Phil Pascoe
Established Member
It's surprising how much draught is is stopped ad insulation gained by covering the the floor with hardboard.
Even better a layer of 25mm celotex if you can live with the step up into the room.It's surprising how much draught is is stopped ad insulation gained by covering the the floor with hardboard.
Thank you so much @rafezetter for your detailed response and thoughts, it’s really appreciated. The floor to the room is made of wooden joists that are filled with rockwool type insulation, the insulated plasterboard was added to the garage ceiling by the builder (the company that built the house) to add a second layer of insulation
Since I last updated this thread, I have fitted a curved heat deflector to the top of the radiator to try and move heat out into the room more rather than just allowing it to rise into the dormer window. This does seem to have helped the room feel warmer. We are also making sure to keep the wireless thermostat at the far end of the room and away from the radiator, which is also helping
Yesterday I bought some foil insulation for just £12.99 a roll. My plan is to stick that to the garage door and see if it makes a difference to the garage temperature and then if that is reflected in the room above. If it does make a difference then I will likely proceed with changing out the garage door for an insulated one (probably with a fight from the builder if I try and argue they should pay/contribute). I have had some quotes and a door will cost about £1900 fitted, so want to experiment with cheap insulated foil first rather than just take a gamble on it helping
Again, thoughts and comments are very appreciated
Sean
Is this rad a single panel - if so it can be changed without any major alterations for a double panel / double convector rad of the same size , the extra panel and convection grills will give a much higher output . I’ve seen many new builds and the rads always look undersized but of course the materials used and the level of insulation usually balance this out . If you opt for a wider/ taller rad then again the double panel / double convector is your best bet . Just bear in mind the additional weight if it’s a plasterboard wall .they are also known as a type 22 rad.Thank you so much for the replies everyone, lots to think about. So a little more detail:
The general theme of all your replies is along the lines of what I am thinking, namely to increase the radiator size so more heat is put into the room and then ensure the cold garage is not sucking it all away
- The radiator in the cold bedroom sits underneath the window in a dormer. The radiator is 800mm but the internal width of the dormer is 1200mm, so could be increased
- I have not done my own calculations on heat requirements for the room. I have spoken to a designer from Worcester Bosch who assured me they do take the vaulted ceiling into account, not just the floor area. Probably worth me doing some work on this
- The floor joists of the bedroom are stuffed with Rockwool insulation. I think the bottom of the joists are then just lined with fire resistant plasterboard and the extra insulated plasterboard was installed directly over that
The fitted garage door is truly rubbish, very flimsy, thinner that tinfoil and has holes in the side where sections have been joined together during manufacturing. I would like to replace this anyway for a decent sectional one to increase security. Making this a good insulated door seems like a no-brainer
I'm stuck in a position of tackling this myself or trying to force the developer to do more, perhaps through raising with NHBC, and that does make things trickier
I am thinking of the following improvements:
Sean
- Increase the size of the radiator to the maximum possible that still allows you to comfortably bleed it, etc. This is the quickest, easiest and probably cheapest step
- Get quotes for fitting a quality insulated sectional garage door. I can possibly take this along the lines of pushing the developer to at least contribute to the work, but need to think if that is worth the fight
- Review the bedroom over winter and see if a difference is felt
- Look at options for further insulation as required, such as cavity wall insulation in the bottom half of the exterior wall, and redoing the garage ceiling with much thicker insulation that is properly taped and sealed, etc.
I put rubber strips on the bottom of my garage doors - unheated double garage which gets used as a workshop - and the difference in general comfort was HUGE. Screwfix do some, doubtless others do as well. Stormguard Garage Seal Aluminium 2.5m - ScrewfixFor draughts at the sides and top, rigid rubber long strips attached to the door itself both sides and the top, then add soft rubber strips along the top and sides of the garage door frame, so when the door is closed the rigid rubber strips on the door itself, mates onto the soft rubber on the wall.
See post #26 - it has 3 external walls, a vaulted ceiling and a north east facing dormer, so basically a northerly aspect. Also on top of an unheated garage..................Also by any chance does this room have 2 external walls ie a corner ..
Sorry, repeat post..........
Also by any chance does this room have 2 external walls ie a corner ..
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