The plumbing on that system is a work of art. Seriously, much respect to you or whoever installed it.
@DeckerChristopherJ11 ай бұрын
Thanks for your compliments! I designed and built the entire setup myself, and documented all of it right here on my channel: kzbin.info/aero/PLdWeMRuZcbQjekwiBk_uy39IS6JFWYORD&si=UJbV2-QnCJxyK_Zg Thanks for watching!
@rustyfan8910 ай бұрын
Was just about to say the same thing!
@mistag853010 ай бұрын
Pure beauty I knew I would find this comment 👍🏿
@runeshadow10 ай бұрын
Was going to post the same! You can really see the quality here.
@Praetor35310 ай бұрын
Also was going to say the same, absolutely beautiful design and install. What do you do for a living?
@kreolekid7110 ай бұрын
Just when you're starting to get bored with KZbin, the ole algorithm kicks in and gives you 26 minutes and 12 seconds of joy. I can spend a good 10 minutes, just staring at the setup.
@mikesapp324110 ай бұрын
Same. There’s gotta be 16 grand hanging on that wall. What is this dude some type of mad scientist plumber? Bored engineer? Maybe he works for Parker? My question is how in the hell is there not sharpie instructions all over that wood, and no masking tape labels on components.
@cW-kp5jd10 ай бұрын
its so pretty isnt it? I want someone that would do a work that nice whenever i build
@RanchKings10 ай бұрын
Hi
@pauljensen569910 ай бұрын
Until KZbin decided to wreck the experience with advertising for over 30 seconds.
@kreolekid7110 ай бұрын
@@pauljensen5699 So, I'm not going crazy. I'm searching for the skip button and realizing it's not there for most ads.
@Javii9610 ай бұрын
My jaw literally dropped when I saw your utility closet. I instantly knew you did it all yourself too, no builders would ever do it like that. Great work I can tell how proud you are
@mikesapp324110 ай бұрын
No builder would do that unless given a blank check, and it’s got quadruple redundancy I guess?
@madjackgamingandfitness49810 ай бұрын
The issue people run into is no matter how much you spend, there’s always the contractor that asks for a lot and appears knowledgeable at the surface, but they are hiring a team of methheads to fufill the work for cheap. It’s a coin toss with some businesses.
@erikthered492910 ай бұрын
@@madjackgamingandfitness498 That's why you cover your ass by having a clear plan agreed on and a list of all necessary requirements from a contractor. Diagrams, engineering designs, etc. If they refuse this, avoid. Also you have every right to observe any and all construction or work that is being done; obviously this isn't possible in a lot of cases, hence why people hire contractors in the first place, but if you can be there while they're doing the work, and you know what shoddy work looks like, it's the best way you can be sure they don't do a crappy job, leave, and then ghost you about any follow-up fixes without having to go through legal channels. Biggest problem these days is people saying they are plumbers or electricians but they are really just "handymen" found on Facebook or something. Naturally, they are the cheapest option, so a significant number of people are hiring what they think are electricians or plumbers but in reality they are not licensed nor professionally trained, don't have insurance, etc. In a case like OP's radiant heating system not a single pipe or circuit would be run before the entire proposed installation is laid out on paper, and good contractors will have a guarantee that any work not up to standards is free to repair. I have shelled out money for more expensive contractors in the past and most of the time, there were issues they had to come out to fix; typically just cosmetic, but since it was in their contract they made no fuss about coming out and doing several more hours of extra work to fix it properly. The difference is they are larger businesses that budget this kind of contingency in, whereas your local neighborhood hackjob handyman does not. I would not call finding contractors a coin toss if you do your due diligence, although I understand this is harder for the average person with no trade knowledge.
@Javii9610 ай бұрын
@@madjackgamingandfitness498 yea if you want something done right, gotta do it yourself. I’m guessing the original uploader is an engineer of some sort. I think it would be neat to buy this house after the fact, i am willing to bet the uploader would type up a PDF of it’s functionality and how to use/maintain/monitor it. As an engineer myself this is something i’d definitely geek out over lol
@jeffa84710 ай бұрын
Holy mother! You're not kidding. I read your comment before I saw that part of the video and it was even more beautiful than I dreamed. I wish I had the skills to do this kind of thing around my house
@paulwilliams529610 ай бұрын
As a plumbing and heating engineer from the UK I feel I must complement you on the quality and neatness of your installation. A job well done
@DeckerChristopherJ10 ай бұрын
Thank you sir! I appreciate your compliments, especially coming from a professional. 😊
@sharonbowers992910 ай бұрын
I agree. That’s the first thing that I noticed too!
@cdurkinz10 ай бұрын
No joke even the solder joints on the copper are immaculate I wonder who did all that. They definitely had experience (installing that system specifically I mean) and a ton of planning.
@underdog2594 Жыл бұрын
A few dollars to clean the driveway.... $25,000 for a hip replacement. The math is pretty simple. I wish I had this.
@RA-II11 ай бұрын
Uses of 4:24 the home hot water heating system to melt your drive way is cool ideal
@estamnar609210 ай бұрын
That hydronic system costs like $25,000 *installed
@DeckerChristopherJ10 ай бұрын
@estamnar6092 Hi! I was actually able to build this myself for less than $10k in materials. It not only melts the driveway, but provides radiant heat to my garage and basement, floor warming to my bathrooms, kitchen, shower and entryway, as well as all of my hot water. I talk about pricing in this video if interested: kzbin.info/www/bejne/sKeygoaHnsakitksi=gB2sMk8ofbRYLU59 Thanks for watching!
@michaelgoble820010 ай бұрын
I discovered this video by chance. I have not seen any of your others so forgive me if my question has already been answered. Why did you choose a water based system rather than electric heating cables in the driveway? (I live in Canada so hip replacement is 100% covered by insurance.)
@Cannabis_Connoisseur10 ай бұрын
I'm guessing this was built a few years ago, at least if the material was 10k or less. Material is outrageous now in 2024.
@randyfox461110 ай бұрын
An old heat and air man here.. .your trade skills and engineering knowlege are out of this world. I have the highest respect for you.
@michaelmichael171611 ай бұрын
I’m a retired builder from California. Completely impressed with your whole set up. Great job both in what you’ve done and the video.
@nonicosio10 ай бұрын
i am from california; lived in chicago 2 years, so i told my family there, kiddingly, you guys should have heater system under the side walk; mind you, i did not know about heating systems in slabs, or they it was possible, them i returned to california and learned all the trades; indeed, slabs can be heated, i found out; and yes, i am very impressed as well; he is so well orginized ... i envy him, i mean admire him... hahah
@zevkej10 ай бұрын
I used to install these systems that is beautiful clean work. You can put an outdoor reset sensor in that automatically turns it on if the temp is below 32 and enough moisture to snow.
@jeffa84710 ай бұрын
What kind of sensor would figure out if there was moisture?
@jasonmershon394110 ай бұрын
@@jeffa847hygrometer
@x666xIronMaiden10 ай бұрын
@@jeffa847 Hygrometers for moisture in the atmosphere would be one.
@sam1258710 ай бұрын
I have to replace my driveway. What kind of setup is this called? What kind of company (industry name) do I look for? Or is it something I have to draw up and hire an eccentric handyman to assist? I am terrible at sweating pipes so I doubt I have the skill to do it all.
@jacknormandeau836510 ай бұрын
Look up Tekmar controls. They have a sensor that is embedded in the driveway that senses the temperature and humidity, so the system will automatically turn on when required avoiding the time it takes to clear the driveway after the fact. It also takes less energy this way. Very neat installation.
@jackpedrick467012 сағат бұрын
Glad to see you and the driveway back again ! Welcome to another season
@mrpbright11 ай бұрын
we have a system down here. Its a two part system consisting of sun and tomorrow. haha. beautiful setup. (tennessee master plumber here).
@teamdada219410 ай бұрын
No sun for 4 mths up here. Well, if you don’t count the 3-4 days in that period. Not enough snow to snowmobile or ski. Terrible area
@xmhkillz10 ай бұрын
This system works great, until the HOA Karen shows up.
@PerryHunter10 ай бұрын
...and a $20 pair of those rubber-banded crampons.
@HitomiMudo10 ай бұрын
Im sure that works great if you get the sun for more than an hour a day. The Buffalo region is finally coming out of a more than a month long period of no sun. Not so easy to melt that lovely block of ice when that happens
@Shinnizle10 ай бұрын
Even as a numbnut who understood very little about your setup, I can't help but be amazed by it. It seems very robust, efficient, secure, and my personal favorite... aesthetically pleasing!
@TheDaisytails10 ай бұрын
I enjoy watching how you have used your brain to make your life easier. I grew up in Chicago, lived in Wisconsin and Ohio, currently in CA. I've been through my fair share of snow events and ice storms. YOur system is awesome.
@wuz2do10 ай бұрын
Thermal bridging is the reason you can cook sleep and survive a winter storm in an igloo. Very interesting and enjoyable video thanks for sharing
@quigonkenny10 ай бұрын
Yep. Air is horrible at transferring heat compared to liquids or solids, so any air pockets that form between the slab and the ice actually insulate the ice from the heat of the slab. Even moreso if the ice you did melt manages to evaporate and escape, as _dry_ air is an even better insulator.
@psalm640810 ай бұрын
“Turn the driveway on”. Living in TX that’s an expression I never thought I’d hear.
@kali-wolf10 ай бұрын
Holy moly ... I'm an IT specialist and I'm in awe of your beautiful setup! It's so common to see bad setups that "normal" ones become the exception, so seeing something like this was a true delight! I'm not sure why, but the KZbin gods have put you on my homepage (and from the comments, many others also) and you have my subscription. This is my kind of content, I was shocked to see you're under 200k subs minimum, I know you'll blow up soon - *_theoretically!_*
@suhspicious10 ай бұрын
I do this for a living and I 110% approve of the installation. Installation, materials, layout etc! Looks a bit crowded but you work with the space you’ve got and that’s how you do it man. Nice work. New subscriber EARNED right here!
@suhspicious10 ай бұрын
Commenting as I’m watching through the video, I LOVE USING THE BOILER SIDE OF THE STORAGE TANK ALMOST LIKE A BUFFER TABK FOR THE REST OF THE SYSTEM! I was like why on earth did he shut it down, and then I realized while watching the overview of the system! Impressive theory implementation!l and the proof, well that’s just in the puddin’!
@suhspicious10 ай бұрын
The water eventually becomes an insulator between the concrete and the ice. Amazing. It’s like a massively cool science project. Bravo.
@MattyDaddy1410 ай бұрын
This setup is insane!! Not sure why your video popped up on my feed but glad it did! This is sooo cool to see someone did this themselves! Cool use of smart things and those smart outlets! Keep it up!!
@juliepowell849410 ай бұрын
Very cool. I just kept thinking about your wife, rolling her eyes and being grateful at the same time!! Loved this video!
@Radictor44 Жыл бұрын
I love your house. It looks so well thought out, I've mentioned this before, but it's really something so aspire to.
@DeckerChristopherJ Жыл бұрын
Thank you 😊. If you’re interested in seeing more of it, stay tuned. I have some projects I am currently filming that will show more of the inside. I’ve also debated on making photo videos showing our 15+ years of renovations and projects that led to its current state, but I wasn’t sure if there would be any interest. Thanks again for your kind words, I appreciate having people like you as subscribers!
@StevenYoungcaptual10 ай бұрын
Neat set up….And here I’m heating my pool and hot tub, while you’re heating your driveway . Greetings from Palm Springs, CA.😎🌴
@doanpham97210 ай бұрын
I wouldn't call the air pocket a "Thermal Bridge," it's more of an "Air Gap." A Thermal Bridge transfers heat through conduction by physical contact. An air gap is an air pocket that help insulates 2 objects like such in a double pane window.
@WhatDadIsUpTo10 ай бұрын
I'm a retired plumbing contractor with 48 years of hands-on field experience and I totally approve of this installation 😮! Put you some rubbing alcohol into a pump sprayer and spray thicker accumulations. Isopropyl alcohol is "miscible" with water and lowers the phase-change temperature. I'm subscribing! Never too old (75) to learn new tricks.😅
@milt0n29010 ай бұрын
I love when I see older folks comment on KZbin about hobbies or without a condescending tone. It’s heartwarming to see
@mannequinplayer10 ай бұрын
Geeking out over your home built system and sharing with all of us. Awesome! Thanks for uploading :)
@DeckerChristopherJ10 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching!! 😊
@WillLeingang10 ай бұрын
Your equipment room is like a printed circuit board ❤
@artisticanna527510 ай бұрын
Right, it’s flawless
@stevenbeshures696210 ай бұрын
As a contractor, I just want to personally complement whoever did your hot water on demand system. They obviously take very much pride in their work. That is an absolute work of art. Whoever did that work you have my respect that some great work
@robertStone-hq1by3 күн бұрын
Amazing piping job the neatest joint solder I have ever seen a marvelous work of art
@DeckerChristopherJ8 сағат бұрын
Thanks!
@TheUllrichj10 ай бұрын
Brilliant job of explaining the system and bridging. Made good sense. Your family is lucky to have you keeping them safe and comfortable.
@sandyslank175210 ай бұрын
Just found your video, thank you for sharing your experience. WOW!!! I am from Southern California and I have become fascinated with weather events. Your information about the “ice bridge” is new and amazing to me. Thank you so much
@drcornelius827510 ай бұрын
In MN I've seen many heated sidewalk system and the concrete never seems to last long. Perhaps if they were left on low all winter it might help. You're basically forcing the concrete through many years worth of freeze-thaw cycles in a short time.
@OTRTrader Жыл бұрын
I so wish we could have something like this for the roads. They have it in some parts of Europe. Imagine how many crash injuries and fatalities could be prevented, not to mention the salt and ice damage to the highways. Imagine being able to go over Donner Pass in California without chaining, or through Wyoming or North/South Dakota and Montana without getting stuck in 20 feet of snow.
@vinces820910 ай бұрын
It sounds cool and all till one does a bit of math and then the idea just doesn't work, at 50w a sq ft for a two lane road you would need almost 8mega watts per mile, in states like ND,SD,MT,MN when its -30 out you would need more it just isn't going to work on a large scale.
@Uhh.thankyou10 ай бұрын
Yep
@Bob_Adkins10 ай бұрын
@@vinces8209 It wouldn't even be feasible for my 90 ft. driveway.
@michaeltorres87710 ай бұрын
You have a beautiful home. Thank you for sharing this.
@johnrogers284910 ай бұрын
Your utility closet is a work of art absolutely beautiful work.
@MsMorganGirls10 ай бұрын
When my great-great grandparents emigrated from England, they "landed" in Erie County, NY. They didn't waste much time moving south, first to Tennessee, then to Florida, where most of my family still lives.
@Ozarkwoods10 ай бұрын
Excellent system Chris I have to hand it it to you, an awesome set up!
@DeckerChristopherJ10 ай бұрын
Thanks! I really appreciate that!
@peterwill369911 ай бұрын
Your system is a thing of beauty.And your soldiering is perfect.
@edstevens9357 Жыл бұрын
This is an awesome system. I’m saving my money for when I do my driveway over. Just south of Albany
@_Moto21510 ай бұрын
Dude. That utility closet looks like the inside of a submarine lol. Awesome video.
@eyeexaggerate768710 ай бұрын
I had a mental picture of the utility room when you put that piece of ice on the bin back in its spot. -just saw the manabloc, I put one in my house and love it
@DeckerChristopherJ10 ай бұрын
😂 A few others have commented on that. I don’t even remember doing it, I had to go back and watch myself! My OCD I guess…. I also love the manabloc! Thanks for your comment and for watching!
@MacMFer2 күн бұрын
That is artwork! A house about 2 miles down the road did this. They have about a 200 yards driveway and when they were doing the construction everyone was curious what they were doing but, as soon as I seen pallets of foam sheets, I knew. That driveway hasn't seen snow in 3 years and this is above Buffalo's line of longitude.
@DKLabs9910 ай бұрын
Had no idea how complex a heated driveway system was. Fascinating video and very impressed with your work
@HistoricalFidelity10 ай бұрын
Have you considered applying a black IR emissive coating on top of the concrete? This could help with the ice bridging effect as the coating would use the energy from your heated glycol to emit infrared radiation that would continue inputting thermal energy into the ice regardless of airflow under the ice bridge. Worth a try and would make an interesting video
@Cheez19792 күн бұрын
I know I’m late to the game but man what a cool system!! I want to do this in my house
@mrmiscast11 ай бұрын
I ran across this channel by accident and was I impressed... I'd assume some call this an obsession, but I'm going to say it's the very useful hobby of an intelligent person with a bit of extra time and some extra money... No doubt if someone is as capable as yourself there is no reason not to hold off Mother Nature if they can... By the way, the setup, the equipment, the installation is just fantastic. Wonderful job, neat, clean, well thought out.. I'm a new subscriber, yes from the deep South, Texas i fact.. Now the snow melting driveway isn't a thing for me but I will use your expertise to slightly cool a concrete floor on those 105 degree days, right up but below the point where the floor sweats, and air movement to make a large shop more comfortalbe in the summer and warm it during the winter without a forced air closed system. Again, I'm very happy to have found your channel and congrats on making your home safer for your family and obviously thinking far far far ahead for any possible issues with the house systems as well.... I could have used a Solar addition to the water heater on multiple occasions over the years... Thank you very much... Oh, just 1 question... Did you make any special adjustment for the ice/snow melt when the driveway system is on? Or do you need to do that at all?
@Treestofirewood Жыл бұрын
Yeah bridging is a real thing. Happen to me the last snow fall. I turned the system off to early. As you know the slab holds temp for quite a while and melts and then dries. I turned it off before it stop snowing and it got windy and cooled the surface to fast and woke up to a sheet of ice. Turned back on the snow melt. Worked pretty good but like you said had to break it up to to come back in contact with surface again. But yeah the concrete was 100% dry.
@joshuatran366710 ай бұрын
This system works if it is turned on during the storm so ice never has the chance to form. Also all the melted ice water just pools at end of the driveway or other less heated areas. So i am not sure if it was $10k well spent. I know it's not my money but just a thought. With that money, bags of ice melters would have been more cost effective.
@gilsterk Жыл бұрын
Love the time lapse videos!
@moby1kanob10 ай бұрын
it def would have melted even with thermal bridging as the air underneath does warm up, but I also get just wanting to get it done with. I dont have the best patience either. Either way, great thing to have if you live in a cold climate!! Very impressive.
@wolfram40710 ай бұрын
It's not just a matter of time but also efficiency. Less energy spent melting the ice if you can shovel it off. It is interesting how air acts as an insulator even when it's warm, like having a fire in an igloo will make it warm inside but the heat transfer from air to ice is so slow the structure stays solid.
@sharonbowers992910 ай бұрын
Respect to the good man of the house. Great job! Clean organized, and well maintained! KUDOS!
@redshot_889710 ай бұрын
Very nice install, just looks super professional. All installs should look this neat.🔥🔥
@DeckerChristopherJ10 ай бұрын
Thanks! As a DIY’r it definitely took me a lot longer than it would’ve a professional, but I saved a ton in labor and learned how to solder. Another benefit is that having designed and built it all myself, I know exactly how it all works, and if something breaks I know how to diagnose and fix it! Thanks for watching!
@terryaustin597610 ай бұрын
I heard long ago when building ice arenas you can also keep sidewalks and driveways clear. Allegedly when making ice you are actually removing heat from the water. Capture that heat and circulate it under sidewalks, floors, driveways to keep warm or help aid in ice melt. I am not an engineer but the idea does seem plausible. (WNY native resident)
@zachmoyer184910 ай бұрын
that is what he has a heat pump
@jonr380910 ай бұрын
I watched your video when you took on the blizzard several years ago. This is another Interesting contest by taking on an ice storm. Love this type of 'head on' challenge ! Disappointed that you had to shovel since I have a bad back. I agree, the horse got out of the barn while you were away. I wonder if you could beat 'thermal bridging' if you pretreated the surface ?? Possibly using calcium chloride or the liquid spray that the highway departments use now so as not to damage the concrete. I pretreat my driveway and it works great. I have seen your operation before but still marvel at the plumbing and electrical setup. You are my hero. 🙂
@travisspoerle155710 ай бұрын
That install is beautiful. Whoever did that hands off to them. True craftsmanship.
@TheMightyOdin9 ай бұрын
Dude, I love how clean and organized that setup looks.
@chrisdaniel133911 ай бұрын
Christopher, did you put down a 4" thick layer of XPS foam before laying the PEX so that the heat cannot go into the soil it can only up through the concrete driveway to melt snow or ice?
@DeckerChristopherJ11 ай бұрын
Hey Chris! So I used 2” XPS foam for a total of R-10. You can see where I did that in these videos: kzbin.info/www/bejne/nampYoelqrhoftUsi=2Tf-mkaizoPHeXy5 kzbin.info/www/bejne/q6ndgZl9jbWjiM0si=xsT6qAKN1Kt9WaJR and kzbin.info/www/bejne/on7FZX2gd6yoqKMsi=M_O-xgGdJE7dPqQ0 If you have additional questions, please don’t hesitate to ask and I’ll try to answer! Thanks for watching!
@jeramiahcox697610 ай бұрын
Geo-thermal pump system, buried 200 feet into a shallow well. Filled with saltwater, run like in-floor heating within your driveway slab, hooked to a small pump and controlled by a temperature sensor that turns on at 32 degrees.
@sandmantk490110 ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure the city will not give a permit for drilling any well in the city limits. This set up is a great idea and a very good lay out. I live in the southern tier and unfortunately a lot of times we get these storms we have power outages. Most gas heaters require electric to operate and N.Y.S. has a big push goiing on to get rid of gas and wood stoves. Otherwise the price of a nice chainsaw and an outside wood furnace would get my attention. But in a differant northern state this would be a great idea. In N.Y. I would like to see the electric bill if these heaters turned on every time it dipped to 32 deg up here.
@carezee Жыл бұрын
Chris we really have been getting lots of crazy weather this winter. I think we have been hit with just about everything here. I love watching your videos and wondered how this was working out for you with the ice. Your driveway has been worth having for sure!
@DeckerChristopherJ Жыл бұрын
Hey carezee! It has been wild this year hasn't it? I forgot to mention the EARTHQUAKE we had in early February too! kzbin.infoypDO77RSArM?feature=share The driveway has been pushed to the limit this winter, but I have been happy with it's performance. It has worked as designed. Thanks for being a subscriber and for taking the time to watch! I really appreciate that! 😊
@jman19489 ай бұрын
I like watching winter on youtube from Florida. Its so pretty. Cool that you have a heated driveway.
@gobblegoblin10 ай бұрын
this is badass
@DL-rx7pj Жыл бұрын
I have an electric heated driveway and bridging is a real thing. I have tried a few different methods throughout the years. I mostly drive my car over it to crush it down when it's more snow than ice but in your case when it's solid ice I found that thinly spread ice melt, a tamper, a good shovel and of course some muscle do the trick. As a plumber on long island i can really appreciate the work you did. I had to go with electric because I didn't have the room to do a hydronic system. None of these systems are perfect but they sure do help a lot. Keep up the good work.
@DeckerChristopherJ Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your compliments D L. They mean a lot to me coming from a professional plumber. You're absolutely correct in that none of these systems are perfect, but they do help a lot! I'm curious how big of a driveway you're heating with your electric system, and how much power is needed? I am installing Solar Panels on the house this spring, and I've been thinking about adding electric loops to my front steps. I would love and feedback you have on the system your using, good or bad! Thanks!!
@brucekatkin5310Күн бұрын
I have friend that has electric radiant heat for the driveway. It stays on standby and when it snows, the sensors pick it up and activate the heating cables.
@gstephen894910 ай бұрын
I’m from NY and moved to Texas back in 2019. So so glad I got away from the snow and such but I’m mad that no one in my family thought about installing the set up you have. Would’ve saved so much time and energy and our driveway wasn’t even as big as yours
@DocMacLovin10 ай бұрын
Very nice clean and tidy installation. Kudos!
@Ministry_Of_Silly_Walks10 ай бұрын
That system is a thing of beauty.
@DeckerChristopherJ10 ай бұрын
Thanks! 😊
@Schatzie30110 ай бұрын
We are in North Alabama. A few weeks ago we were iced in all over town with single digit temps for a several days. Sure could have used this. Awesome system.
@cryhavoc3810 ай бұрын
just your everyday run of the mill plumbing closet. Is that all ya got?? LOL..this is awesome
@DeckerChristopherJ10 ай бұрын
😂. Thanks for your compliments and for watching!
@Highest_Expectations10 ай бұрын
You seem like one of the nicest people in the world man. Would love to have ya as a buddy! Great video!
@russellfrancis81310 ай бұрын
That is quite the setup. I have never seen anything like it. Reading the comments it seems that you've built it, and it shows. Very cool. It's also absolutely insane. Good work!
@groovy193710 ай бұрын
I am impressed! That doesn't happen very often. I wish I were your friend or neighbor, I can tell we would get a long well. I love this kind of stuff - organized, glycol systems, hot water systems, all your stuff is neat, etc. . . . . I could go on and on. I love cement style siding too, your home looks so well done and kept. I dislike vinyl or aluminum siding. You have so much order in how you do things. I love order, I dislike chaos.
@AatroxSuppMain10 ай бұрын
I've never seen a more beautiful setup for anything like this, not server racks, other driveway heaters, radiant floor systems, or carwash systems. Everything just flows and runs exactly how it should.
@eggman9713 Жыл бұрын
A bit offtopic but I love the little soffit lights you have on your house and garage. It provides some nice looking ambient light without being a large point source that blinds you. Very nice style.
@DeckerChristopherJ Жыл бұрын
Thank you! 😊 I thought about doing some videos on the house, including things like the rain screen siding, oak trim work, and the lighting, etc. I am currently working on installing a 80+ year old fireplace mantle. I wasn't sure if any of my subscribers would be interested in that stuff. I still have some soffit lights to install on the sides of the garage, and I wired a separate switch to turn them off when not needed. I will do a video for sure when I install them. Thanks again for the compliment, I appreciate it!
@dnlmachine428710 ай бұрын
Its a nice system for sure. Here in Canada, dealing with the water runoff that freezes is a challenge. Good slope and drainage is key. Stay gold.
@Mickey-jn8hz10 ай бұрын
What an amazing installation! WOW!
@brianrobinson396110 ай бұрын
Pretty amazing. Funny I was working on installing a snow melt system today and this popped up in my feed. We use a snow sensor 90 from Tekmar to automatically turn the system on. I’m sure you have some kind of snow detection system but didn’t see it mentioned in the video.
@DeckerChristopherJ10 ай бұрын
So I did install the Tekmar socket in the slab, and ran the conduit back to the utility room for future installation, but I haven’t brought myself to spend the $2k+ for the sensor or controls yet. So far it works great turning it on / off in person or from my phone. This storm was unique in that we were in an area with no cell coverage for a few days so I had no access to the cameras or SmartThings to see what was happening and turn it on until it was to late. Maybe I’ll install the Tekmar controls at some point. Thanks for watching!
@Lledyl6810 ай бұрын
Good stuff man! I wish that my siblings would have saw this before they had my parent’s new driveway poured. They’re in their 80’s and this is a quality of life home feature for those seniors 26:13 who can afford it and live in snowy conditions.
@ruserious957710 ай бұрын
Nice rig! The key is to have it up to temp when the snow starts to fall.
@theairstig916410 ай бұрын
So the snow melts then re solidifies in to proper clear ice?
@BAKABRAND10 ай бұрын
As licensed boiler operator i appreciate the setup you have in the basement. looks similar to my work environment
@dillard71510 ай бұрын
there are specific thermostats u put in your drive way. as soon as it detects snow it turns on an your driveway will never have snow in it ever. then you dont have to worry about it
@Mind694207 ай бұрын
your utility room looks wild. Great cable management, very clean!
@MalVMoo10 ай бұрын
Wow. Impressive
@DeckerChristopherJ10 ай бұрын
Thanks! 😊
@edjovi367711 ай бұрын
as a lic plumber omg u did a great job on the install !!!! hello from eddie leak master plumbing in ct
@jemery310 ай бұрын
You did a fantastic job with that mechanical room! Wow!
@Bob_Adkins10 ай бұрын
If he is selling his house and tries to explain it to a novice prospective buyer, he'll get brain lock. Someone familiar with circulation heating will be thrilled.
@LaszloBagi Жыл бұрын
Chris... Another great video!
@DeckerChristopherJ Жыл бұрын
Thanks Laszlo! 😊 Got another one coming out tomorrow morning at 8!
@TheRedStateBlue10 ай бұрын
i used to have this happen all the time on my farm when i was a kid. all you had to do when you noticed it was only melting the contact part and forming air bubbles was grab a sledgehammer (or anything else that's heavy, strong and can be used standing up). grab it by the handle, upside down, and just drop it 1-2 inches from above the ice to crack it. all it needs is a place for the air to go and you get contact with the heated source back. i guarantee it won't hurt either the concrete or the heating tube. we get ridiculous ice storms in Oklahoma, and we lost a horse on a slab of icy concrete by one of our barns, once. mom said never again and made my dad tear up all the concrete around all three barns and run heated tubing. this was the mid 80s. it was not cheap.
@scottnewton904610 ай бұрын
Very cool. Always interesting to see the home systems people install to make life easier and to see the region-specific needs that lead to those installations. Here in Southern California, my side yard consists of the various pool / spa / waterfall pumps, pool heater, as well as the solar control boxes etc. Here, we’re trying to stay cool. There, you’re trying to stay warm.
@jimconnelly81610 ай бұрын
Holy wow brother, good for you. You kept my attention for the video.
@mist492610 ай бұрын
loved seeing the ice sliding across the lawns. ty what i couldnt see i could hear it slide across
@moby1kanob10 ай бұрын
imagine this was for a PC as the CPU cooling solution. This is basically a giant DIY CPU liquid cooler but in reverse.
@DeckerChristopherJ10 ай бұрын
I have actually run it in reverse in the summer to pull heat of the driveway and pre-heat my domestic hot water 😂. I made a video of it here: kzbin.info/www/bejne/p2WXfaKsntJ9qassi=6wWOag3Fohs-bwGW
@barrylitchfield835711 ай бұрын
Kinda like watching grass growing.... After seeing that demonstration and you still need to shovel the "bridged ice" that remains after several hours. Your system looks great. Beautiful workmanship. Very neat and well organized. I'm just glad I'm in south Texas. Snow shovels are an unknown thing here. No retail stores have them. We just wait it out here. Normally it melts within a few hours.
@bstives5811 ай бұрын
you wouldn't have the bridging if you turned it on before the storm...but he was out of town.
@yolo_burrito10 ай бұрын
I love watching these. I live in South Florida and in mid-January my mango trees start blooming.
@JohnVKaravitis10 ай бұрын
Which means what, exactly?
@randylahey734310 ай бұрын
I live in New Brunswick Canada and feel the same way watching hurricanes
@charlespipitone23244 күн бұрын
They have outdoor sensors that will automatically start your system as conditions (temperature/ humidity) form to start hours/days b4 it even shows. Thus, concrete is warm enough so nothing forms.
@richardrtracy10 ай бұрын
I have a Noritz with a outdoor sensor that will kick on that zone when it gets below 32. I know you were away, but you've got to trust your system, it looks fantastic.my advice would be to heat that slab all winter, once it comes to temp it doesn't use that much gas to keep it there. Thanks
@richardtheweaver489110 ай бұрын
2:00 “bridging” is all you need. Warm the driveway and it will turn into a no-stick frying pan. Makes for easy work with minimal electricity
@suzanneshwaluk485610 ай бұрын
A true work of beauty and genius😊
@xorbodude10 ай бұрын
Perhaps the driveway shouldn't be flat rather it should be convex. to prevent bridging
@ryanjg5136Күн бұрын
That's one hell of a system, as an electrician I am very impressed. The hot water would be better than electric elements.
@jlatture110 ай бұрын
That is an absolutely beautiful setup
@Camaro45th10 ай бұрын
As a person who has plumbing experience for over a decade, your basement is a plumber’s wet dream. Beautiful work.
@Kinkajou101510 ай бұрын
I know this was a year ago, but I would see if there was a way to set up the system to cycle for 15 minutes every hour or so if the temps drop below like 35F if you are going to be away for a few days. That way it helps inhibit a slab like that from forming in the first place without needing it to run continuously.
@Ghostdog410 ай бұрын
Fantastic Utility Closet! I'm here for the duration. Subscribed
@tdotw7710 ай бұрын
You just popped up on my feed, first vid I've seen. I'm also in Buffalo, so the title caught my attention right away. You have a pretty sweet set up there. I've been in residential construction and plumbing all my working life. That plumbing is A1👍🏻👌🏻 (ESPECIALLY for not being a plumber!)Nice job. I subbed & I'll check out some more vids in the future 👍🏻🛠️🔧🔩⚡🔌⚠️💨🔥👨🏼🔧