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Home » radiant

Articles Tagged with ''radiant''

Radiant system

The Glitch & The Fix: Troubleshooting hydronic piping mistakes in panel radiator systems

John Siegenthaler 200x200 author headshot on a white background.
John Siegenthaler, P.E.
March 4, 2026

Figure 1 shows a hydronic system that’s intended to supply four panel radiators, each with their own thermostatic radiator valve and an indirect water heater from a gas-fired sectional cast-iron boiler. The system is designed using primary/secondary piping. The primary circulator operates whenever the space heating load or the indirect water heater call for heat. 


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A photo of the radiant heating system by Uponor and GF.

GF utilizes Uponor radiant heating for First Nations communities in Canada

Through the Blanket of Warmth project, GF integrated Uponor radiant systems into a homes' existing furnace.
February 12, 2026

The first Blanket of Warmth project was completed in 2018 with two homes. Now, with the grant from the GF Water Foundation via the OneGF Impact Fund, more than a dozen First Nation homes have the Uponor radiant system.


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Air conditioner condenser unit sitting next to brick home with fence.
Hydronics Workshop | John Siegenthaler

What’s it capable of? (part 2)

Measuring net heat output and head loss in existing hydronic circuits.
John Siegenthaler 200x200 author headshot on a white background.
John Siegenthaler, P.E.
February 4, 2026

In hydronic systems, the circuit usually passes through the boiler, which adds heat. When using a block heater and the boiler is off, it dissipates heat from the circuit. This heat loss must be considered when measuring the circuit's true "net" heating output.


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An exterior shot of a Connecticut home designed by architect Leigh Overland. Partial view of front landscape, cloudy blue sky in the background.
Project Profile

ThermaCEILING radiant system provides net‐zero comfort in Connecticut ICF home

Robert Barmore
January 16, 2026

A case study of a ThermaCEILing radiant system in a Connecticut home.


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The Glitch & The Fix
The Glitch & The Fix: January 2026

The Glitch & The Fix: Geo-normous problems

Pairing a non-modulating geothermal heat pump with a multi-zone, low-mass radiant system introduces several avoidable issues.
John Siegenthaler 200x200 author headshot on a white background.
John Siegenthaler, P.E.
January 7, 2026

Single-stage non-modulating heat sources in zoned distribution systems often face short cycling, particularly with low thermal mass. When few zones are active, they struggle to dissipate generated heat quickly, causing temperature build-up and potential shutdown of the heat pump based on internal limits, with varied restart behavior depending on controls.


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A plumber adjusting a boiler's pipes with a wrench and turning a valve.
Hydronics Workshop | John Siegenthaler

Injection mixing revisited (part 2)

Advanced ways injection mixing can manage temperature, protect equipment, and stabilize modern hydronic systems.
John Siegenthaler 200x200 author headshot on a white background.
John Siegenthaler, P.E.
December 8, 2025

Last month, we reviewed the basics injection mixing. It’s a method for controlling water temperatures by regulating the flow of heated water “injected” into a circulating distribution system, while simultaneously removing an equal flow of cooler water from that distribution system. Any method that controls the rate of injection flow also controls the rate of heat transfer into the distribution system.


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Figure 3 and Figure 5 feature image
The Glitch & The Fix: October 2025

Hindsight - From complex loops to clean headers: simplifying for reliability

John Siegenthaler 200x200 author headshot on a white background.
John Siegenthaler, P.E.
October 13, 2025

Around 25 years ago, I developed a design that sends high-temperature water to a remote manifold for low-temperature floor heating, mixing it with returning water to achieve the optimal supply temperature, regulated by a variable speed pump. Can you identify a problem with this approach or propose a better one?


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Air Conditioning Units
Hydronics Workshop | John Siegenthaler

How mismatched loads in a dual-temperature heat pump system can limit performance

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John Siegenthaler 200x200 author headshot on a white background.
John Siegenthaler, P.E.
October 8, 2025

At a supply water temperature of 103 ºF, the heating capacity of the heat pump is the same as the total heat dissipation ability of the distribution system. That’s where this system achieves thermal equilibrium. The floor heating zone is fine at this condition, but the output of the air handler is significantly lower than what was planned for based on the assumption that 120 ºF supply water would be available.


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Radiant & Hydronics eBook Cover 1170x658

eBook | 2025 Radiant & Hydronics All Stars

The latest technology, product innovation and installation trends
August 28, 2025

The third edition of the Radiant & Hydronics All Stars eBook highlights the latest technologies and design trends in radiant heating. It features insights from our All-Star Roundtable on innovations and challenges, along with design trends for residential and commercial applications.


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Hole room floor heating system - hydro installation with pipes
Renewable Heating Design | John Siegenthaler

Aesthetic, efficient and resilient: hydronics outclass multi-splits in key areas

John Siegenthaler 200x200 author headshot on a white background.
John Siegenthaler, P.E.
August 20, 2025

Zoning has always been a premier benefit of hydronic heating and cooling systems. There are many zoning configurations capable of delivering heat (or cooling effect) when and where it’s needed in a building, with minimal effect on the temperature in other parts of the building. Some methods use circulators to create flow in each zone; others use either motorized or thermostatic valves to regulate flow.


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