Hi all I have a bit of an odd one for you.
the shower in my bathroom is plumbed so that the feed pipes come down from the celing to the mixer tap, the shower is fed by a salamander ct50 pump which is located above the shower in the loft, the ct50 is listed as having a posotive head.
link to pump details
http://www.salamanderpumps.co.uk/Products/CT_Pumps.htm
the pump has seperate hot and cold feeds, the cold is fed from the tank in the loft which gives it a posotive feed but the hot is fed from the hot storage tank located in the spare room which is below the level of the pump by about 6 ft.
the shower does work reasonably well but you need to "bleed" the system everytime you use it by setting the thermostatic controll to about 35 degrees C opening the tap up fully and putting the shower head on the base of the bath it will then run and stop a few times before coming to life and operating normaly, if you dont bleed the shower you get no hot only cold water.
I know the instilation should have the pump below the cold AND hot suplies so that both are gravity fed but unfortunatley I have no way of moving the pump or the pipework in the bathroom.
I want a bit more shower pressure and thought I could kill 2 birds with one stone by fitting a more powerfull pump which has a negative head and therefore ( please corect me if I'm wrong here ) self bleed or not airlock the hot at all.
I'm looking at somthing like this
http://www.salamanderpumps.co.uk/Products/ESP_Pumps.htm
The new negative head pumps are £300 or therabouts for the pressure I want ( 2 bar ) so I dont realy want to buy and fit one only to find a very slight increase in shower pressure and the airlock / bleed problem still present.
Another soloution I had in mind was to put a bleed line from the from the cold tank onto the hot input of the pump with a non return valve behind it to stop cold water being back fed into the hot water tank.
I suspect this may cause other problems and airlocks between the non return valve and the tank anyway so I've scrapped that idea.
Ta in advance mobile chicane
the shower in my bathroom is plumbed so that the feed pipes come down from the celing to the mixer tap, the shower is fed by a salamander ct50 pump which is located above the shower in the loft, the ct50 is listed as having a posotive head.
link to pump details
http://www.salamanderpumps.co.uk/Products/CT_Pumps.htm
the pump has seperate hot and cold feeds, the cold is fed from the tank in the loft which gives it a posotive feed but the hot is fed from the hot storage tank located in the spare room which is below the level of the pump by about 6 ft.
the shower does work reasonably well but you need to "bleed" the system everytime you use it by setting the thermostatic controll to about 35 degrees C opening the tap up fully and putting the shower head on the base of the bath it will then run and stop a few times before coming to life and operating normaly, if you dont bleed the shower you get no hot only cold water.
I know the instilation should have the pump below the cold AND hot suplies so that both are gravity fed but unfortunatley I have no way of moving the pump or the pipework in the bathroom.
I want a bit more shower pressure and thought I could kill 2 birds with one stone by fitting a more powerfull pump which has a negative head and therefore ( please corect me if I'm wrong here ) self bleed or not airlock the hot at all.
I'm looking at somthing like this
http://www.salamanderpumps.co.uk/Products/ESP_Pumps.htm
The new negative head pumps are £300 or therabouts for the pressure I want ( 2 bar ) so I dont realy want to buy and fit one only to find a very slight increase in shower pressure and the airlock / bleed problem still present.
Another soloution I had in mind was to put a bleed line from the from the cold tank onto the hot input of the pump with a non return valve behind it to stop cold water being back fed into the hot water tank.
I suspect this may cause other problems and airlocks between the non return valve and the tank anyway so I've scrapped that idea.
Ta in advance mobile chicane