Hydronic vs Forced
Air Heating and Cooling
Hydronic, or hot water, heating has been standard for years
in many parts of the U.S. It is seeing a surge in popularity at present, mainly
because of the increasing use of radiant floor heating, which is known for providing
even, comfortable heat. Yet contrary to popular belief, not every home in the
free world needs hydronic heat to achieve this level of comfort.
Apples to Oranges
Hydronic heat is sometimes touted as more comfortable than
forced-air heat. But since the typical hydronic system is significantly more
expensive than the typical hot-air system, especially if cooling is included,
this is an apples-to-oranges comparison. Customers willing to invest in a quality
hot-air system, rather than a bare-bones package at the lowest price, will find
that forced hot air can be as comfortable as hydronic heating. Unfortunately,
if the heating system is hot water and the home owner doesn’t spend the
extra up front to cool their home, their finished home may be still too expensive
to add the cooling system later and probably imposable to even install without
doing even more expensive and inconvenient remodeling to accommodate such an
install. Or the homeowner may have to add a window air conditioner instead to
each of the rooms in the home. Another system maybe a ductless system that is
not as efficient as the central split system design on a standard forced air
install.
The least expensive forced-air system usually includes
a single-stage furnace with a single-speed blower motor. The entire house is
ducted as a single zone, and therefore has just one thermostat. If the system
is sized by a contractor who uses a rule-of-thumb formula to estimate heat loss
and heat gain, the homeowner can end up paying higher-energy bills for a noisier,
less efficient system that provides uneven temperatures from room to room.
A quality forced-air system would probably include a Coleman
two-stage furnace with a variable-speed blower motor.
The house would be separated into several zones, I recommend
Arzel Zoning Systems, with separate thermostats, and the air would be distributed
through well-sealed, insulated ducts. In many cases, such an upgraded hot-air
system will still cost less than a hydronic system.
by: Daniel Gipe
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