They can be camouflaged with decorative vent covers that match carpeting tile or hardwood flooring.
Floor ducts vs ceiling ducts.
If theyre in the floor youll want your return in the ceiling.
Hot air rises and cold air drops.
Additionally it is easier to vacuum and eventually replace carpet as you don t have to work around the floor registers.
You re adding a room to an existing space or adding cooling to a space like a garage or work room.
Floor ducts affect furniture arrangement especially in small rooms.
For heating vents in the floor would be better.
In this situation it may be costly or difficult to add ducts to the new space and connect to your existing system.
You can camouflage them with vent covers that blend seamlessly with carpeting hardwood or tile flooring.
If you want to keep your high ceilings or there s just no room for ducts then ductless air conditioning is the answer.
This disperses warmth evenly throughout the room from floor to ceiling.
Today though let s focus on one particularly bad place to put a duct.
Overhead ducts are a lot more convenient as they don t collect dust pennies and whatever else falls onto the floor.
Ceiling ducts don t hog existing or potential closet wall or ceiling space making an interesting or worse unsightly decoration and ceiling vents don t present the decorative dilemma floor vents often due forcing furniture to strange locations to prevent blockages in airflow.
I ve certainly written about a lot of them as well as how to do it properly.
Floor heat ducts are not as visible as ceiling ducts.
Floor ducts are less visible.
Supply registers are the vents that deliver warm or cool air from your central heating cooling system to each room.
Ceiling ducts are conspicuous and difficult to camouflage.
The placement of your return is.
What is the difference between supply registers and return registers.
The combination has floor ducts in the bedrooms and bathroom under the towel rail they think of everything and the living areas have ceiling ducts.
This isnt the main concern however.
The only advantage to floor registers is for heating efficiency.
Floor ducts for heating according to the natural laws of convection heated air entering through floor ducts rises.
One quote is all ceiling one is all floor and one is a combination.
Ceiling ducts are more visible than floor ducts and harder to camouflage.
Ceiling ducts cannot be used with radiant heating systems which generate heat from the floors.
If you want to design and install a duct system to create problems the possibilities are endless.
Heat entering through ceiling ducts however naturally tends to accumulate at the ceiling warming the room from top to bottom more slowly than floor ducts.
In fact i think it s the third worst place to put one.
If the registers are in the ceiling you will want your return low.
Ah so many choices.
Either type of register ceiling or floor can be used for this as long as the need for the area or room is matched.