T
tamz
true indeed I was told at one of their courses that they allow 2.5mbar to be lost at inlet
That is a big get out of jail card for some :wink:
Welcome to the forum. Although you can post in any forum, the USA forum is here in case of local regs or laws
Discuss Adding 3 metres of 28mm pipe at the end of a 15 metre 22mm run in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at Plumbers Forums
true indeed I was told at one of their courses that they allow 2.5mbar to be lost at inlet
Ignoring the hob.
The pressure drop you have is down to more than you are stating.
A 15m x 22mm run with 10 elbows to the tee
then
3m x 22mm + 1m x 15mm + 1 elbow from tee would give an overall drop of around 1.68mb (it would be around 2.34mb allowing for a 7kw hob)
The 15mm part somewhere under the floor has never been upgraded. Get it done again and done right this time.
increasing the working pressure at the meters govner will increase the working pressure at the boiler, who ever said it wont is wrong because while the gas board was out i got him to up it a little while he was upgrading it, which did help a lot
it would yes but the pressure drop would still be the same
I am assuming you are referring to my question about the gas board increasing the pressure at the governor. In terms of the pressure drop being the same, I could live with that as long as the pressure to the appliances is high enough. So my next question is whether having a large pressure drop in the system is allowable as long as the appliances have their minimum required working pressure?
doesnt matter if you can live with it or not, there should be no more than a 1mb drop across the system. there are reasons why the working pressures are controlled at the meter governor, if not you could run it in 10mm and just boost the pressure, but then its not safe
The minimum that vaillant allow is 17mb, I would disconnect the boiler and hob and blast some compressed air through the pipes, as the pipes have been cut to install a tee for the hob the installers may have got dirt ect in the pipe.
the working pressure is their to make sure a hob or another gas appliance doesnt go out while a boiler is running, also most boilers wont work properly with a working pressure of say, 15mb..
if you only have a boiler and nothing else, and the burner pressure is spot on, just the working pressure is down its only ncs, it wouldnt be dangerous.
Thanks Fuzzy - that's why I asked the question as I wasn't sure if there are regulations that state it can't be more than 1mb or not. Sounds like you are saying that there are regulations that state there cannot be more than a 1mb drop, full stop. So even if they were to up the pressure at the governor (to say 25mb), to allow about 19mb at both appliances, there would still be a "breach" of the regulations as the drop is 6mb.
So it sounds like the only option I have is to fix the fact that there is a 6mb drop across the pipework (either find source of blockage or re-lay new pipe), and reduce that to no more than 1-2mb. Is that right?
I have a boiler and a 4-burner hob. What's the difference between burner pressure and working pressure? I thought they were the same thing? There is also a concept of standing pressure, right?
burner pressure = appliance
working pressure = pipework
both got with appliance running
feeling a bit uncomfortable now, a little too much info
is compressed air etc a standard piece of kit to expect RGI's to have with them?
yeh! About 10 post's ago.imo.feeling a bit uncomfortable now, a little too much info