- Aug 28, 2001
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Currently making plans to do a 2nd-floor dormer (4 beds, 2 baths) to our new-to-us ranch. 1st Fl (and basement) currently uses 5-zones of baseboard heat and an older system with a boiler which won't support a 2nd floor in addition.
Options are to add an additional boiler for just the 2nd floor or upgrade this one entirely for $2k more than the price of adding 1 more boiler. Many contractors are saying this original is perfectly fine for its current purpose and doesn't need replacing. If we don't replace, we have to maintain both and that's always a higher risk.
Other, more important, question is - do we do more baseboard for the 2nd floor or do we go with a a complete system replacement - a "hydronics" system which is forced hot air from vents that the central air will use? Many contractors are high on hydronics because of efficiency (and ease to install) but one really put it to question when he mentioned hot air is not efficient... heat rises, and the vents are up top because that's where the AC will be coming out. One guy's response to that was the return vent makes all the air move around regardless. Also hot air makes it too dry. In my experience with winter & heat, it's already really dry with baseboard.
There's also the question of which is more costly... one has said baseboard is very expensive to put in and another guy today said hydronics is more expensive. In my amateur-ish opinion, all the high-end and newer homes use hydronics, presumably because it makes it look clean (no baseboard). That's a factor for us too but if it sucks, then no.
If it matters, we use gas, not oil. What say you?
Options are to add an additional boiler for just the 2nd floor or upgrade this one entirely for $2k more than the price of adding 1 more boiler. Many contractors are saying this original is perfectly fine for its current purpose and doesn't need replacing. If we don't replace, we have to maintain both and that's always a higher risk.
Other, more important, question is - do we do more baseboard for the 2nd floor or do we go with a a complete system replacement - a "hydronics" system which is forced hot air from vents that the central air will use? Many contractors are high on hydronics because of efficiency (and ease to install) but one really put it to question when he mentioned hot air is not efficient... heat rises, and the vents are up top because that's where the AC will be coming out. One guy's response to that was the return vent makes all the air move around regardless. Also hot air makes it too dry. In my experience with winter & heat, it's already really dry with baseboard.
There's also the question of which is more costly... one has said baseboard is very expensive to put in and another guy today said hydronics is more expensive. In my amateur-ish opinion, all the high-end and newer homes use hydronics, presumably because it makes it look clean (no baseboard). That's a factor for us too but if it sucks, then no.
If it matters, we use gas, not oil. What say you?
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