Product category:
Floors
News Release from: Schluter-Systems | Subject: Single room pack underfloor heating
Edited by the Buildingtalk Editorial
Team on 22 February 2008
Single room pack fast-tracks underfloor
heating
Two special versions of Schluter-Systems' award-winning underfloor heating system have been developed for small extensions and conservatories.
Award-winning system also protects floors and cuts installation time Providing an entire underfloor heating system in one complete package, the "Schluter-BEKOTEC-THERM Single Room Pack" comprises a modular screed assembly, control technology, pipes and pump for a floor of up to 15-square metres
This article was originally published on Buildingtalk on 11 Apr 2008 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
Ceramic Tile Distributors new Glasgow showroom
Showroom floor was tiled with Vitra 440 x 440 Cemento Mink and a number of Schluter profiles were specified to ensure the installation's long-lasting integrity.
Award-winning underfloor heating system
John Croft has installed Schluter-Bekotec-therm under all 1,470 square metres of flooring at his luxury eco-house in the Cotswolds.
The other new pack provides heating for up to 30-square metres.
Small extensions and conservatories do not need such an intricate system as that required for a whole house or the type of commercial applications that the original Schluter-BEKOTEC-THERM is currently being used in.
So the single room packs were developed, which can easily be connected either directly to a boiler or onto an existing radiator network.
Further reading
Penthouse owner shows sound taste
Tiling contractors Maurice Parker installing the acoustic membrane Schluter-DITRA-SOUND to cut the impact sound perception by more than half.
Stone floor cracking or debonding from substrate
Ian Knifton, Technical Manager at Schluter - Systems, says very often stone floors crack or debond because installers have not fitted an uncoupling membrane, or movement joints correctly
How to ensure stone flooring lasts longer
Ian Knifton, Technical Manager at Schluter - Systems, explains why installers who are not trained in laying stone are going to end up with failures.
Offering the same benefits of the larger system - namely tile protection technology, with reduced fuel costs, as well as fast-tracking the entire installation process, it was this combination of revolutionary features that led to Schluter-BEKOTEC-THERM being named The Tile Association's Best New Innovation for 2007 at the industry's annual awards ceremony.
TTA's prestigious Best New Innovation category is one of the industry's leading "Oscars," and is awarded for innovation in solving a tiling problem.
The Tile Association said the judges in this category were looking for something "really new" that "solved a current problem".
Schluter Managing Director Elaine Stokes says: "While more and more tilers are discovering that Schluter-BEKOTEC-THERM is a truly innovative underfloor heating system unequalled by anything else on the market, it's also very pleasing to receive national recognition in this way from our industry".
Many tilers have become wary of fixing tiles over conventional heated screeds - in particular in conservatories - because of problems they've experienced in the past with tiles cracking, buckling and debonding, caused by the screed and ceramics expanding and contracting at different rates, due to their different heat expansion coefficients during temperature changes.
However, the TTA-Award-winning Schluter-BEKOTEC-THERM is an energy-efficient and quick-reacting modular assembly system, which overcomes this long-standing problem.
Schluter Technical Manager Ian Knifton says: "Temperature changes within the screed mass of conventional underfloor heating installations - whether water or electric - lead to the screed moving at a different rate from the tile or stone surface".
"The rigid surface simply cannot cope with the degree of movement, and the tiles crack or debond".
"Also, the relatively large screed mass requires a great amount of heating energy, which can make conventional systems slow to respond to temperature changes".
The TTA judges had recognised that Schluter-BEKOTEC-THERM specifically addresses those disadvantages, with its unique combination of studded screed panels and matching heating and control technology, giving an energy-efficient and quick reacting radiant heated floor system.
Stress build-up due to shrinkage is successfully combated by micro-fine cracks, which form around the studs.
And because the whole assembly has an overall low construction height, the screed mass to be heated is relatively small.
This means the floor heating is easier to regulate and can be operated with lower supply temperatures than traditional methods, giving reduced fuel costs.
With most installations the minimum screed depth above the heating pipes is only 8 mm, so just 5 degrees is lost between the pipes and the surface, making the system particularly suitable for conservatories.
The studded panels are easily cut to size, and interlock into each other on top of a load-bearing substrate or any insulation layer that may be required.
The studs form a grid pattern, and the heating pipes simply clamp between the studs.
The combined pump and blending systems are easy to connect, making the entire installation process very quick and easy.
Another innovation of Schluter-BEKOTEC-THERM is that it considerably reduces the waiting time before tiling can begin on top of the underfloor heating.
With conventional systems, according to BS standards, a traditional sand-cement screed of 65 mm needs 28 days to dry and cure.
Then the underfloor heating has to run for several days, and cooled, before tiling.
But with Schluter-BEKOTEC-THERM, bonding an uncoupling membrane to it means ceramic or natural stone tiles can be installed as soon as the screed can be walked on.
Schluter has been involved with installations where the screed has been laid on a Friday, and the tiling commenced on the Monday.
And the heating can be turned on seven days after that. Request a free brochure from Schluter-Systems ...
• Schluter-Systems: contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Buildingtalk email newsletter
• Buildingtalk Home Page


