837 is still a bit too big, bear in mind if you're going to be adding extra insulation the required output figure will go down anyway. Why has it suddenly gone up? Of the two, I'd say go for the 831, but there are more suitable boilers out there for your needs that will give you the hot water performance of the 837 but without the same issues of cycling on your heating system
I've already suggested - Intergas Combi Compact HRE 36/30. Don't worry about the slightly shorter warranty, the Intergas has far fewer parts in it than anything else and therefore far less to go wrong. It only has four moving parts - gas valve, fan, pump and flow switch. The first three will all last a long time, the flow switch should do as well but if it doesn't it's a very cheap part to replace. The Vaillant has several more moving parts, including a diverter that has been redesigned so many times I've lost track of which version we're on. The big expensive bit on an Intergas is the heat exchanger, but that has a 10 year warranty (something you won't find on a Vaillant, although you will find two heat exchangers on a Vaillant whereas the Intergas only needs one) and so far they have a zero failure rate.
Apart from the fact that not all machines are cold fill only, that is nonsense!Bearing in mind that the appliance is making hot water on demand and if you are in the shower and there is another demand for hot water the water produced will be shared, this is unavoidable, however washing machines and dishwashers only have a cold feed so this will have no impact on the shower at all.
The water in the cylinder will only need heating if you have used some, which has been replaced by cold water. If you have a modern well insulated cylinder, the heat loss from a full cylinder is very low. The water temperature in a cylinder will have to drop 8-10C before the thermostat turns the boiler on. We have a HW cylinder with the water temp set to about 60C and get three showers in an evening before the boiler comes on to reheat the water.your current boiler heats up the water twice a day whether you use it or not and you are paying for this.
The 837 produces 12 -28kW and your requirement is 0 - 13kW!Heating would also be cheaper than existing boiler as modulating boiler will only produce Kw’s required for heating load, so although it is a 37 Kw boiler it will modulate down to 11Kw’s for heating requirements
Before you make your final choice, take a look at a Viessmann Vitodens 200-W Combi with weather compensation. This has only one more moving part than an Intergas, the diverter valve, which is not troublesome. The primary heat exchanger is heavily built stainless steel, not aluminium. There are numerous energy saving devices in the electronics, which again are not troublesome. You will not need any further controls, and the boiler is simply converted on site to LPG without any extras. Viessmann are the market leader in Germany.
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