Hi,
I've recently moved to a new house with gravity fed hot water system.
I'm concerned that the hot water cylinder, which is located in an airing cup board, off the landing above the stairs, may not be supported properly. From what can I see it's sitting on short pieces of 2x4, which in turn are sitting on what appears to be some thin plywood. I've attached some photos which hopefully should show this better.
The plywood is warped under the weight of the tank and there are signs of previous water damage to it's surface. When I knock the top of the plywood I can't identify any points which would suggest that there are any supports underneath.
The tank itself is also leaning against the wall of the left hand side, and the attached pipework on the right has become free from it's pipe clips, which makes me think that over time the tank is moving.Also the angles of the pipework all seems to be suggesting that the tank has suffered some downward movement.
I'm sure that the tank isn't going to fall overnight, however my primary concern is that if a leak develops then the plywood (if unsupported from below) could be weakened leading it's collapse.
I would really appreciate some advise on this. I've never liked gravity fed systems and so had thought about having a combi at some point, however I was planning on waiting until this system required replacing.
(I know that without proper inspection no one can actually tell me for sure that it is safe)
If I needed to have the cylinder removed and the supporting platform made good, would anyone be able to provide a ball-park figure of how much this would cost - it may make more sense to simply go for a combi if this were the case...
Many thanks in advance.
Matt.
I've recently moved to a new house with gravity fed hot water system.
I'm concerned that the hot water cylinder, which is located in an airing cup board, off the landing above the stairs, may not be supported properly. From what can I see it's sitting on short pieces of 2x4, which in turn are sitting on what appears to be some thin plywood. I've attached some photos which hopefully should show this better.
The plywood is warped under the weight of the tank and there are signs of previous water damage to it's surface. When I knock the top of the plywood I can't identify any points which would suggest that there are any supports underneath.
The tank itself is also leaning against the wall of the left hand side, and the attached pipework on the right has become free from it's pipe clips, which makes me think that over time the tank is moving.Also the angles of the pipework all seems to be suggesting that the tank has suffered some downward movement.
I'm sure that the tank isn't going to fall overnight, however my primary concern is that if a leak develops then the plywood (if unsupported from below) could be weakened leading it's collapse.
I would really appreciate some advise on this. I've never liked gravity fed systems and so had thought about having a combi at some point, however I was planning on waiting until this system required replacing.
(I know that without proper inspection no one can actually tell me for sure that it is safe)
If I needed to have the cylinder removed and the supporting platform made good, would anyone be able to provide a ball-park figure of how much this would cost - it may make more sense to simply go for a combi if this were the case...
Many thanks in advance.
Matt.
Attachments
Last edited: