Rob_H
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- 12 Feb 2005
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We live in a detached house out on the fens dating back to about 1850 which is quite exposed. In this cold spell we can't seem to keep heat the upstairs that effectively. We have wooden floorboards upstairs which we are going to carpet over, and wooden double glazing (about twelve to fifteen years old I think) and oil fired central heating probably fit about ten to fifteen years old which are thin single radiators. The inside of the external walls feel very cold to the touch and we are having problems heating the nursery (it is a small room about 9' x 6'). The two other bedrooms are much bigger but similarly are often cold. The temperature in the nursery - even with the central heating on - was only 10.9 degrees after three hours tonight. I'm trying to avoid getting new double-glazing in the whole house (lots of windows, and we want to move next year and I doubt we would recover the money in any sale the way things are).
The loft is insulated but needs more modern insulation but the walls seem the coldest part and seem to suck the heat out. So my questions are:
1. Will new radiators help - are the modern box shaped ones more effective?
2. Is there anything I can do to stop losing heat through the walls - or to prevent having very cold walls?
3. Any other tips to raise the temperature - I will probably get double glazing in the nursery to start with.
thanks in advance
The loft is insulated but needs more modern insulation but the walls seem the coldest part and seem to suck the heat out. So my questions are:
1. Will new radiators help - are the modern box shaped ones more effective?
2. Is there anything I can do to stop losing heat through the walls - or to prevent having very cold walls?
3. Any other tips to raise the temperature - I will probably get double glazing in the nursery to start with.
thanks in advance