North Idaho Wolfman
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Equipment
L3450DT-GST, Woods FEL, B7100 HSD, FEL, 60" SB, 743 Bobcat with V2203, and more
Oh no chance of that, I have 1/4 mile long driveway.Wolfman if heat the drive way you won't have a reason to use kubota all winter [emoji853]
I've looked into the whole system, the tank less boilers increase efficiency 100 fold. You can run this system on electric, but it's not efficient enough, propane or natural gas is the way to go.Wolfman, my boss built his retirement home in 2000. He said he tried to think of everything. It ended up really nice and he was just 60. Double wide hallways for 2 wheelchairs, extra wide doors, laundry at both ends of the house, 2 dishwashers, tile floors thru out, 2 boilers for floor heat, 2 a/c units, whole house generator, ..... also heated his rear/front sidewalks and the front driveway. He had 2 sensors, 1 for moisture and 1 for temperature. It would snow and melt the driveway. After the first winter month and the wife got the energy bill(over $1k)
needless to say she said to never turn the outside heat on again, that was in 2001
Or if your making your own pellets, pellet boiler.
But yes overuse of the driveway, sidewalk heater would waste a ton of money! I'll mainly use it when it ices over too much for a normal scraping off.
We don't get very hot here, lucky if we hit 90 a day or two over the summer.Wolfman, what are you going with for AC? I'm thinking ductless for mine. Current plan is stained concrete on most of the house, epoxy in the mechanical room. Oversize the mechanical room to make room for a chest freezer and a small reloading bench. At least one bathroom will get the tall toilet, a shower with a bench, and room to move a walker or wheelchair. Open design between kitchen and living/dining room. Pedestal fireplace as close to the majority of the plumbing as it will fit without looking stupid.
2 systems, geothermal exchange will cool the floor and a secondary heat pump that heats and cools the floor (the heat aspect will probably never be used).
The heat pump should be rarely run as I believe the geothermal will do the trick.
All it involves is trenching a run of some pipes about 6 foot into the ground, then sending the water threw that loop in the summer.
Still doing the last of the research on that part.
A few notes: If your going to have a big chest freezer figure it's location and do not put any pipes in the slab under it, also no pipes under cabinets, toilet, or bathtub.
But you can double up under a shower floor if you are doing a mud pan and tile shower floor (makes for a nice warm floor in the winter and cool floor in the summer).
Also check the epoxy and make sure it doesn't have an R value more than 2, some thick epoxies do and it will cause some serious exchange rate issues.