S
Sup9
Hello all,
I currently have a gravity hot water system - with a 110x60x60cm water tank and a small one (expansion vessel?) in the loft, the water pressure in the bathrooms (3 on first floor) are very poor, especially the master bedroom en-suite (the furthest way from the cold water tank) which is unusable for shower. My understanding is that the cold water tank is feeding both the hot water cylinder and the cold water taps in all bathrooms. And I have tested at the ground floor tap, the mains water is 22L/mins so not so bad at all.
I also had a look in the loft and find out the cold water tank is the old style open tank with plastic sheet covers on top, which already fall off into the tank so the tank is quite dirty and I can see the built up limescale at the bottom.
So apart from the shower pressure I have the concerns about the water quality.
My understanding is that I have two options:
1. Keep the existing system with the loft cold water tank. Add multiple small pumps for each bathroom, and change the cold water tank to poly water tank with lid. This system is the safest system as the tank and cylinder is not pressurized, but the water quality could be getting worse along the time when the limescale built up and dust etc get into the tank.
For this setup my main concerns are Water quality over time and pump noise. Do people just get the tank professionally cleaned regularly? Or can I by pass the cold water tank and split the mains water (currently feeding the cold water tank) then connect all bathroom cold water pipes to it, so my bathroom cold water taps are feed directly by mains water - fresh and at the mains pressure. Then adding pumps for each bathrooms' hot water to balance off the pressure.
2. Convert to unvented cylinder, so the cold water will be at mains supply pressure. With 22L/min flow rate tested at ground level tap, am I guaranteed to have good shower performance in all bathrooms ( assuming only one in use or 2 showers simultaneously). And we are also slightly worried about the safety of the cylinder as it may blow up if not fitted right - I was not aware it could explode and cause serious damage, the cylinder fitting guy came for a quote and asked me to check out the explosion video - he was trying to make a selling point as he's manufacture approved installer and I am seriously put off by the possibility of it exploding.
The current cylinder is in the cupboard next to my daughter's room so my wife asked me to move the unvented cylinder to the garage if we went with the unvented, but then my double garage would become single as I cant park two cars anymore with the cylinder installed there...
Considering I will be living in this house for a long time so the cost does not play much here, only looking to the best option for the long run.
Thanks a lot for any advice in advance.
I currently have a gravity hot water system - with a 110x60x60cm water tank and a small one (expansion vessel?) in the loft, the water pressure in the bathrooms (3 on first floor) are very poor, especially the master bedroom en-suite (the furthest way from the cold water tank) which is unusable for shower. My understanding is that the cold water tank is feeding both the hot water cylinder and the cold water taps in all bathrooms. And I have tested at the ground floor tap, the mains water is 22L/mins so not so bad at all.
I also had a look in the loft and find out the cold water tank is the old style open tank with plastic sheet covers on top, which already fall off into the tank so the tank is quite dirty and I can see the built up limescale at the bottom.
So apart from the shower pressure I have the concerns about the water quality.
My understanding is that I have two options:
1. Keep the existing system with the loft cold water tank. Add multiple small pumps for each bathroom, and change the cold water tank to poly water tank with lid. This system is the safest system as the tank and cylinder is not pressurized, but the water quality could be getting worse along the time when the limescale built up and dust etc get into the tank.
For this setup my main concerns are Water quality over time and pump noise. Do people just get the tank professionally cleaned regularly? Or can I by pass the cold water tank and split the mains water (currently feeding the cold water tank) then connect all bathroom cold water pipes to it, so my bathroom cold water taps are feed directly by mains water - fresh and at the mains pressure. Then adding pumps for each bathrooms' hot water to balance off the pressure.
2. Convert to unvented cylinder, so the cold water will be at mains supply pressure. With 22L/min flow rate tested at ground level tap, am I guaranteed to have good shower performance in all bathrooms ( assuming only one in use or 2 showers simultaneously). And we are also slightly worried about the safety of the cylinder as it may blow up if not fitted right - I was not aware it could explode and cause serious damage, the cylinder fitting guy came for a quote and asked me to check out the explosion video - he was trying to make a selling point as he's manufacture approved installer and I am seriously put off by the possibility of it exploding.
The current cylinder is in the cupboard next to my daughter's room so my wife asked me to move the unvented cylinder to the garage if we went with the unvented, but then my double garage would become single as I cant park two cars anymore with the cylinder installed there...
Considering I will be living in this house for a long time so the cost does not play much here, only looking to the best option for the long run.
Thanks a lot for any advice in advance.