Hi All,
I have just purchased a house and as part of my renovations want to sort out the hot and cold water system. The previous owners clearly had to make some tactical and maybe short-sighted decisions as one of the occupants could not use the stairs and therefore needed a downstairs shower room. As a result I am left with a rather strange situation which I am hoping to get your advice on prior to a visit by my plumber on Wednesday.
Current situation:
As you can see this is a slightly weird set-up. In terms of my requirements for the hot water this is them in a priority order (1 = most important):
What would you all suggest I do to the house? To be honest I am confused by the options as none of them seem ideal. It almost feels like I should either keep a cold water tank and hot water tank and suppliment them with a pump (in which case I likely need a new non-combi boiler to heat them all). Or that I need to dig my drive up, install a larger mains inlet and then in the future upgrade the Combi to a larger capacity one when the family grows in size.
Please let me know your ideas. No option is too stupid. One plumber even suggested pumping water from a new cold water tank through my Combi? An innovative and novel idea or completely stupid?
Thanks in advance for your suggestions.
Jon
I have just purchased a house and as part of my renovations want to sort out the hot and cold water system. The previous owners clearly had to make some tactical and maybe short-sighted decisions as one of the occupants could not use the stairs and therefore needed a downstairs shower room. As a result I am left with a rather strange situation which I am hoping to get your advice on prior to a visit by my plumber on Wednesday.
Current situation:
- 4 bedroom house (spread over 3 floors)
- 1 upstairs master bathroom with shower and bath
- 1 downstairs bathroom with shower
- Standard kitchen
- Currently only 2 occupants
- Worcester 25si Combi Boiler (3yrs old)
- Runs central heating throughout house
- Currently runs hot water in only the downstairs shower room (direct feed from mains)
- Seems like it could be underpowered for the size of house?
- Standard vented hot water tank with 2 electric immersion heaters
- Runs hot water in upstairs bathroom (shower has a horrid wall mounted pump)
- Runs water in kitchen
- Standard Plastic Cold Water Tank
- Water tank needs replacing as it is bulging and has a small crack
- Feeds upstairs bathroom, kitchen and hot water tank
- Water pressure
- Thames Water (house situated very near the pumping station)
- Good pressure at all times of day (previous plumber indicated pressure was not an issue when he tested it)
- 15mm mains inlet so volume may be an issue
- The whole estate is mainly elderly people who have the old water tank / hot water tank system. I would imagine pressure might start becoming an issue over the next 10 years as new couples move in.
As you can see this is a slightly weird set-up. In terms of my requirements for the hot water this is them in a priority order (1 = most important):
- Power
- I will be keeping both bathrooms with Shower in both rooms. I will be unlikely to use both showers simultaniously for 5-7 yrs if/when we have children.
- I am planning on rainfall type shower heads in both shower rooms and understand that it is best to have good pressure and volume for these to be effective.
- Noise
- I am keen not to have the whole house woken up when anyone has a shower. Pumps have probably gotten better since I had one installed 10 yrs ago, but imagine that they still generate a decent amount of dB!
- Efficiency
- I would prefer not to heat a tank of water and have a combi boiler running. It seems inefficient to heat hot water in a tank only to then heat different water when taking a shower.
- Longevity
- I am rennovating the house at the moment and want to ensure that any new pipe work/ wall chasing etc is completed now so that I do not need to redo this work in the future. Whilst my requirements on hot water are not great at the moment, I plan to be in this house for 10+ years when my family will likely be larger and hot water requirements will increase.
- I would not mind replacing the combi boiler with a larger unit in 5-7 years if water requirements increase. Equally if replacing it now makes the most sense then this is also an option
- Cost
- Cost is a consideration, but doing the right thing for the future is more important to me.
What would you all suggest I do to the house? To be honest I am confused by the options as none of them seem ideal. It almost feels like I should either keep a cold water tank and hot water tank and suppliment them with a pump (in which case I likely need a new non-combi boiler to heat them all). Or that I need to dig my drive up, install a larger mains inlet and then in the future upgrade the Combi to a larger capacity one when the family grows in size.
Please let me know your ideas. No option is too stupid. One plumber even suggested pumping water from a new cold water tank through my Combi? An innovative and novel idea or completely stupid?
Thanks in advance for your suggestions.
Jon