I'm well into dry-lining my workshop now, and as I think more about the thermal performance of the building I've hit an awkward problem.
I'd like to maintain it at a fairly constant temperature, ideally in the 16-20°C region by using oil-filled radiators and an AC unit linked to a PID controller, but to make that economic need to minimise sources of heat loss, and the floor is a bleedingly obvious one that's not addressed.
Once I have my small machines and surface table set up, I'm aiming to acquire a large lathe (in the 17" center height kind of region) in the next year or so and a medium size surface grinder and largish (Deckel FP3 size) mill after that... All of those have *very* significant floor loading involved.
Existing floor is a 6" concrete slab with rebar and 12" foundations around the edge, sat on good hardcore, so I'm comfortable that will be ok.
But there's zero info on acceptable floor loading in the technical data I can find on the various retro-fit floor insulation options, and without information to the contrary I would assume none will withstand tools weighing over a tonne without compressing enough to mess with the leveling of said tools.
At the same time if I have a large mass of cast iron sat directly on the concrete, I'm creating a huge thermal bridge which defeats the object of putting down insulation elsewhere.
Is there an established solution to this issue?
I was planning to grout the bigger machines in anyway, and figure that there would be an insulating additive/fill I can use with a vibration damping grout, although I'd like an alternative to mixing custom grouts if at all possible.
I'd like to maintain it at a fairly constant temperature, ideally in the 16-20°C region by using oil-filled radiators and an AC unit linked to a PID controller, but to make that economic need to minimise sources of heat loss, and the floor is a bleedingly obvious one that's not addressed.
Once I have my small machines and surface table set up, I'm aiming to acquire a large lathe (in the 17" center height kind of region) in the next year or so and a medium size surface grinder and largish (Deckel FP3 size) mill after that... All of those have *very* significant floor loading involved.
Existing floor is a 6" concrete slab with rebar and 12" foundations around the edge, sat on good hardcore, so I'm comfortable that will be ok.
But there's zero info on acceptable floor loading in the technical data I can find on the various retro-fit floor insulation options, and without information to the contrary I would assume none will withstand tools weighing over a tonne without compressing enough to mess with the leveling of said tools.
At the same time if I have a large mass of cast iron sat directly on the concrete, I'm creating a huge thermal bridge which defeats the object of putting down insulation elsewhere.
Is there an established solution to this issue?
I was planning to grout the bigger machines in anyway, and figure that there would be an insulating additive/fill I can use with a vibration damping grout, although I'd like an alternative to mixing custom grouts if at all possible.