Several posters have pointed out that there is no "instant" warm up with in-floor heating.
If I wasn't going to keep the heat on, I'd certainly use some type of anti-freeze in the tubing. My worry, without anti-freeze, would be expansion of the tubing when it froze. I think it would pop up the concrete over the tubing, much like a rebar rusting in a bridge deck.
My son built a 30X50 shop with hot water in-floor heat. It was nice - he used an electric boiler that looked suspiciously like an electric water heater. No anti-freeze, but we're in southern Illinois. He set the thermostat on the lowest setting and left it alone.
I worked with a guy who bought a house with in-floor hot water heat. Concrete floors, nice modern gas boiler. He was a tightwad, and waited 'til it got to 40 degrees before he turned the heat on. Took three days steady burning to get the house warmed up. Lotsa mass in that conc floor. Probably didn't save much money.
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Today's Featured Article - Harvestin Hay: The Early Years (Part 2) - by Pat Browning. The summer of 1950 was the start of a new era in farming for our family. I was thirteen, and Kathy (my oldest sister) was seven. At this age, I believed tractor farming was the only way, hot stuff -- and given a chance I probably would have used the tractor, Dad's first, a 1936 Model "A" John Deere, to go bring in the cows! And I think Dad was ready for some automation too. And so it was that we acquired a good, used J. I. Case, wire tie hay baler. In addition to a person to drive th
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