Search the forum,

Discuss Air source heat pump and UFH in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

PDS

Messages
19
Hi Guys,
I’ve been asked to fit an air source heat pump with unvented hot water tank, and UFH on downstairs concrete slab and spreader plates upstairs.
Has anyone fitted this before and taken pictures so I can see a neat or workable layout please?
Look forward to hearing from you.
 
Me personally would chose a brand that would suit the job for size, practicality and cost. Then ask their tech dept for a design and control usage. Have you considered how to top up the hot wAter temp to kill off legionnaires? As I don’t think that there’s a HP out there yet, that can get to 65/70 degrees.... I maybe wrong, I haven’t kept up with the technology like I use to.
 
Which air source heat pump are you proposing, the Panasonic range?

Are you proposing to lay the ground floor ufh onto an existing slab, if so do you know what level of insulation is beneath the slab, to calculate the level of insulation required.

Personally, I don’t like (aluminium) spreader plates if they are to be retrofitted into an existing property. They are ok for new build. For retrofitting I find that biscuit mix gives a good even distribution of heat.

If you go down the aluminium spreader plate route, warn the customer that the plates will adversely affect wifi and mobile phone signal reception.

I append two photos, one of the floor ready for screeding and the second of the plant room - albeit the pump here is ground source. For air source with a split unit the plant room would be identical.

Hope this helps
 

Attachments

  • F4792A51-C73A-48DA-AC60-14ADA5AE6FEA.jpeg
    F4792A51-C73A-48DA-AC60-14ADA5AE6FEA.jpeg
    62.6 KB · Views: 25
  • F6D0B142-7D3E-4685-B861-BAA6CF5693AD.jpeg
    F6D0B142-7D3E-4685-B861-BAA6CF5693AD.jpeg
    19.6 KB · Views: 24
Last edited:
Which air source heat pump are you proposing, the Panasonic range?

Are you proposing to lay the ground floor ufh onto an existing slab, if so do you know what level of insulation is beneath the slab, to calculate the level of insulation required.

Personally, I don’t like spreader plates if they are to be retrofitted into an existing property.

I append two photos, one of the floor ready for screeding and the second of the plant room - albeit the pump here is ground source. For air source with a split unit the plant room would be identical.

Hope this helps
Hi Brambles,
The downstairs will be on a slab and I plan on using 100 mm insulation with a vapour barrier.
For the upstairs, the customer wanted to use standard rads, that were going to be massive. Aluminium rads too expensive. Therefore, I suggested spreader plates between the joists with wooden floor fitted above.
I was going to use the Mitsubishi heat pump.
[automerge]1570380553[/automerge]
Thanks for the images, very helpful.
 
That should be fine. If you have the option tongue and groove flooring upstairs seems to give a better level of heat than chipboard (but there is a price to pay).

Bear in mind, with the MHI (Mitsubishi) pumps they can only really be used with Mitsubishi controls. Panasonic - the domestic range - can be used with any conventional (Honeywell) control system and are modular if you want to add solar at a later date.

Hope this helps
[automerge]1570381181[/automerge]
A final point - not teaching you to suck eggs - I always take customers for air source heat pumps to see an existing installation.

Most have no idea as to how much noise the external evaporator units make. It may seem tedious - but I have had a number of customers who were wedded to the idea of air source until they heard the noise and in one case realised the size of plant room required.
 
Last edited:
That should be fine. If you have the option tongue and groove flooring upstairs seems to give a better level of heat than chipboard (but there is a price to pay).

Bear in mind, with the MHI (Mitsubishi) pumps they can only really be used with Mitsubishi controls. Panasonic - the domestic range - can be used with any conventional (Honeywell) control system and are modular if you want to add solar at a later date.

Hope this helps
[automerge]1570381181[/automerge]
A final point - not teaching you to suck eggs - I always take customers for air source heat pumps to see an existing installation.

Most have no idea as to how much noise the external evaporator units make. It may seem tedious - but I have had a number of customers who were wedded to the idea of air source until they heard the noise and in one case realised the size of plant room required.
Thanks for that. I didn’t take into account the controllability of the system and am pleased you brought that to my attention.
 
Most have no idea as to how much noise the external evaporator units make. It may seem tedious - but I have had a number of customers who were wedded to the idea of air source until they heard the noise and in one case realised the size of plant room required.

Also not forgetting to take account of the effect of the noise on neighbours.
Sound travels a long way and is even more noticeable with variable speed fans.
 

Reply to Air source heat pump and UFH in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

Hi, Can anyone advise as to why the cold water to my bathroom keeps airlocking? This originally happened about 12 months ago and has happened 3-4 times since. It’s an upstairs bathroom, fed from a tank in the attic. The tank is about 8 Meters away and feeds a bath, sink and toilet. The tank...
Replies
9
Views
278
Hi, My current hot water system needs to be replaced. Anyone got any suggestions or can recommend any plumbers around Derrimut area that won't rip me off? An office guy recommended me to apply for government rebates and get it installed through timetosave.com.au. How reliable is this...
Replies
6
Views
268
Hi all I'm hoping someone can shine a light on this for me Since our stop tap on the pavement has now been filled with sand for whatever reason, we are relying on our property fitted stopcock (this is outside on our garage wall) Unfortunately turning this to the closed position only reduces...
Replies
3
Views
209
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