Is our radiant heat system heating our domestic water lines?
We have a radiant heat system installed 2 years ago as part of a remodel of our daylight rambler. The downstairs is heated by radiators, the upstairs by the in floor system. The tubing for the radiant system is clipped to the subfloor of the upstairs in the same interstitial space as the domestic water lines. The only insulation in this space is between the domestic water lines and the basement ceiling drywall. The water temperature from our cold water taps measures up to 92 degrees for up to 10 minutes in the winter when the radiant system is on and up to about 80 degrees in the summer or when the radiant system is off. The domestic water lines are piped with Pex with Wersbo connectors, one of which popped off 2 weeks ago and flooded the basement at which point we had to tear into the ceiling and saw how close the pipes are located to each other.
What is the standard for insulation when radiant systems are run in the same joist space with domestic water lines and is our only option for correcting this problem tearing into all the drywall and insulating the domestic water lines (would fix summer issue) and insulating between the domestic water lines and radiant tubes (to fix winter issue)?
Thanks!