I have built 5 houses using one Polaris condensing water heater for the radiant and hot water. The oldest must be 20 years and never with a hitch except to be sure ONE check valve continues to work. I never use electric valves and the idiotic and non-maintainable complex valving and sensing controls. Each zone has a small ballvalve for flow control, and I use one properly chosen circulator pump. If you have a monster house you could use several of the smallest pumps, one to a zone or two. By simply placing the check valve in the correct location, all incoming cold water destined for the water heater is routed through all of the floor zones. In the summer this automatically provides some free "heat" in the slab to the incoming cold water. Unless you are a techno-nut and like 500$ service calls, this is the hands down only way to plumb up a house. One of the radiant parts site used to have a schematic of the system on line. I have passed out my own plan to many builders and still get thank you calls.
A few valves, 2 manifolds, 1 top quality checkvalve, and a pump - thats it! The system also tells you elegantly when the check valve fails: You will have hot water at the hot water heater, and hot water at all fixtures when the circulator pump is running OR when the check valve is good. The moment hot water fails to reach any and all fixtures when the pump is NOT running, the check valve is bad.
After 11 trouble free years, my wife suddenly decided our hot water heater was bad. She Was not getting hot water in a distant bath. By the time I got to check it, I had hot water. The hot water heater was at normal temp. We almost duked it out when I told her she did'nt know left from right anymore. Seems each time the pump kicked on before I went to inspect her screams. Finally I got stiffed for hot water, and found a tiny piece of a hot water connector washer in the check valve. So many years and jobs without callbacks that I forgot my own design spec. {thank god she was'nt home and I did'nt have to grovel at her feet in apology} So outside of marital harmony once each decade or so, its so simple and perfect that you will laugh at the guys with the nuclear controlroom boards in their basements. Use a SS checkvalve one or 2 sizes larger than the piping with a very low force spring closed valve disc or ball. I use double unions and wire a spare check valve to the pipes with the schematic. Many plumbers have never heard of this system and it could drive them insane trying to figure out hot water at the heater and NOT at the fixtures.





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