Are you ready
@PeterT : lets begin
My shop is 750 SqFt (roughly) and I have it divided into 3 zones. Rule of thumb for 1/2" pex tubing is tube space is every 12". A 750 sqFt floor will need roughly 750 feet of tubing. For Flow reasons you want to keep each zone or loop (some zones can have more than 1 loop) under about 300 feet in length for 1/2" tube. You can go like 500 with 3/4 tube and 200 with 3/8" tube (in general). Glycol or water as a fluid for the heating medium have different viscosity and thus you can pump water easier so to speak. My manifold has 3 x 250 foot "zones" - however, I just run the shop as a whole. I am circulating Ethylene glycol as there is no chance of it cross contaminating - the heating unit is a simple "on demand" hot gas fired water heater mounted to the shop wall.
- Ethylene glycol. A historically popular and very effective anti-freezing agent, modern HVAC experts try to avoid using ethylene glycol because of its toxicity. Nonetheless, it is commonly implemented in industrial settings where strict regulation prevents any chance of it seeping into drinking water.
- Propylene Glycol. A more modern compound, propylene glycol is an effective anti-freeze agent generally recognized as safe by the FDA. HVAC experts use this anti-freeze compound in residential and commercial settings. Propylene glycol is also the preferred anti-freeze for industrial food processing applications.
You can circulate straight water if you don't have freezing concerns. My house is just water as the on demand also does the hot water for our domestic use and I do not want any cross contamination from a failed check valve etc and freezing is not a huge issue - could be if we lost heat for more than a couple days - but I am not concerned
Fluid temp is kept at 100 Deg F for the system. There is one pump and it is pretty small and I have a thermostat and a control box. My system is "open" so I have a header tank secured to the attic floor joists with make up fluid. The tank is an old travel trailer water tank - fit between the joists perfectly.
The thermostat is mid shop and about 4 feet off the ground and set for 60 deg. or 70 if I am painting something.
Pad thickness is 5" as is normal with 6x 6 wire mesh reinforcement that also has the tubing zip tied to it at the 12" spacing. Under the cement floor is 2" thick R10 dense foam board and under that is a vapour barrier 6 mil poly. The foundation is a 4 foot ICF frost wall so there is a 2-1/4 thermal break at the foundation.
The only thing you would need to reinforce for the floor is if you were going to be using a power hammer or something of that kind.
It is cheap to heat the shop - maybe $15 a month and that is tagged into the house heat.
The whole system occupies maybe a half sheet of plywood with the header tank being in the ceiling.
It is super nice to to have the machines warm to the touch when it is 10 below outside