M
mike_s
Has anybody got experience with this? I have heated a smaller church successfully with radiators but now I have a job to improve a heating system for a larger church and especially as they will be gaining access to funding for the job then I need to get it right first time.
The church has been getting lots of complaints of being too cold.
Challenges with this job are: Preventing cold down draughts, heat the lower areas of the church with a quiet system that blends in to the traditional decor.
There is already a wet system in place. The boilers are working fine and the pipework is getting hot but all they have are some natural convector boxes with pipework with fins on running through them which is doing a poor job of heating the place.
I am yet to do the heat loss requirements but I need to settle on a method first. I have done hours of research on church heating and given the size of the hall 17m long by 13m by 10m high with no insulation and large windows if I heated this place with radiators alone to 20 degrees C may cost too much to run, they may take up too much space and look ugly. They would like them to be low surface temperature as well.
From my research the most practical and comfortable method seems to be by improving the wet heating system heating the air combining it with radiant heaters where the air temperature would only need to be heated to around 15 degrees or even as low as 10 degrees going off the charts I have seen.
I could use gas fired radiant plaque heaters or infra red radiant quartz heaters.
I could also install some electric pew heaters and a wet system or electric air curtain above the door as the pipework enters around here.
I could utilize a destratisfication fan if needed?
underfloor or warm air heating ducted through the floor would be a last restort and probably too expensive.
Would love to hear from someone who has experience on this as I really want to come up with the right solution. Thanks.
Depending on the replys I get here I plan to speak to AmbiRad, SpaceRay and some specialist church heating equipment manufacturers.
The church has been getting lots of complaints of being too cold.
Challenges with this job are: Preventing cold down draughts, heat the lower areas of the church with a quiet system that blends in to the traditional decor.
There is already a wet system in place. The boilers are working fine and the pipework is getting hot but all they have are some natural convector boxes with pipework with fins on running through them which is doing a poor job of heating the place.
I am yet to do the heat loss requirements but I need to settle on a method first. I have done hours of research on church heating and given the size of the hall 17m long by 13m by 10m high with no insulation and large windows if I heated this place with radiators alone to 20 degrees C may cost too much to run, they may take up too much space and look ugly. They would like them to be low surface temperature as well.
From my research the most practical and comfortable method seems to be by improving the wet heating system heating the air combining it with radiant heaters where the air temperature would only need to be heated to around 15 degrees or even as low as 10 degrees going off the charts I have seen.
I could use gas fired radiant plaque heaters or infra red radiant quartz heaters.
I could also install some electric pew heaters and a wet system or electric air curtain above the door as the pipework enters around here.
I could utilize a destratisfication fan if needed?
underfloor or warm air heating ducted through the floor would be a last restort and probably too expensive.
Would love to hear from someone who has experience on this as I really want to come up with the right solution. Thanks.
Depending on the replys I get here I plan to speak to AmbiRad, SpaceRay and some specialist church heating equipment manufacturers.
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