B
Blimey
Apologies this is so long winded, but hopefully you're an understanding bunch & you'll stick with the novel and provide a straight opinion on this.
I'm a competent DIY'er (ex-spark), but it's a while since I've done any DIY tiling at home. I'm now re-doing the kitchen floor/walls in a 1960’s house, and having purchased some polished porcelain tiles felt it was a good idea to go for UFH.
The house is well built, crawl space below joists & having researched options (& that it's about 10m2 of UFH, across a 13m2 of tiles) I plumped for a wet system, using a rad conversion kit. This will be sat underneath the existing f-boards, Celotex laid on battened OSB, then spreader plates on top, rather than the biscuit mix).
I then turned to advice on best substrate options above the FB’s & after half day googling this forum and elsewhere, I was headed for using 6mm NMP, given it gets a strong thumbs up on here/elsewhere. Plus the price seems comparable to ply.
To get to the point, it’s dawned on me, that with the above installation and the fact that NMP is an insulator & not a conductor, am I just suppressing UFH output even more by using NMP before tiling?
I get that I can't lay the tiles directly onto the FB’s, but am I right in thinking that whilst NMP is the most stable base for the tiles, is it bad for the UFH? (majority of google results seem to link it with being laid below leccy mats). Some posts suggest NMP can act as a heat store, but I'm a bit sceptical?
So I’d really appreciate the pros opinions if you wouldn’t mind. is NMP still the best option, even with impact to UFH efficiency, or are there alternatives that can provide a solid base & good conductivity?
Don’t want to go for a leccy mat. Not because of bills, but also the fact I've purchased the wet system kit. If an alternate to NMP is a well prepped 12mm ply I could probably live with the height uplift in the floor.
Thanks for sticking with this & look forward to comments & suggestions.
Thanks
Chris
I'm a competent DIY'er (ex-spark), but it's a while since I've done any DIY tiling at home. I'm now re-doing the kitchen floor/walls in a 1960’s house, and having purchased some polished porcelain tiles felt it was a good idea to go for UFH.
The house is well built, crawl space below joists & having researched options (& that it's about 10m2 of UFH, across a 13m2 of tiles) I plumped for a wet system, using a rad conversion kit. This will be sat underneath the existing f-boards, Celotex laid on battened OSB, then spreader plates on top, rather than the biscuit mix).
I then turned to advice on best substrate options above the FB’s & after half day googling this forum and elsewhere, I was headed for using 6mm NMP, given it gets a strong thumbs up on here/elsewhere. Plus the price seems comparable to ply.
To get to the point, it’s dawned on me, that with the above installation and the fact that NMP is an insulator & not a conductor, am I just suppressing UFH output even more by using NMP before tiling?
I get that I can't lay the tiles directly onto the FB’s, but am I right in thinking that whilst NMP is the most stable base for the tiles, is it bad for the UFH? (majority of google results seem to link it with being laid below leccy mats). Some posts suggest NMP can act as a heat store, but I'm a bit sceptical?
So I’d really appreciate the pros opinions if you wouldn’t mind. is NMP still the best option, even with impact to UFH efficiency, or are there alternatives that can provide a solid base & good conductivity?
Don’t want to go for a leccy mat. Not because of bills, but also the fact I've purchased the wet system kit. If an alternate to NMP is a well prepped 12mm ply I could probably live with the height uplift in the floor.
Thanks for sticking with this & look forward to comments & suggestions.
Thanks
Chris