This is my first post on the forum... but I've been around a while, lurking. Hello!
I'm hoping someone can advise me with a question about unvented cylinders. I'm told they must be connected to the mains and can't be gravity fed, but I'm having trouble understanding why... if the pressure and flow rate are good enough, why does it matter?
Backstory / context
I currently have an open vented cylinder and cold tank in my airing cupboard. My hot water pressure is poor due to the lack of head height. So I'm looking to have an unvented cylinder installed to a) free up space in the airing cupboard, b) improve hot water pressure, and c) remove a very noisy (positive head) shower pump which only kicks in if the shower head is brought right down into the bath. The flow rate from the bath cold tap is 32 l/m, which indicates the flow would be good enough for an unvented
The issue is I have four supply pipes running through my airing cupboard, which unhelpfully are not labelled. One of them supplies the existing cold water tank in the airing cupboard and the bathroom. The other three pipes aren't connected to anything. We know there are communal tanks on the roof of the block, so we are not sure if this pipe is a rising main or fed by the communal tanks. But unfortunately we can't gain access to the roof to trace pipes. So there doesn't seem to be a way of determining whether the pipe is mains or gravity fed.
I spoke to Joule who told me unvented cylinders can't be gravity fed. When I asked why, the response I got was - "An unvented cylinder needs to have a constant pressure and supply and you would not have this on an unvented cylinder". I think they mean 'I would not have this on a gravity fed system'. I want to understand this better - what's the difference, if the pressure and flow is good enough from the communal tanks (given there's a 50/50 chance that's what the supply is).
I'm hoping someone can advise me with a question about unvented cylinders. I'm told they must be connected to the mains and can't be gravity fed, but I'm having trouble understanding why... if the pressure and flow rate are good enough, why does it matter?
Backstory / context
I currently have an open vented cylinder and cold tank in my airing cupboard. My hot water pressure is poor due to the lack of head height. So I'm looking to have an unvented cylinder installed to a) free up space in the airing cupboard, b) improve hot water pressure, and c) remove a very noisy (positive head) shower pump which only kicks in if the shower head is brought right down into the bath. The flow rate from the bath cold tap is 32 l/m, which indicates the flow would be good enough for an unvented
The issue is I have four supply pipes running through my airing cupboard, which unhelpfully are not labelled. One of them supplies the existing cold water tank in the airing cupboard and the bathroom. The other three pipes aren't connected to anything. We know there are communal tanks on the roof of the block, so we are not sure if this pipe is a rising main or fed by the communal tanks. But unfortunately we can't gain access to the roof to trace pipes. So there doesn't seem to be a way of determining whether the pipe is mains or gravity fed.
I spoke to Joule who told me unvented cylinders can't be gravity fed. When I asked why, the response I got was - "An unvented cylinder needs to have a constant pressure and supply and you would not have this on an unvented cylinder". I think they mean 'I would not have this on a gravity fed system'. I want to understand this better - what's the difference, if the pressure and flow is good enough from the communal tanks (given there's a 50/50 chance that's what the supply is).
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