One of the things I have wondered and have never heard first hand experience from is that I like to sleep in a cold bedroom. So, what I am hearing is that if you are on a slab, it is at least 2 hours of heat radiance, so you would want to cut the supply of heat off at 8 and start it up at 6A assuming normal sleep patterns?
Just wondering what experience people who have radiant in floor heat can share...
I have in-slab heat in my great room, including kitchen, (a tad over 1000 sq ft.) while in the master suite Nother 1000 plus, I have a mix. The bedroom proper has in ceiling radiant (pex behind drywall) while the master bath has in slab and the shower has in slab plus in-wall and is on its own stat which has a sensor in the tile grout of the wall so it controls the floor and wall temp not the air temp.
The sitting room has forced air plus a direct vent propane decorative parlor stove (gas log.) The walk-in closets have no heat. OK they are heated, but indirectly. We have a HRV unit with 4 registers to collect the outgoing air stream. One of these registers is in the ceiling of the far corner of the walk-in closet. Warm air from the rest of the house passes through the bedroom into the walk-in closet via a bypass register (with filter) in the wall and is exhausted to the outdoors. In winter the closets are a degree or two below the bedroom temp.
All the parts of the house with in floor or in ceiling hydronic heat also have, in addition to the zone stats for hydronic control, programmable set back stats for the forced air (heating or cooling.) My geothermal heat pump can provide chilled air, heated air, heated water, or hot air and hot water at the same time. you can set the air stat a degree or two below the hydronic stat and if the outside temp drops fast so that the hydronic lag makes the floor fall behind then the hot air kicks in till the floor catches up.
A hydronic ceiling for the bedroom has worked out very well indeed. We wanted a good carpet in the bedroom and the R-factor would have interfered with a hydronic slab. Much of the bedroom is covered by the bed and furniture which would interfere with heating. The ceiling is never obscured by anything and if you were not aware the heat was in the ceiling you couldn't tell. The room is just comfortable. It cools or heats faster as the sheetrock has a low R-value and much less thermal mass than a slab. The slab under the carpet is insulated underneath and ends to maintain the average room temp or close to it.
If you want to be able to more quickly change the temp of the room with hydronics, go with a hydronic ceiling with a carpeted area or both hydronic ceiling and floor in a tiled area. If you want to sleep in a cool room but have it warm in the day then go radiant ceiling, hydronics or otherwise.
Pat