Benjamin Dinkel wrote:Hi L,
you say a large thermal mass might be problematic. To me that means I would also dissuade you from using under floor heating, as that uses all the floor as thermal mass and is usually a system with a lot of inertia.
You could supply hot water heaters or the heat exchanger of an HVAC with the hot water.
I do believe I have seen underfloor heating systems that have low inertia. Such a system could be suitable for Florida weather, but I could also see running a water/air heat exchanger for forced air heating. Underfloor appeals to me simply because it can create comfort without heating the air as much, meaning my sinuses would be a lot less dry compared to forced air.
Before I started thinking about heating water, I had pondered the idea of adding tubing to my thermal mass, which would allow me to circulate water through the mass to get hot water, and I could also valve in a diversion loop, which would let me circulate the water to a ground loop, so if the weather warmed, I could dump the excess heat into the ground. But I would have to know how fast I could cool the mass to room temperature, in order to know if the idea was practical. That led me to a rethink, and the idea of heating water outside.