Implications with having two gas supplies in one building | Gas Engineers Forum | Plumbers Forums
  • Welcome to PlumbersTalk.net

    Welcome to Plumbers' Talk | The new domain for UKPF / Plumbers Forums. Login with your existing details they should all work fine. Please checkout the PT Updates Forum

Welcome to the forum. Although you can post in any forum, the USA forum is here in case of local regs or laws

American Visitor?

Hey friend, we're detecting that you're an American visitor and want to thank you for coming to PlumbersTalk.net - Here is a link to the American Plumbing Forum. Though if you post in any other forum from your computer / phone it'll be marked with a little american flag so that other users can help from your neck of the woods. We hope this helps. And thanks once again.

Discuss Implications with having two gas supplies in one building in the Gas Engineers Forum area at Plumbers Forums

Status
Not open for further replies.

bacon_sandwich

Gas Engineer
Messages
254
Just starting on a project that involves installing a new gas supply U40 2 inch job but the client already has a very old u16 supply which is piped from a remote meter box and underground steel pipe. The pipework cannot deal with the increase in demand required (quite frankly its not really up to the current demand) and as the existing pipework is basically scrap. I have a quote to put the new supply right up to the building considerably shortening the run at 21mbar.
However i may or may not de-commission the old pipework , client wants to keep the old set up as well as having a new one.
Anybody know the rules wrt multiple supplies to industrial buildings and how do we deal with isolation etc
thx
 
Are you commercially bacon ?
 
Just starting on a project that involves installing a new gas supply U40 2 inch job but the client already has a very old u16 supply which is piped from a remote meter box and underground steel pipe. The pipework cannot deal with the increase in demand required (quite frankly its not really up to the current demand) and as the existing pipework is basically scrap. I have a quote to put the new supply right up to the building considerably shortening the run at 21mbar.
However i may or may not de-commission the old pipework , client wants to keep the old set up as well as having a new one.
Anybody know the rules wrt multiple supplies to industrial buildings and how do we deal with isolation etc
thx

You can have more than one supply to a building.
I may be missing the point here Bacon!!
lots of Buildings have more than one supply.
They won't be linked will they?
 
@Shaun - yep.
I was thinking along the lines of - client smells gas, he will have to isolate at two locations unless i put in some electric valves.
One supply existing feeds, 2 X combi, 1 X warm air heater, then extends to another building where it feeds 1 X warm air heater.
New supply is really for a new process boiler circa 250KW.
However the new boiler, combis and 1 X warm air heater are all in the same "space" i.e. an industrial unit.
Hope that makes sense
 
So what's going to be fed from the old meter ?
 
All existing, except the new process boiler. The new boiler will be in the same unit (space) as the existing combis and warm air heater.
wish i could draw it.
 
Try and make it clearer:
Option 1 : Existing U16 supply currently feeds 2X combi, 1 X warm air heater in Unit 1 and 1X warm air heater in Unit 2. This stays as is and the new supply will be dedicated to the new process boiler.
Option 2: New supply supplies new boiler and i pipe to a suitable point where it can pick up the other appliances using the existing internal pipework. It is then capped as it goes out of the building and the rest back to the old meter is redundant. Pipe is decommission and old meter is taken away.

The reason for option 1 is to provide continuity whilst this is going on and he also has extra capacity for the unknown which he likes. However i keep picking up signals that providers dont like multiple supplies and wish to disconnect the old one once i have connected the pipework together, however i cannot find out why or whats the problem, hence coming here. If its to ensure there is one method to isolate i can do this will electric isolation valves.
 
seems stupid paying standing charges on two meters

if it was me i would size the new supply and meter to cope with the whole install and plant

you could get away with a u40 (u65 better)

but hay hop yes you can have two supplies just need to list / label what meter the appliance is fed off also if they have a fire alarm link a solenoid valve into that
 
I think option 1 now is, i contact supply and get a new quote for a U65, this will then assure client he has enough capacity for knowns and some extra for unknowns. I can then get a company in to weld up pipe to the new boiler, drop down to 2 inch i can take it from there.
Sound like a plan...
 
I think option 1 now is, i contact supply and get a new quote for a U65, this will then assure client he has enough capacity for knowns and some extra for unknowns. I can then get a company in to weld up pipe to the new boiler, drop down to 2 inch i can take it from there.
Sound like a plan...

why not press it ?
 
You can hire all the gear
 
When I did a stint with NGrid about 3 years ago, it was a definite no-no for 2 supplies to one premises. When encountered, we had to report them, an they were scheduled for street disconnection.
 
Deeerrrrrrr, what you on about
Deeerrrrrr? The Cheek of it!
I'm going off Shaun saying:-
you could get away with a u40 (u65 better)
Along with you not seeming to know the answers yourself.
I have not seen any mention in this thread of the volume of Gas being used so it looks like a guess.

There is no Deeeerrrrr! required here Bacon. I was trying to help because the thread reads like you are new to Commercial.
 
Last edited:
When I did a stint with NGrid about 3 years ago, it was a definite no-no for 2 supplies to one premises. When encountered, we had to report them, an they were scheduled for street disconnection.
I work in plenty of Buildings where there is more than one Meter installation. They have all been installed by Nat Grid.
 
Deeerrrrrr? The Cheek of it!
I'm going off Shaun saying:-

Along with you not seeming to know the answers yourself.
I have not seen any mention in this thread of the volume of Gas being used so it looks like a guess.

There is no Deeeerrrrr! required here Bacon. I was trying to help because the thread reads like you are new to Commercial.

I took it from the kw of the new boiler off the new meter and added a bit I allowed 30m3/h when the new one I around 250kw

Post 4
 
I took it from the kw of the new boiler off the new meter and added a bit I allowed 30m3/h when the new one I around 250kw

Post 4
The new 250 Kw would work off a U25. That's why I didn't get the U40?
Unless he is adding the other appliances that the existing supply feeds but then he does not say how big the 2 warm air units are or the combi boilers.
You know yourself, a warm air unit can be any size.
It's one thing to guess a combi but not that.

That's the only reason I posted about the Gas use. It did not deserve the deeerrrrrr!.
Why not calculate the requirements accurately?
Why try to apply for an oversized meter?
The process of application asks for the gas use anyway, you can't just apply for whatever meter size you fancy as you know.
 
The new 250 Kw would work off a U25. That's why I didn't get the U40?
Unless he is adding the other appliances that the existing supply feeds but then he does not say how big the 2 warm air units are or the combi boilers.
You know yourself, a warm air unit can be any size.
It's one thing to guess a combi but not that.

That's the only reason I posted about the Gas use. It did not deserve the deeerrrrrr!.
Why not calculate the requirements accurately?
Why try to apply for an oversized meter?
The process of application asks for the gas use anyway, you can't just apply for whatever meter size you fancy as you know.

That's my estimation

U16 if sized right and u25 combined into one meter

And that's why I said if the u16 is sized correctly

And yea you can easily loose 65kw - 150ke on one unit

And yea but the next one up is a u65 from a 40 ?
 
That's my estimation

U16 if sized right and u25 combined into one meter

And that's why I said if the u16 is sized correctly

And yea you can easily loose 65kw - 150ke on one unit

And yea but the next one up is a u65 from a 40 ?

Still no reason why it can't be worked out is there?
That would give an answer. The right answer. The only way to do it.
 
Still no reason why it can't be worked out is there?
That would give an answer. The right answer. The only way to do it.

Nope just op didn't supply any figures so had to take a shot in the dark a bit :D

Yep
 
Guys, chill out, my OP was about 2 supplies, i can do the math on meter size and i did, thats when the client then mentioned "additional stuff that i cannot size" after i hit him with the U40 quote. U40 covers his known demand but its at the limit.
The Deeer was all about you thinking i was needing help to size a meter, i dont, thx i needed help on multiple supplies.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Similar plumbing topics

More than fine then in 11/5 tube should be...
Replies
3
Views
629
Gottit! Thanks Chris.
Replies
12
Views
26K
  • Locked
As others have said a U16 meter is needed some...
Replies
5
Views
2K
Good stuff, yep I can’t totally relate to...
Replies
7
Views
2K
Sharp Point
S
    • Funny
I have exactly the same problem! Is there a...
Replies
6
Views
10K
Mrloaf
M
Back
Top