I have recently inherited a house which has only ever had part-central heating, and the radiator panels are in poor condition. The system was a DIY install in the late 1960s and has gravity fed HW & a pumped two-pipe heating circuit, but no thermostat other than on the boiler. The boiler itself has been renewed and is in good condition, so my intention is to extend the heating system by making it fully pumped with new controls (inc programmer, room & HWC thermostats & Y-valve), and to completely renew the heating pipe runs and radiators (with TRVs on all but two). My intention is to use underfloor plastic pipework, and for each radiator to fit t-connectors with copper pipe rising vertically to each radiator valve.
The floor joists run across the width of the house, so taking pipework from one side to the other will be easy (the house is empty, and I have all the floorboards exposed - access is not a problem); but getting pipes from front to back will require either notching joists, or drilling holes, and feeding the pipework through. For the first floor pipe runs, I wondered about the possibility of running pipes along the length of the wall below, just under the ceiling, and then covering the pipes with plaster coving, with elbows at each end taking the pipe back up to beneath the first floorboards. Is this OK? If I use plastic pipes, there don't need to be any joins between elbows, so the leak risk should be minimal.
The floor joists run across the width of the house, so taking pipework from one side to the other will be easy (the house is empty, and I have all the floorboards exposed - access is not a problem); but getting pipes from front to back will require either notching joists, or drilling holes, and feeding the pipework through. For the first floor pipe runs, I wondered about the possibility of running pipes along the length of the wall below, just under the ceiling, and then covering the pipes with plaster coving, with elbows at each end taking the pipe back up to beneath the first floorboards. Is this OK? If I use plastic pipes, there don't need to be any joins between elbows, so the leak risk should be minimal.