- Joined
- 22 Sep 2016
- Messages
- 14
- Reaction score
- 0
- Country
Hello all,
I live in a 5 bed, 5 bath 1930's solid wall house. I currently have two Potterton 100e boilers and two cylinders with tanks in the loft. The boilers usually fire at the same time. Each of the 5 showers has its own shower pump. These are the issues I have:
I've spoken to a few heating engineers and they have differing opinions on how to go forward.
What are the views of the people on this forum?
P.S When Thames Water tested the pressure they said that the tap in the front garden has 20 litres per minute flow. The stopcock flow was 44 litres per minute. The pressure was 36 litres/per head.
I live in a 5 bed, 5 bath 1930's solid wall house. I currently have two Potterton 100e boilers and two cylinders with tanks in the loft. The boilers usually fire at the same time. Each of the 5 showers has its own shower pump. These are the issues I have:
- The two upstairs bathrooms have really low water pressure
- The downstairs kitchen hot water pressure is really low
- The boilers are inefficient and I would like to upgrade them
- The radiators in the downstairs bedroom do not heat up (there may be gunge in the system and a power flush may resolve this as well as maybe installing a more powerful pump). This problem, therefore, may not be related to the above 3 points.
I've spoken to a few heating engineers and they have differing opinions on how to go forward.
- One recommended going the combi boiler route.
- Others have suggested going down the unvented cylinder route, removing the shower pumps and upgrading to condensing boilers.
- Another suggested upgrading to condensing boilers and putting electric hot water heaters in the two upstairs bathrooms but the issue is that the consumer board is at the front of the house and an electrician will have to run new cabling to the bathrooms - its a long and messy run.
What are the views of the people on this forum?
P.S When Thames Water tested the pressure they said that the tap in the front garden has 20 litres per minute flow. The stopcock flow was 44 litres per minute. The pressure was 36 litres/per head.