What do you mean "possible thermal loss"? Are you referring to your radiant heat being less effective because of building over the concrete? If so, that will not be the case. Don't let this deter you! There are solutions. See if you can rent a thermal camera for an afternoon.ssl4000g wrote:Needless to say, I've reconsidered the whole project because of the radiant heat and the possible thermal loss. If this was easy, everybody'd be doing it!
People do do it all the time. The radiant heat is not a big obstacle in my opinion. I'm very glad to have such efficient heating in my space. It's been awesome this winter so far, and I'm in Canada! Now figuring out all the details of this build and not screwing it up, that's a challenge! [/quote]
In thinking about the thermal loss, anything i put on top of the existing floor will have to be heated before the floor would become heated enough to radiate into the space. Therefore, it would seem likely that there would be an increase in the amount of time the heater would need to run, which would lead to increase heating costs and maintenance costs. It would also seem likely that the space would heat less efficiently especially in extreme situations such as multiple days that are significantly below freezing.
On the anchoring issue, after some further thought, while using fasteners and a glue solution, I would be concerned about the ability to de-anchoring a portion of the wall. This could be possible when; someone pushes a large amp cab into the room and it runs into the wall or, someone trips and fall into a wall... I know these sound a bit unlikely, but I've seen those things happen. I would point out that these walls carry the ceiling, so you have a load pressing down onto the walls. Should one of the walls become unanchored in a spot, the integrity of the box becomes compromised which could lead to collapse.
So, the heat int he floor coupled with the need to preserve the effectiveness of said heat, plus the need to support the inner structures seems to me to require careful consideration to undertake the best, most secure way of anchoring the walls. I don't have that solution yet. However, not considering the problem fully opens one up to serious problems should a wall become compromised.
Just food for thought colliderman. You have people in, you got to keep it safe. As we see so much in the studio biz, you do get what you pay for. I think that applies across the board to any aspect of studio business.
W