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- 13 Sep 2007
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One for the plumbers out there!
I have a 'standard' plumbing installation comprising cold water tank in loft, indirect hot water cylinder in (upstairs) airing cupboard and modern condensing gas boiler downstairs.
I have recently renovated the bathroom, but many modern taps, especially thermostatically controlled ones, require a minimum 0.5 bar. The shower head is only about four feet below the tank water level - not much more than 0.1 bar! So showering is barely adequate - and that's with a non-thermostatic tap. 'er indoors requires thermostatic control, so I am looking to boost the water pressure.
There seem to be several alternatives. My own preferred option would be to put a double-ended pump (like the Salamander) in the loft where the two 22mm outlets come from the cold tank (one cold supply to taps, the other cold supply to the hot tank).
But all the info from Salamander insists that the 'hot' side of the pump is fed from the hot outlet from the tank - which would be a plumbing pain. I don't want to mount the pump down in the airing cupboard if I can help it.
Can somebody please explain WHY I can't just put the pump on the two cold feeds? Pressure is limited to about 1.5 bar with this pump, and the cylinder is rated at 6 bar, so no problems there. I can't for the life of me see the problem - but no doubt one of you can!
Phil
I have a 'standard' plumbing installation comprising cold water tank in loft, indirect hot water cylinder in (upstairs) airing cupboard and modern condensing gas boiler downstairs.
I have recently renovated the bathroom, but many modern taps, especially thermostatically controlled ones, require a minimum 0.5 bar. The shower head is only about four feet below the tank water level - not much more than 0.1 bar! So showering is barely adequate - and that's with a non-thermostatic tap. 'er indoors requires thermostatic control, so I am looking to boost the water pressure.
There seem to be several alternatives. My own preferred option would be to put a double-ended pump (like the Salamander) in the loft where the two 22mm outlets come from the cold tank (one cold supply to taps, the other cold supply to the hot tank).
But all the info from Salamander insists that the 'hot' side of the pump is fed from the hot outlet from the tank - which would be a plumbing pain. I don't want to mount the pump down in the airing cupboard if I can help it.
Can somebody please explain WHY I can't just put the pump on the two cold feeds? Pressure is limited to about 1.5 bar with this pump, and the cylinder is rated at 6 bar, so no problems there. I can't for the life of me see the problem - but no doubt one of you can!
Phil