Hi
We had a shower installed a couple of years ago and it has never performed as it should. I wonder if anyone would be kind enough to offer any advice or thoughts? (Apologies it took a fair few words to explain the problem).
The shower is fed from a CW tank in the loft with a much larger than normal HW cylinder - it is about 6ft tall and is in the airing cupboard. There is a shower pump (2.3 bar) next to the cylinder and the shower is on the same floor. The cylinder is vented and heated by an indirect coil fed from the boiler. I think its all pretty "old school" standard apart from the 50% or so larger cylinder. The pipes are 22m most of the way to the shower head and the HW pipe uses a dedicated flange that is situated at the very top of the cylinder. I never saw the exact route of those pipes and what the "plumber" did.
We set the heating and HW on the programmer to only come on in the evening - it is never on in the morning.
Showers in morning take about 1-2 minutes to reach full flow (that we could live with) and then perform fine afterwards. Showers in the evening when the tank has been recently reheated, are terrible with approximately 25%-50% of the flow achieved in the morning. It basically trickles out and now that the wife is expecting, I'm getting this in my ear on a regular basis. Nothing else is using any water anywhere in the house at these times. The other thing to add is it does seem to be worse in colder weather.
I'm thinking it has something to do with air because is there was some kind of blockage wouldn't it be constant? The "plumber" that did the original job certainly left a million black plastic shavings in the cold tank when he'd finished. I'm wondering if its possible that when the HW tank heats up and isn't give hours to settle, then maybe air bubbles form on the coil or something and thats why the pump never settles down? If that was the case, then fitting a flange on the side of tank wouldn't help? These are only my guesses though and would they account for such a dramatic reduction in flow?
In the past I have inspected the mixer and taken the connections off the pump and inspected and there wasn't any crap there and as I say the whole thing is intermittent.
Any thoughts/troubleshooting suggestions gratefully received
We had a shower installed a couple of years ago and it has never performed as it should. I wonder if anyone would be kind enough to offer any advice or thoughts? (Apologies it took a fair few words to explain the problem).
The shower is fed from a CW tank in the loft with a much larger than normal HW cylinder - it is about 6ft tall and is in the airing cupboard. There is a shower pump (2.3 bar) next to the cylinder and the shower is on the same floor. The cylinder is vented and heated by an indirect coil fed from the boiler. I think its all pretty "old school" standard apart from the 50% or so larger cylinder. The pipes are 22m most of the way to the shower head and the HW pipe uses a dedicated flange that is situated at the very top of the cylinder. I never saw the exact route of those pipes and what the "plumber" did.
We set the heating and HW on the programmer to only come on in the evening - it is never on in the morning.
Showers in morning take about 1-2 minutes to reach full flow (that we could live with) and then perform fine afterwards. Showers in the evening when the tank has been recently reheated, are terrible with approximately 25%-50% of the flow achieved in the morning. It basically trickles out and now that the wife is expecting, I'm getting this in my ear on a regular basis. Nothing else is using any water anywhere in the house at these times. The other thing to add is it does seem to be worse in colder weather.
I'm thinking it has something to do with air because is there was some kind of blockage wouldn't it be constant? The "plumber" that did the original job certainly left a million black plastic shavings in the cold tank when he'd finished. I'm wondering if its possible that when the HW tank heats up and isn't give hours to settle, then maybe air bubbles form on the coil or something and thats why the pump never settles down? If that was the case, then fitting a flange on the side of tank wouldn't help? These are only my guesses though and would they account for such a dramatic reduction in flow?
In the past I have inspected the mixer and taken the connections off the pump and inspected and there wasn't any crap there and as I say the whole thing is intermittent.
Any thoughts/troubleshooting suggestions gratefully received