Live in Northern Sweden and do ground work, including concrete slabs. I have never seen this type of system or even heard about any houses up here having it. It might be a good design, but not very commonly used.
@bryanbaril53256 ай бұрын
To start off with, no rebar in the footing?
@amygorman52676 ай бұрын
Wow-fantastic product!
@parsmedberg53847 ай бұрын
Two things comes to mind. The footings have no insulation and in the centre there is only one layer of insulation . Won’t meet the standard even for a normal house.
@Mayonnaise_Ketchup7 ай бұрын
타인의 영상을 도둑질하는 채널이군요 kzbin.info/www/bejne/n2qnk5ZpqZd8a8k
@eddiebezzell7 ай бұрын
The romans invented this!!!
@thomasward72358 ай бұрын
Those transitions are so messy and annoying. Please stop...
@jeffhuntley29218 ай бұрын
Seems like a bunch of weak areas in the foundation where the pipe runs
@peterjames67468 ай бұрын
No Footings? OK what about an assessment of soil conditions and applied buildings loads...very doubtful about this. What about soil heave, what about overland water flow washing out gravel under the polystyrene...
@mattblack1338 ай бұрын
Wont the slab be weakened around all those 4" voids?
@petera.watters44597 ай бұрын
I was wondering about that as well
@timothyjohnson60558 ай бұрын
Not nearly enough foam under there. Just heat the air in the house, much more efficient.
@dand55938 ай бұрын
Great content annoyng that you speak in the same time, i was not able watch more that 2 min...😢
@jbouza098 ай бұрын
Not a new idea, I lived off base back in 85 when I was stationed in Korea and we used a coal brick call Ahndal and a little fan. Same idea only they used copper plumbing. Made sleeping on the floor very comfortable.
@geraldhartman23368 ай бұрын
The Romans be like: “hello!, it’s called a ‘hypocaust’ system. Yeah, we invented it.” Nevertheless, this is an awesome system that I’ll be using in the near future. 👍👍
@coffeyvideoproductions77678 ай бұрын
Yes, hypocaust , or ondol in Korea. Frank loyd Wright used some similar system inspired by floor heating he saw in Japan.
@MrTyeandrews8 ай бұрын
Until foam degradation and then you have uneven foundation lol
@antoniocampos56388 ай бұрын
EPS foam usually doesn't degrade if not exposed to UV light, like the Sun that won't be reaching under the concrete slab! It would take a lot of heat, closer to the melting point of EPS (a lot higher then anything there) to degrade it. I would be worried about water getting to it and freezing in the winter, so not degradation, but physical damage from elements. But the slab is over a drainage system, so they only need to worry if the water level gets too high under there (very hard to do in mountains if it isn't on a flash flood area). Besides that, no worries about the EPS foam degrading before the house itself as a whole.
@lauriviik8 ай бұрын
In your comparison you forget most important thing. Then compare you should compare like for like. How is it better than other types of floor heating? I live in nordic and liquid is most popular because you can heat liquid with anything. Then building and money is tight for example, you can slap on a electric heater. After you have saved enough money, replace it with geothermal or just add on and keep electric for emergency, do whatever you like. Liquid doesnt care where heat comes from. Energy required to keep house warm stays the same no matter if you heat floor with airtubes, liquid tubes or electric wire.
@banditto19699 ай бұрын
without footings, how long does it take the foundation to crack and sag?
@davidlangford91078 ай бұрын
FOOTINGS? NY QUESTION TOO!
@kevinveinotte34549 ай бұрын
Cool- my boss built his own house with heating like this in the 70's; heated it with a wood/oil furnace for an example. Worked great. Everybody thought he was crazy. The heating system was changed in the 80's to electric baseboards-common around here. Doubt the people there now even know about the original system they are walking on. He used actual duct work(was heavier back then). Once the concrete dried the cavity remained. The cement would radiate heat for days.
@gone2island8199 ай бұрын
koran style. most of them don't even understand the property of material and they don 't know what the ipc and upc code lol
@klrmoto9 ай бұрын
What about critters?
@fryske.tynster9 ай бұрын
al nice but elec wil get exp in the winterm.. so now the calculation wurks but not in 3 years
@shaneferguson24189 ай бұрын
There is no way this works. This is something you see on tv at 3 am in the morning
@fixitfaxit40069 ай бұрын
Yes it works, check out their history and global applications.
@shaneferguson24189 ай бұрын
@@AdirondackHomestead I’m not totally closed minded I starte d heating and a/c as a job since 1995 and doing mainly infloor / snowmelt and high velocity air handlers as a now current job. So I install 1/2 rehau pipe for infloor on 6’’ center along the perimeter and 12’’ center for interior with a lochinvar boiler. I realize that heat can come from below but they are saying that it heats with 10btu’s /sqft which isn’t really a lot (a person gives off 400btu/hr). It is also a slab on grade build so you can’t turn off the heat. Which means they expect some heat to travel downward. How much of the 10btus is expected to go down and then realistically what is left to go into the building space. So if you had a 1500sq/ft single floor house it’s going to be heated with 15000btu water or electric and a portion of that goes down to keep the foundation from freezing. Does the heat stay on the whole time. Then looking at a 2’’ or a 4’’ pipe on what looks like at least 18’’ center We put 6’’ on center for the exterior 4’ then 12’’ after that How evenly can that slab heated and the perimeter should have the most heat for the windows and doors and heat for the walls. Just saying
@jn1ty9 ай бұрын
How long does it take to get the slab up to temp and how long does it hold temp?
@jameshalliday4129 ай бұрын
If you’re spending $1,200/month on propane, you need to close your windows and doors. I heat 3,000 square feet of home for less than $1,500/ WINTER! Admittedly, I only live in Canada…🙄
@TheFunkymohawk7 ай бұрын
I heard that too. $1200/ month for propane heat is insane. I'm in Ontario canada. Not crazy cold, comparatively but $2000 would cover my cost for an entire year of heat and I'm continually thinking of cheaper options.
@LevizGibson9 ай бұрын
I cant find info on the system... anywhere. Like the heater.... Where it draws air from.... where it exhausts air. Nothing. No specs or anything.
@advertslaxxor9 ай бұрын
I don't think it needs to draw or exhaust air; it's just a electric heater circulating air through those tubes.
@LevizGibson9 ай бұрын
@@advertslaxxor so an enclosed electric system... interesting
@amdasaba9 ай бұрын
$120/m ~= $4/day on heating That's like half the average wage where I live bruh No frikking way we can afford this
@pisspoortraveller76439 ай бұрын
Does pouring a slab like this use more concrete or less?
@davidlangford91078 ай бұрын
WOULD SEEM LESS (removal of cement for heating pipes) BUT HOW MUCH THICKER MUST THE SLAB BE FOR THE PIPED AREA?
@na-fv7cl9 ай бұрын
I call b******* on the $1200 a month on propane.
@tireballastserviceofflorid77718 ай бұрын
That's what I said. I heated a 1995 trailer house in seriously cold Temps. It wasn't that bad at all.
@edregan63918 ай бұрын
Well. My shop used to cost 15,000 a month keeping it at 45 and this was back in late 90s and early 00s. Don’t doubt the costs of propane.
@InTheYear7 ай бұрын
And you are on a mountain at 10,000 ft in your 4000 sq ft home?
@Pitoumotorsport10 ай бұрын
Une maison passive avec du béton, des évacuations sans pente et avec des coudes partout ? les gars soyons sérieux !!!
@young-f4c10 ай бұрын
i saw this from other guys channel which named HwangGum MangChi. He doesn't followed passive house techique. Just copy what he want to do.
@olli897710 ай бұрын
What i was just seen ? It had to bee Joke
@someguydino677010 ай бұрын
beautiful work REALLY nice that there's no mugging idiot narrating with 3rd grade show and tell skills
@Dancing_Alone_wRentals10 ай бұрын
The rebar bender is a magical machine! tHanks for the video
@lucipherjohnson10 ай бұрын
$800 a month that’s insane or did I miss hear, mind blown.
@taylor1108910 ай бұрын
No, I heard the same thing, $800-1,200 a month.
@theleiteone8310 ай бұрын
His neighbours, who heat with propane, $800-$1200 per month. This system $120 per month. They are in high elevation Colorado area.
@taylor110899 ай бұрын
@@theleiteone83 That’s what we were commenting about, was that fact that the Neighbors were Spending a Insane Amount for Propane every month. Most Americans couldn’t afford a Propane Bill that is a Small House Payment.
@benchmark7610 ай бұрын
Too less steel, not enough space to the sides to be covered with enough concrete
@NevzatUskovski-ie4uh10 ай бұрын
Super a kolky kvadrati
@andregenter4213 Жыл бұрын
1:25 What good are the bitumen membranes if they are not welded together? Don't you have experts who know what they're doing?
@andregenter4213 Жыл бұрын
Foil much too thin. Fundament thickness seems not being calculated, but way bigger than neccessary. Is that a 10 floor building?
@WladimirGalkin10 ай бұрын
Yes, yes. I would like to ask in what place is this foundation energy efficient? The footboard is superfluous, the base is not prepared, the warm contour is not closed. A waste of time and money.
@manfredvonrichthofen4738 Жыл бұрын
which part was low budget?the labor?
@newera4k333 Жыл бұрын
Was the guy at the end wearing a bullet proof vest?
@ELPURY2022 Жыл бұрын
😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
@l0I0I0I0 Жыл бұрын
Interesting! Ty
@thomasschafer7268 Жыл бұрын
Was soll das denn sein. Nie im Leben. Keine durchgängige Dämmebene. Unsinniger Beton drunter. Keine randdämmung.