Since the temperatures have now dropped below 10°C (50°F), the heating season has officially started for us – and this month alone, 6 kWh of electricity have already been pumped into the screed.
Hello,
How warm is it inside your house with a flow temperature of 45°C (113°F)? We had a flow temperature of 48°C (118°F), which resulted in 33°C (91°F) indoors.
Best regards,
Andreas
daniels87 schrieb:
We also have a flow temperature of 45 degrees currently... until October 15th.
How warm is it inside your house with a flow temperature of 45°C (113°F)? We had a flow temperature of 48°C (118°F), which resulted in 33°C (91°F) indoors.
Best regards,
Andreas
For us, it would be about 2.5 months. It all depends on whether the screed has dried quickly enough. The past few weeks have been very dry here, and the house never really became humid.
Next week, the tilers plan to come and install the floor tiles. If that works out, the schedule is set!
Best regards,
Andreas
Next week, the tilers plan to come and install the floor tiles. If that works out, the schedule is set!
Best regards,
Andreas
D
daniels877 Oct 2016 17:00andimann schrieb:
Hello,
how warm is it in your house with a 45 degrees Celsius (113°F) supply temperature? We had a 48 degrees Celsius (118°F) supply temperature, which resulted in 33 degrees Celsius (91°F) inside the house.
Best regards,
AndreasI’ll put a thermometer up today. But it definitely feels well above 30 degrees Celsius (86°F).
The painters have been here for the last three days and worked up a real sweat. Sanding walls, filling ceilings, sanding again, and spraying.
Our handover is planned for the end of November.
We took a solid 8 weeks 😀
And there was no rushing on the schedule – I believe some things just need their time. For example, the painter took 2 weeks, the tiler almost 2, the screed 4 weeks, plastering 2 weeks, concrete for the foundation slab 4 weeks, precast ceiling 2 weeks, and so on.
Sure, there are companies that can manage all this in 3-4 months, but I would guess they schedule tightly and do many tasks in parallel.
And there was no rushing on the schedule – I believe some things just need their time. For example, the painter took 2 weeks, the tiler almost 2, the screed 4 weeks, plastering 2 weeks, concrete for the foundation slab 4 weeks, precast ceiling 2 weeks, and so on.
Sure, there are companies that can manage all this in 3-4 months, but I would guess they schedule tightly and do many tasks in parallel.
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