Search the forum,

Discuss Wet underfloor heating possible leak problem in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Status
Not open for further replies.
Messages
9
Hi all.

ive trawled the net and this forum looking for a possible diagnosis to my problem and now hoping you can help.

i have a wet ufh system install a year ago. I've used a polypipe mounted in 20mm polystyrene panels by wunda floor. Under the panels is a latex screed over a concrete floor. The panels have metal heat spreader plates with a 9mm marine ply over the top. On the top of the ply I have karndean.

the house is big and I've used this system throughout however in the last 8 months I've noticed that in the hallway the karndean has warped over a span of about 2sqm. Underneath this section are the flow and returns for several zones. The system has lost about 1 bar over the last 6 months which I put down to the fact I've had a number of other add on manifolds for other floors and general renovations done. However the warping is there and for marine ply to warp there has to be moisture underneath. The system works fine in all zones and hadn't lost pressure noticeably in months.
My worries have increased since I've used a moisture detector on the skirting boards in the hall and they read 13% which considering elsewhere in the house it is 0% it confirms something isn't right.
what can be done to identify and rectify this? I'm not bothered about ripping up the karndean and ply to fix the fault but concerned if I have to replace a whole zones pipe

thanks
 
best bet before hand is to pressure test each zone and find out if you do indeed have a leak
 
get the installers back, use a flir to check for leaks and be sure it isnt just moisure fm your sub base drying out.
 
Thanks. I installed the pipe and plumber terminated on to manifold and pressure tested. I like the idea of the sub base drying out!
 
Could be drawing moisture from underneath if no vapour barrier was installed.
 
Wunda and polypipe do repair couplers, there quite bulky so may need to butcher the polystyrene to allow it to fit. Much easier that replacing complete pipe..

Be sure you have a leak before breaking up floors...

If the warping is in a transition area where all the circuits leave the manifold, it could be caused by excessive heat? If having wood with UFH its a good idea to fit a high limit stat in the floor in these zones.

You would think ifs it caused by lack of vapour barrier then you would have this problem all over?

I hope this is helpful
 
Could be overheating in that area, wunda floor recommend a over temp stat to be fitted where natural timber will be used
Iirc 27 deg, the stat probe/sensor should be just under the timber flooring
 
Is that laminate flooring, Iv seen it all rise up if there's not the correct expansion gap around the area, maybe that is what's happening?
 
If there's no joints in the underfloor pipework it's unlikely to be leaking
 
I didn't mean a leak, I meant excess heat causing warping of timber

If you have a lot of ufh pipes concentrated in one area, it is good practice to apply an insulation layer over the top of the pipes to stop overheating, even more so when it's not embedded in screed.

You have 3 possible causes of warping
1) leak
2) Overheating
a) Expansion of floor without sufficient gap bending
b) Warping of the floor


I do get very confused though why people spend a small fortune on the floor covering (karndean) and skip on the underfloor heating system.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Reply to Wet underfloor heating possible leak problem in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

We have UFH throughout downstairs. I have had one coil replaced. I have had the thermostats checked that they are linking to the correct actuators, which they are. the cupboard where the UFH system is gets hot when I turn up the thermostats in one or all zones. The boiler is coming on but the...
Replies
8
Views
602
I'm attending a wet underfloor heating system, it's an old one ..No flow meters, just adjustable valves on the returns with conventional actuators. Problem is , one loop (far right in photo) isn't heating the floor (timber suspended) . I've bled the loop via a hosepipe, shut off all the other...
Replies
3
Views
524
Hi there, I'm considering having my heating system controlled by Honeywell Evohome. I have a question about the underfloor heating controller.... I have a single zone water underfloor heating in the kitchen. The controller is currently a Wunda. I've never been all that happy with it because...
Replies
4
Views
875
As part of deep house renovation, planning to install wet ufh on the ground floor, and radiators on upper floor. Two bathrooms will have both water based towel warmers and electric ufh, and need dual thermostat to separately control air temp (by running towel warmer) and floor temp. Need...
Replies
0
Views
629
I have a OMNIE designed wet underfloor heating system on three floors. Ground and 2nd floors work well with those two floors having a single manifold and recirculating pump for the various zones. On the 1st floor the rooms are split over two manifolds each with its own recirculating pump...
Replies
6
Views
882
Creating content since 2001. Untold Media.

Newest Plumbing Threads

Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock