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How To Install Under Floor Radiant Tubing With Aluminum Omega Heat Transfer Plates Between Joists 

Benjamin Sahlstrom
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US Made Omega Heat Plates: amzn.to/3H6jVJW
M12 Staple Gun: amzn.to/3AYmTfy
Recommended Oxygen Barrier PEX: amzn.to/3gZKVzV
Milwaukee Hole Hawg: amzn.to/3UxEQsw
Big Hawg Bits: amzn.to/3Um1nbu
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Milwaukee PEX Crimper: amzn.to/3H7kmn8
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PEX Tubing Unroller: amzn.to/3B1s1Qi
Work Platforms: amzn.to/3P8m4XD
Caulking Gun (Options): amzn.to/3izeBEo
Materials Used:
ARROW T50 Staples 2-Pack: amzn.to/3EYbmxY
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PEX Couplings: amzn.to/3ORR8dK
PEX Crimp Rings: amzn.to/3ixwvI1
Oxygen Barrier PEX 1000': amzn.to/3VHQnWT
Oxygen Barrier PEX 300': amzn.to/3EYbVIl
Safety Gear Used:
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Tools We Recommend: amzn.to/3Cssuwh
How To Drill Holes Through Floor Joists: • How To Drill Holes Thr...
Articles that explain about concrete slab vs. wood for radiant heating:
www.energy.gov/energysaver/ra...
www.builderspace.com/wood-vs-...
In this video we show you the parts & supplies needed and explain the process of installing radiant PEX tubing using aluminum staple up heat transfer omega plates.
Thanks for watching and subscribing! As an Amazon affiliate I earn from qualifying purchases. Thank you for your support!
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1 дек 2022

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Комментарии : 313   
@EvanDinelli
@EvanDinelli Год назад
Can't wait to see the boiler hook-up video next!
@jaysmith201
@jaysmith201 5 месяцев назад
The "Pexnado" PEX Tubing Unroller, is a super helpful tool.
@handstwister
@handstwister Год назад
Young man your ever evolving skill set is more impressive with each new project. It’s a pleasure to see such a smart hard working young man especially in todays setting.
@Leonbartolome
@Leonbartolome Год назад
It’s satisfying to see such a clean installation
@jadesprite
@jadesprite 10 месяцев назад
The cute little animations during installation REALLY set this video above and beyond for assisting DIY jobs. Thank you so much!
@nemarec
@nemarec Год назад
Great job man. It's good to see how you keep everything organized.
@scottcarruthers3807
@scottcarruthers3807 Год назад
Benjamin, Came across your video as I am looking into adding this type of system into my finished cottage. I would need to be installing from our crawl space (totally dry as when we built we sprayed the ground a min of 4'' and all up the walls and roof) We should have added infloor heat mats when we tiled, but we didn't and now looking to add this system. I found your video to be VERY useful on how to plan and install this system! So please, Continue to make more videos. Your descriptions are done incredibly well. Cheers,
@JayPoe80
@JayPoe80 Год назад
Thanks for the vid! Going to get rid of the baseboard heat in my 100+ year old house. Showing how to loop the runs is very helpful. Thanks!!!
@adicarevreasastie9612
@adicarevreasastie9612 Год назад
Great work, Benjamin. Thank you for sharing the information. God bless you.
@Sashasdoc2
@Sashasdoc2 Год назад
Great video. Looking to do something similar in my crawl space and this had all the tips I was looking for. As to naming the roll carriage, two suggestions: The PEX Plexus, or The PEX Dispenser. Keep the great content coming!
@ChileExpatFamily
@ChileExpatFamily Год назад
Hello from Chile Ben! I have radiant heating here in my house that I installed and I love it. I came to your video so that I could get an update on the correct installation process. I could not find the OMEGA Plates here in Chile years ago. So I had to use multiple clips which was not the best but it is still effective. Thanks for the video. Very good explanation. Here I use a wood boiler to heat my water. It works well. Thanks again Ben. Jim in Chile.
@jkbrown5496
@jkbrown5496 Год назад
I always like the standard name "Spinning Jenny" used in fencing. Come from the thread spinning of old.
@Chris_at_Home
@Chris_at_Home Год назад
Great video. I am getting ready to put hydronic heat in a duplex we have been building out of pocket for 9 years. There are full basements in both units. I was going to put in those Morris Beacon heaters, but I can handle this even at 70 yo.
@NickMach007
@NickMach007 Год назад
Very cool project. Looking forward to seeing more!
@dccooper1211
@dccooper1211 Год назад
Cool! I've had the chance to install this type of radiant heat with accessories and over the years of installation of boilers etc I've found "poor-overs" are much easier and way more efficient. Nice work! Hated loading my uncoiler lol.... I'm now becoming a mechanical engineer at 45 years young.... Hard work and good work ethics pay off💯 keep it up!
@jimharris1590
@jimharris1590 Год назад
Well done---you made it simple!!!
@oby-1607
@oby-1607 Год назад
The only tools we use is the good ol red and black Milwaukee. Never stops working. The staple idea is a good one. Wish I saw this video as we did this very same job on an addition.
@jagzigian
@jagzigian 2 месяца назад
BRO!!! Been in business doing changeouts and ductless. I decided we try our first radiant floor. It turned out amazing. Your video was impeccable.
@thediamono
@thediamono Год назад
Well done and informative. Wish I had seen this before completing a couple of rooms.
@richdobbs6595
@richdobbs6595 4 месяца назад
I used these plates to radiant heat the tile floor in the kitchen when I was finishing off the basement below. Then on top of the slab in the basement I used some plastic spacers designed for radiant heating. On top of this was a cement board underlayment for a tile floor or a plywood subfloor for the basement bedroom that was carpeted. I used 300 foot rolls, and due to the size involved all of the loops ended up somewhere around 250 feet. I used a really cheap corded electrical stapler, and afterwards drove any staples that were sitting proud in with a tap of a hammer. With the basement layout, I didn't have to drill any holes through the joists for the radiant floor because the loops were in an area that was going to be left as an unfinished storage room, and the other ends of the loops were mostly beneath the kitchen cabinets. This was circa 2006. It's interesting that the process and material is pretty much unchanged from that time.
@SailingCatamaranElement
@SailingCatamaranElement 9 месяцев назад
One of the better informative videos I have seen in a while....well done!
@WalnutsandWineberries
@WalnutsandWineberries 5 месяцев назад
Very nice presentation. Good job, Ben!
@ivancheitowskyj4323
@ivancheitowskyj4323 3 месяца назад
Great job on the video! I like the way you explain everything.
@billbrooks7911
@billbrooks7911 Год назад
Great job. Trusting I didn’t miss this but you may want to add that when possible the runs first coming from the heat source should be focussed on the coldest parts of the floor example the extremities so for instance your greatest heat is not in the middle of the floor where it gets too hot
@markflanagan6653
@markflanagan6653 Год назад
This kid does nice work. 👍
@linedog19delta
@linedog19delta Год назад
I enjoy your video , very professional . Thank you for sharing it .
@johnparkhurst825
@johnparkhurst825 Год назад
Great video. Going with 5/8 or3/4 pex sure looks enticing.
@johnfitbyfaithnet
@johnfitbyfaithnet Год назад
Great presentation very helpful and useful
@dosiodosev740
@dosiodosev740 Год назад
I am not going to try it but enjoy your meticulous style, thank you
@shaner67
@shaner67 Год назад
Nicely done young man, well put together video..
@tcap7917
@tcap7917 Год назад
Nice work. Making the holes bigger as you suggest is the best advice. I fought with a lot of pex because of this. The twist and pull is the method I use instead of having all those loops hanging and feeding. Its way faster and reduces the chance of kinking. You could've heated up that kink if it wasn't too bad. Always have a plan drawing for the routing this way you can combine some shorter loops with potential longer loops. It's easier to balance out the loops on paper first. I have done 1/2" 350' runs without issues but I do planning to stay below 300' Design the flow to heat from the outside in and keep off the outside wall by 12", don't heat but completely insulate the outside joist to the box.
@bp4170
@bp4170 Год назад
As always, great video!
@doingtimeforsixty9
@doingtimeforsixty9 Год назад
Ben stellar tips once again!
@Aaronmcgrattan
@Aaronmcgrattan Год назад
Nice work man. Very well explained aswell
@genabrutskiy5708
@genabrutskiy5708 7 месяцев назад
Great job viewing it properly.
@TruckHouseLife
@TruckHouseLife 8 месяцев назад
Awesome video dude! Thanks!
@BenjaminSahlstrom
@BenjaminSahlstrom 8 месяцев назад
Thanks! Have enjoyed your channel now and then by the way!
@ericsyre9418
@ericsyre9418 Год назад
Thanks for all the info!
@edgarcornette6387
@edgarcornette6387 Год назад
Wonderful.. love to see it. beautiful install.
@THEBOSS-vn2ky
@THEBOSS-vn2ky Год назад
Thanks again for your time
@justincrasi4638
@justincrasi4638 Год назад
nice video! very clear and informative!
@TomStrahle
@TomStrahle Год назад
Great video. Liked and subbed.
@FixthisCD
@FixthisCD Год назад
I would make gauge for marking your holes. just a piece of plywood/ 2x4 to stick into the corner to quickly mark your centers.
@BenjaminSahlstrom
@BenjaminSahlstrom Год назад
That would be faster probably.
@TheMityquin
@TheMityquin Год назад
In a few years when this young man graduates hs, his father is going to have to pay him whatever he asks for. He's incredibly knowledgeable.
@hunts318
@hunts318 4 месяца назад
Superbly presented, thank you.
@david-breitenfeld
@david-breitenfeld Год назад
i did this to my house. If you do this put your bed mattress on the floor, the heat will make the entire bed warm and cozy in the winter - win, win. You can thank me later ;)
@jeremypittman1697
@jeremypittman1697 Год назад
Code is not opinion. In Canada 1 inch hole has to be 12" from any load bearing wall and 12" per inch in hole size there after to a maximum of 1/3 of joist size. ( 3 1/4" hole in 2x10, (9 1/2") Neat product and work.
@elc2k385
@elc2k385 Год назад
Very high quality video.
@kirkevans9177
@kirkevans9177 2 месяца назад
Great video. Well done!
@JoeWysocki-zk7qi
@JoeWysocki-zk7qi 27 дней назад
Nice Job! Great video!
@Johnlee0513
@Johnlee0513 Год назад
this is a fine example of how to do this task.....NOW..I see all the holes that must be drilled for the heat lines....What are the rules for "engineered floor joists"? near the rim joists? along with all the other stuff mounted to the ceiling such as ducts, piping and etc, It's all good when it not obstructed but OMG on an existing ceiling.
@we3k1ngs12
@we3k1ngs12 Месяц назад
We’ll done thanks !
@danobrien155
@danobrien155 Год назад
Sweet thanks 😊
@lulutileguy
@lulutileguy Год назад
this is done in Alberta frequently as air is dry in winter they no like forced air
@teejay622
@teejay622 6 месяцев назад
As usual, great video Ben. I did mine exactly like this. If I had it to do all over again, I think I may have done it differently though. Each of my zones, done in this manner, really suffer from thermal loss across the floor of each room. What I mean by that is that the side of the room where the loops begin is always substantially warmer than the far side. I think when I do the next rooms, rather than running the tube into the cavity and down and back, and then into the next cavity, like you've done in this video and like I did in all of my other rooms, I will run the tubes into the cavity, down to the end and then into the next cavity - having a single tube in each cavity all the way to the far end of the room and then run the tube back through in the same manner, ending up with 2 tubes per cavity like your method here but, unlike this method, the heat should be much more evenly distributed throughout the room rather than having a hot side and a cooler side of the floor. Has anyone ever done it that way and if so, did it do what I'm hoping it will do? What's your opinion on this Ben? Either way, this video is yet another example of your excellent teaching talent. You always explain things in such a way that anyone can understand it. That is a true gift. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience with us. Even at 430K+ subs, I think your channel is seriously underrated. Thanks again. Be well.
@0my
@0my 5 месяцев назад
Have you tried reversing the flow (swapping the tubes at the manifold) so that the hottest section of pex goes first to the exterior side of the zone (coolest section of the room)?
@danielhall5364
@danielhall5364 Год назад
How about a video on installing radiant in old construction with 2x6 cross bracing. Great looking job. Well done
@Machailey1
@Machailey1 Год назад
Cool Spool!
@lancerudy9934
@lancerudy9934 Год назад
Great video 😊
@rockiewilmot9041
@rockiewilmot9041 Год назад
I did runs no more then 250 ft, and nailed it on the side of the joists on 1 ft centers 2 ins down, so I didn't have to worry about nails going into it from above, and put 2×8 insulation underneath, and insulated all interior walls,
@newhampshirelifestyle4233
@newhampshirelifestyle4233 Год назад
Nice job!!
@user-xx8ds7fs2f
@user-xx8ds7fs2f 10 месяцев назад
Thanks!
@aqeilalrubaiai
@aqeilalrubaiai Год назад
As manufactur recommend, why they keep the pipes 2-3 inches on cement floor but nothing on wood floor. You install it directly under the floor!.what about if the customer want to install a new subfloor in future for some reason it will damage all pipes and waste money. I think should install a protection metal plate or leave a gaps between the pipe and the floor around 1-2 inches to avoid any damage or issues. What do you think as manufactur recommend? Thanks .
@robindenbeste4655
@robindenbeste4655 Год назад
NOT ALL TYPES OF WOOD FLOORS ARE COMPATIBLE WITH UNDERFLOOR HEATING. THANK YOU FOR PASSING IT FORWARD.
@paulmaxwell8851
@paulmaxwell8851 Год назад
I've installed many, and never come across a wood floor that was somehow incompatible. My last job was in my own house, and I had prefinished solid maple. These systems are lower in efficiency, but work well regardless.
@robindenbeste4655
@robindenbeste4655 Год назад
@@paulmaxwell8851 I HAVE. TRUE STATEMENT. HAPPY HALLYDAY'S 😊
@YevZakharov
@YevZakharov Год назад
More of a "Warranty" issue than a real issue.
@channelcatchaser9426
@channelcatchaser9426 8 месяцев назад
Great job
@carabela125
@carabela125 Год назад
Spiralosaurus Pex
@ChuckKarl525
@ChuckKarl525 Год назад
Great video! Several years ago I raised a sunken living room floor to the same level as the rest of the main floor level using 2x8 joists. Because the living room was a converted single stall garage, I couldn't access the joist bays from below. So, after friction fitting batt insulation plus a one inch layer of foil backed rigid insulation in the joist bays, I notched each joist from the top and stapled the heat transfer plates transvers to the joists. After snapping the pex into place in the same pattern that you are showing here, I installed the sheathing to complete the upgrade. Also, I used a big black marker to map the tubing below, then wrote a note to beware of what is below. To do it all over again, I would have spaced the initial (4) runs of tubing 6" OC along both exterior walls first, then continue in the field. At -40 in Fairbanks, the entire floor is nicely warm on the feet, but there is a slight cool convection dropping down from above at the walls where a couch or chair may be located. Note that my home has R 38 walls and an R50 lid but placing the heat nearest to the heat loss will make for a more comfortable space. Once again, great job on the video.
@paulhoekstra7569
@paulhoekstra7569 Год назад
You notched the joist! Now they are 2x6's.
@ChuckKarl525
@ChuckKarl525 Год назад
@@paulhoekstra7569 yep, but they are completely supported by the conc slab that they are sitting on. Agree that notching is not good for a free span joist.
@paulhoekstra7569
@paulhoekstra7569 Год назад
@@ChuckKarl525 Now I understand. I missed a couple words in your note. I think I started in at the second sentence. Have a great day.
@ChuckKarl525
@ChuckKarl525 Год назад
@@paulhoekstra7569 you have a great day as well.
@hansshaffer3788
@hansshaffer3788 Месяц назад
*phenomenal* video! 'Subbed!
@diegocastillo5576
@diegocastillo5576 Год назад
Badass bruh! 💯
@samuelkingentrepreneur
@samuelkingentrepreneur 5 месяцев назад
Very good work on the video and very informative. I just put this into my house. I retrofitted underneath with the 1 inch boards and then hardwood on top of that. During this most recent cold snap the system couldn’t keep up. I still have not insulated between the joists. My question is will insulation make a drastic difference. I have a friend who set his system up almost identical to mine and he didn’t insulate in order to heat his basement as well. His system keeps up fine. I’m wondering if it’s an issue that there’s at least 1 3/4 inches of subfloor or should that not make a difference?
@dissociativecat7495
@dissociativecat7495 Год назад
very nice work
@ManoloRalda
@ManoloRalda Год назад
Perhaps you can call it (him) Turner
@davidderoode7691
@davidderoode7691 Год назад
Great video
@stevehaken
@stevehaken Год назад
Nice video! I grew up in Slayton. Just a few miles from you! ;-)
@BenjaminSahlstrom
@BenjaminSahlstrom Год назад
What! No way! That's awesome. Was just in Slayton at Bomgaars the other day. You still around the area?
@stevehaken
@stevehaken Год назад
@@BenjaminSahlstrom I have been living in San Francisco Bay Area for the past 30 years. Engineering degree and Silicon Valley is the rest of the story.
@beesonman05
@beesonman05 Год назад
Great Video!! well explained and detailed. question. If you have I-Joist on 16" centers could you run bigger tubing and just one tube down the middle instead of two tubes? Maybe 5/8?
@ip5232
@ip5232 Год назад
It is a very nice instructional video , however I saw one thing I need to share , and for personal experience, make sure the silicon you use it's comparable or use something else, reason been in a new construction, we had so many problems with areas that we discover that when silicon was in contact with the PEX and also with the new orange PVC for fire sprinkles , for some reason it had a chemical reaction and end up breaking or becoming weak or unglued , yes after many investigation that was sthe culprit , had to go to court to prove this things ,so be safe
@douglaswindsor120
@douglaswindsor120 Год назад
Back when my brother had his house done it was a brand new idea and a brand new product solar roll tubing was put in a loop between each joist and attached to 3/4 copper headers each tube waa rubber about an inch in width two rubber tubes joined together with a rubber Web it was easy to install just staple the web to the bottom of the plywood floor and attach it to the copper headers each tube was attached so it was hooked up at the ends one side to the feed and one to the return so each side side flowed opposite ways that way each side had equal heat transfer but afterwards they realized that they had a lot of oxygen transfer into the water in the tube aluminum foil was installed between the joist and R12 fiber glass insulation installed below
@timdiemer2017
@timdiemer2017 8 месяцев назад
That snake is a sidewinder!
@cfdtv1
@cfdtv1 Год назад
Great video, your very good with your explanation. Is there a reason you chose the omega channel instead of what he U channel?
@jimpaulson1728
@jimpaulson1728 Год назад
Its for this reason, inefficiency, that i went with Ecowarm floor panels for my in-floor heating of the upper floor of my garage. I had the project panels layed down and secured, and the PEX tubes run in about 4hrs. AND the efficiency of the heat getting to the room is MUCH greater because the tubes are IN the floor and not UNDER the subfloor. UNDER means you need a hotter temp to heat the tubes, the aluminum flashing, then the 3/4 or greater subfloor, then FINALLY the heat get to the room. I like way much better...lol.
@Brane_Ded
@Brane_Ded Год назад
Name suggestion: Spooly
@brady0630
@brady0630 Год назад
awesome video
@Reedith
@Reedith 6 месяцев назад
Very interesting didn't know this was an option. I have access to my basement or I could technically do my full house this way I wonder how efficient it is I would definitely stuff some rock wool under it and then probably air seal it
@007balzak
@007balzak 4 месяца назад
Great video. QUESTION : can this set up be done on a crawl space in a freezing region???
@chippydog2
@chippydog2 4 месяца назад
Hey Ben! Have you ever installed pex floor heat in a log home loft I believe I need to install T&G to provide a ceiling, then install joists to allow space for loft bathrooms, then a product such as warmboard so the pex tubes can be placed, followed by my finished flooring 😳
@FrustratedBaboon
@FrustratedBaboon 4 месяца назад
This is all nice and wonderful, now the flooring people have arrived to nail down an oak floor, how do you prevent a nail from the gun from piercing the PEX below?
@esneeze
@esneeze Год назад
There is a argument that the heat transfer plates are not needed due to the nature of the floor assembly being saturated with heat and the slow nature of heating the system. Great job on the install. Nice video.
@davidgrisco1939
@davidgrisco1939 Год назад
Agreed. I installed yrs ago in a new house. Read the pros and cons of transfer plates. Decided not to use. No noise. Even heat. Must keep set temp, no set back. Takes time to both heat up AND cool down. Best even, quiet heat.
@adamenstrom
@adamenstrom Год назад
Yup. Plates are pointless
@richdobbs6595
@richdobbs6595 4 месяца назад
​@@adamenstrom I would think that depends on how much heat you are trying to transfer and how much floor area you have to transfer it. If you don't use the plates, how do folks hold the PEX in place? I used the plates based on the research that I did at that time, but that was 18 years ago.
@allanmurphy7474
@allanmurphy7474 Год назад
A dab of spray foam in holes helps with noise as well as protecting tubing as it goes through joists
@kangaroogod
@kangaroogod Год назад
Great vid
@Mike588
@Mike588 Год назад
Made my own plates out of aluminum sofits each panel was 24 inches by 15 inches with two rounded channels for the pex. Twice the heat transfer and cheaper than those plates.
@richiecapuccino9853
@richiecapuccino9853 Год назад
How did you do it?
@jk15214
@jk15214 Год назад
Great video, not sure if I missed it or could not find, but what is the heat source for this system? Would love to see you do a video on Air to water Monoblock or a Heat Pump to indoor unit maybe even a hybrid Outdoor Heap pump to Coaxile exchanger to buffer tank?? Really like you video's.
@justgivemethetruth
@justgivemethetruth Год назад
Those are pretty big holes you are drilling, and off center from the middle of the joist too. But, this is a very informative video. I have a small house with a crawlspace that is open to the ground under it, about 3 feet tall. I'm wondering if this would be efficient in that case where the heat is not embedded in a floorspace?
@mattaudio
@mattaudio Год назад
I have this type of in-floor in my house, with separate thermostats for my in-floor to the 110v zone pump relay (a two-wire Honeywell dial) and a normal five wire thermostat for forced air/AC with backup heat strips. I want to run the in-floor as W1 and heat strips as W2 on the same thermostat, so I am considering a 24v-24v transformer to connect my primary thermostat W1 to the zone pump relay with transformer isolation, then switch the W wire back to the air handler control over to W2. Maybe a chance for a follow-up to your recent thermostat wiring vid on how to control radiant + backup heat from the same thermostat?
@lonestar4721
@lonestar4721 Год назад
Should this be more efficient than baseboard? I understand the heat would be more even. Great vids, keep it up.
@anthonyaldridge
@anthonyaldridge Год назад
My name suggestion Rolopex (Take on Rolodex)
@TodaysTask
@TodaysTask Год назад
Tina turner…… I wish I had one of these when I did mine.
@kenchrapko3697
@kenchrapko3697 3 месяца назад
Nice work, did you fail to show how you would approach the return of that run before you hit the 300' mark ?
@francismallard5892
@francismallard5892 Год назад
Great vide, this is exactly what I want to do to my house as a retrofit. However, the house was built in 1960 and the main floor has 1” hardwood oak strips. So the underside (where I’ll be installing the pex) has about a billion tiny nail points protruding. Do I grind them all off? The floors squeak so ideally I’d like to replace the subfloor with plywood (it currently is the old 5” planks). Can I tear up the oak flooring, tear up the planks, put down plywood (with construction adhesive and screws) and then…glue the hardwood flooring back down?
@ranger178
@ranger178 Год назад
any heating system has conducted heat the pipe and plates touching floor, the convection of the hot air collecting up against the underside of floor rising up, and radiant heat. which is only a part of the heat going up through floor. my bathroom is heated with nothing but copper pipe up against wood no metal plates or insulation with 3/4 tongue and groove boards then plywood above it and linoleum tiles on floor above, but my system runs at whatever high temp my whole system is at for baseboard from 120 to 180 with high efficiency boiler so I didn't want my floor burning hot when barefoot out of shower I might add aluminum plates or insulation if we want more heat but i think this system you have there will be plenty warm
@LLCStreetwise
@LLCStreetwise Год назад
You mentioned some sort of friction sleeve at the 11:22mark but didn't list that in the description. Could you do that? Thanks.
@daddybear7062
@daddybear7062 Год назад
Name the spool Wheelyn
@Guillotines_For_Globalists
@Guillotines_For_Globalists Год назад
Certainly looks a lot more simple to service in the event of a leak versus beneath a finished floor. Is under floor heating less effective than above the floor though?
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