Newbie here, sorry to dig up an old-ish thread, but i have the same problem as the OP, just a bit of background first
albion Mainsflow MFI 20/120 tank heated by Glowworm energysaver 30 boiler, mains water is 15mm metered pipe
i have been living in this house for just over 10 years, house is 12 years old,4 replacement tanks fitted for the same fault, tank coil split on the cold water feed, back filling through the cylinder into the header tank in the loft, and then onto my path outside
the first 2 tanks were replaced under warranty, the 3rd i paid someone to replace, the 4th my father and myself fitted to save labour costs, the last tank was fitted in August 2007, so in theory still in manufacturers warranty, but because we fitted it ourselves, i believe there is no warranty, so theres the problem,
when we bought the tank last time, it came as a complete unit, 3 litre pressure vessel, mixer tap, pipework etc, al this was fitted etc except for some of the pipework as it was easier to use the original pipes as they were 15mm to 22mm for the tank inlets, 3 bar pressure set in pressure vessel etc, all has worked ok until the start of this year when it started leaking again, i currently turn the mains water off now due to the amount i'm losing outside
when this tank was bought it cost about £250 off EBAY, now i see i can't get one for less than £1000
just why has there been such a price increase ?
well my question is really, what is my best option, rip the lot out, new combi boiler ? the only problem there is i live in a hard water area and i foresee a limescaled up boiler every couple of years
do i break the bank and fork out a grand on a new tank which will last another 2.5 years ?
or is there a 3rd option, does anybody make a tank wich will fit my system for reasonable money ? I see Albion make stainless steel tanks, but do they make one to fit my system ?
or is there anything else i can do ?
P.S. the only thing i am a bit suspect about is the pressure reducton valve on the mains inlet pipe, i'm not sure it is actually reducing the pressure to 3bar, but then i suppose 3 bar is 40psi, so quite high
TIA Rich