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Heating and power options for your home, Natural choices, Radiant floor heating – Regency Natural Living Gas Fireplaces User Manual

Page 3: Blue-flame space heaters, Snow melt

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naturalLiving

Fall-Winter

05

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naturalLiving

Fall-Winter

natural choices

Heating and Power

Options for Your Home

Want to reduce your utility bills? Find out how radiant
floor heaters, snow-melt systems, blue-flame space heaters,
water heaters and backup generators can help.

By Amy E. Lemen

Radiant Floor Heating

Wouldn’t it be wonderful to feel warmth and comfort

throughout your home without air blowing into the room —

or without looking at an unsightly radiator? Homeowners are

discovering how radiant floor-heating systems — which are

all but invisible — can maintain constant temperatures from

room to room, even upstairs.

“As radiant flooring gets less expensive and there are more

options and styles, it’s really exploding in popularity, even

in places like Texas and Florida,” says Dan Chiles from Watts

Radiant in Springfield, Mo. “It’s a dash of color. We encourage

people to see it with a designer’s

eye, because it’s getting so much

more sophisticated.”

It’s also a more efficient way to

heat an area, or even an entire home.

Gas-powered radiant systems consist

of tubes installed under a slab, or if

you’re

replacing

existing

flooring,

under the floor. A small circulator,

acting as a pump, pushes heated

water through the tubes, essentially

heating objects in the area and mak-

ing them warm to the touch. The re-

sult is that when you sit down on that

normally cold-as-ice-in-winter leather

couch to watch a football game, it’s

actually warm.

“It’s a whole different heating phi-

losophy,” says Chiles. “You’re not trying

to heat the room like in a typical forced

air system, but the things in it, so it’s a

much more efficient use of energy.”

T

here’s an incredible variety of money-saving products to

choose from when it comes to home heating and power

options. Whether you’re looking for a whole-house

heating system, a convenient way to get rid of treacher-

ous ice and snow, an efficient water heater or a system to ensure

your family has power in the event of a weather emergency, there

are many popular and energy-efficient options.

Blue-Flame Space Heaters

Blue-flame

space

heaters

are

just

what

the

name

suggests: space heaters that give off a sapphire-blue flame,

which

heats

the

air

around

people

and

objects

for

atmospheric warmth.

Most have controls on the unit that are simple to oper-

ate: Just push a button to ignite the pilot light (no matches

needed), and the heater begins to instantly warm the room

or area. They’re a good option when it doesn’t make sense

to crank up a whole house heating system, or to add a lit-

tle extra heating oomph to a room that doesn’t get quite as

warm as the rest of the house.

Most of the new blue-flame space heaters are vent-free,

working much like a central heating system. Because

they’re ventless, each unit is required to include an oxygen-

depletion sensor (ODS) that shuts the unit off if there isn’t

enough fresh air to avoid the danger of carbon monoxide

poisoning. According to the Vent-Free Gas Products Al-

liance, all U.S. gas code groups and 49 states, as well as

British Columbia, Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan,

allow the sale and installation of vent-free appliances.

“Homeowners throughout the United States are discov-

ering that vent-free gas appliances are a smart and eco-

nomical answer for safe supplemental heating,” says Sue

Walker,

chairman

of

the

Vent-Free

Gas

Products

Alliance. “Manufacturers are investing more than ever in

cutting-edge designs and technological breakthroughs that

are exceeding consumer expectations.”

Finally, keep in mind that older gas-fired space heaters

may not have the ODS mechanism, so before you settle in

for a chilly winter, be sure you have a newer model.

“Radiant floor heating is a different heating philosophy. You’re not trying to
heat the room like in a typical forced air system, but the things in it, so it’s
a much more efficient use of energy.”

Most new blue-flame

space heaters are

vent-free and feature

sensors that shut

off the unit if there

isn’t enough fresh

air, thus preventing

the risk of carbon

monoxide poisoning.

Instead of using

forced air, radiant

floors heat objects

in the room, spread-

ing warmth through-

out and adding a

designer touch with

a splash of red color.

Snow melt systems

use the same technol-

ogy to melt ice off

driveways and other

slippery surfaces.

Photo courtesy

of Watts Radiant.

Snow Melt

The same radiant technology used to heat floors is also

used outside — in snow-melt systems that are essential to

getting around on those mornings when overnight ice and

snow make long driveways treacherous.

“It takes about 30 BTUs per square foot, per hour, to

heat the inside of a home,” says Chiles. “Outside, you need

300 BTUs per square foot, per hour. In urban and remote

areas, it’s about safety, and it has definitely become a

growth industry, especially with Baby Boomers.”

Snow-melt systems can be installed underneath drive-

ways, sidewalks, patios, carports and more — basically any-

where there’s a concrete slab. Like radiant floors, they use

hydronic (water) heating systems, melting ice and snow by

circulating a gas-heated solution (usually antifreeze and

water) through tubing underneath. It’s about safety, to be

sure, but it’s also about aesthetics for homeowners whose

driveways are decorative or stamped concrete.

“You can’t get ice out from between those cracks, and

you can’t shovel it,” says Chiles. “A snow melt system gets

rid of ice safely, without the risk of cracking the surface.”

The snow-melt system

underneath this driveway

uses natural gas to heat a

water/Glycol or antifreeze

mix, which is then pushed

through tubing under-

neath the driveway, easily

melting away snow and

ice.

Photo courtesy

of Watts Radiant.