R
rob42
My partner owns a house which she lived in for 20 years and started renting out 2 years ago. First 2 gas inspections found no problems, but the engineer doing the third one put an "At Risk" notice on the hob, giving the reason "pipe to small".
The notice said the hob had been disconnected and was both dangerous and illegal to use. Disconnection consisted of removing the button for the spark ignition and putting the sticker over the hole. Gas was still on, and the hob could still be used by lighting with a match or just pressing the sticker in the right place.
Pipework to the hob is as follows: 22 mm copper from the meter connects to an approx 27 mm OD steel pipe which runs in the (concrete) kitchen floor to the hob. (I'm not used to steel pipe, but 27 mm OD I think is 3/4" BSP?) The steel pipe then connects to 10mm copper up to the hob.
Pipe lengths: steel approx 4m, with one elbow I can see, and presumably one more where it comes out of the floor (possibly 2 if it goes up in the wall). 10mm copper approx 1.5m, no elbows, hand bent, one isolating valve.
The only other gas appliance in the house is an old system boiler fed by 15mm copper which tees off from the 22mm from the meter just before the iron coupler.
I can see that the 10 mm pipe should really be 15 mm, but is there actually a significant risk here? With all 4 burners lit, the flames on the hob are stable. The others increase slightly when the big one is turned off, but not much. (Hob is a standard 4 burner 1 big, 2 medium, 1 small.)
Replacing the 10 mm pipe is difficult because accessing the end of the steel pipe involves removing a run of kitchen units - it would probably be easier to start again on the outside wall.
Can we ask the inspecting engineer for more information on what he thinks the problem is? If there's a real risk we'll get it sorted, but I'm a little doubtful.
The notice said the hob had been disconnected and was both dangerous and illegal to use. Disconnection consisted of removing the button for the spark ignition and putting the sticker over the hole. Gas was still on, and the hob could still be used by lighting with a match or just pressing the sticker in the right place.
Pipework to the hob is as follows: 22 mm copper from the meter connects to an approx 27 mm OD steel pipe which runs in the (concrete) kitchen floor to the hob. (I'm not used to steel pipe, but 27 mm OD I think is 3/4" BSP?) The steel pipe then connects to 10mm copper up to the hob.
Pipe lengths: steel approx 4m, with one elbow I can see, and presumably one more where it comes out of the floor (possibly 2 if it goes up in the wall). 10mm copper approx 1.5m, no elbows, hand bent, one isolating valve.
The only other gas appliance in the house is an old system boiler fed by 15mm copper which tees off from the 22mm from the meter just before the iron coupler.
I can see that the 10 mm pipe should really be 15 mm, but is there actually a significant risk here? With all 4 burners lit, the flames on the hob are stable. The others increase slightly when the big one is turned off, but not much. (Hob is a standard 4 burner 1 big, 2 medium, 1 small.)
Replacing the 10 mm pipe is difficult because accessing the end of the steel pipe involves removing a run of kitchen units - it would probably be easier to start again on the outside wall.
Can we ask the inspecting engineer for more information on what he thinks the problem is? If there's a real risk we'll get it sorted, but I'm a little doubtful.