Hi all, Firstly i feel really dumb asking such a amateurish question so please be nice as i feel i have to ask for clarification i'm working correctly. Two resent conversations with an ex gsr installer i work with and my old mentor have suggested i'm doing this wrong.
Currently when replacing an appliance in a house for this example we'll use a gas fire replacement (in this house there is also a gas hob and a boiler). My understanding is that i'm connecting to an old supply and i have to ensure i have a no more than a 1mb drop with all other appliances on.
My Method 1.My normal procedure is connect a manometer to the meter outlet test point and light the fire i've just fitted. This will give me my meter working pressure say at 21mbar, i then check my other manometer to the fire and it says 20.5mbar. So far so good. I would then fire all four rings on the hob and run the boiler at maximum output. Once everything is running and then re check the manometer connect to the fire if it shows 20mbar or higher. Jobs good happy days................. Is my current working method correct?
Ex Mentors Method 2.He said that i only have to do this test with only one other appliance running (the next highest Kw rated appliance).
So his method would be for example in this scenario; attach a manometer to the meter outlet test point and light the fire he's just fitted. This will give him a meter working pressure say at 21mbar, he then check's his other manometer to the fire and it says 20.5mbar. So far so good. He would then just fire up the boiler on maximum neglecting theirs a hob fitted (hob remains off), the recheck at the fire the working pressure. Is his working method correct?
Ex GSR Method 3.He has suggested that you are only looking at the pressure in immediate connecting pipe between the meter and the appliance you've just installed.
So his method would be for example in this scenario; attach a manometer to the meter outlet test point and light the fire he's just fitted. This will give him a meter working pressure say at 21mbar, he then check's his other manometer to the fire and it says 20.5mbar. Happy days, forget theirs a hob and a boiler on the other leg of the gas pipe and if he measured and he was say 19mbar he would just be upgrading the immediate leg between the meter and the fire and leave the other leg feeding the boiler and hob untouched. Is his working method correct?
This is all doing my head in ive spent all last night and this morning pulling out all my literature from my exams and all sorts and cannot find a stable answer, in one of my bits of literature it states: 1mbar is the maximum acceptable pressure drop on natural gas installation between the gas meter and the furthest appliance away running at maximum demand. So this note suggests that as long as the furthest appliance away has less than 1mb drop with nothing else running its all good just start banging in appliances before this point.
Any help would be great as i normally work on LPG were pipesizing is more lenient and this is becoming very stressful for me to understand, Thanks very much in advance👍
Currently when replacing an appliance in a house for this example we'll use a gas fire replacement (in this house there is also a gas hob and a boiler). My understanding is that i'm connecting to an old supply and i have to ensure i have a no more than a 1mb drop with all other appliances on.
My Method 1.My normal procedure is connect a manometer to the meter outlet test point and light the fire i've just fitted. This will give me my meter working pressure say at 21mbar, i then check my other manometer to the fire and it says 20.5mbar. So far so good. I would then fire all four rings on the hob and run the boiler at maximum output. Once everything is running and then re check the manometer connect to the fire if it shows 20mbar or higher. Jobs good happy days................. Is my current working method correct?
Ex Mentors Method 2.He said that i only have to do this test with only one other appliance running (the next highest Kw rated appliance).
So his method would be for example in this scenario; attach a manometer to the meter outlet test point and light the fire he's just fitted. This will give him a meter working pressure say at 21mbar, he then check's his other manometer to the fire and it says 20.5mbar. So far so good. He would then just fire up the boiler on maximum neglecting theirs a hob fitted (hob remains off), the recheck at the fire the working pressure. Is his working method correct?
Ex GSR Method 3.He has suggested that you are only looking at the pressure in immediate connecting pipe between the meter and the appliance you've just installed.
So his method would be for example in this scenario; attach a manometer to the meter outlet test point and light the fire he's just fitted. This will give him a meter working pressure say at 21mbar, he then check's his other manometer to the fire and it says 20.5mbar. Happy days, forget theirs a hob and a boiler on the other leg of the gas pipe and if he measured and he was say 19mbar he would just be upgrading the immediate leg between the meter and the fire and leave the other leg feeding the boiler and hob untouched. Is his working method correct?
This is all doing my head in ive spent all last night and this morning pulling out all my literature from my exams and all sorts and cannot find a stable answer, in one of my bits of literature it states: 1mbar is the maximum acceptable pressure drop on natural gas installation between the gas meter and the furthest appliance away running at maximum demand. So this note suggests that as long as the furthest appliance away has less than 1mb drop with nothing else running its all good just start banging in appliances before this point.
Any help would be great as i normally work on LPG were pipesizing is more lenient and this is becoming very stressful for me to understand, Thanks very much in advance👍