E
ericbrad
We are having gas installed to our, at present, all electric house. The main reason we want it is so we can get rid of the hot water cylinder in the bathroom cupboard. It`s a combination cylinder with cold water tank above the hot water. It spends every night heating up on off peak electricity, but the water is never very hot, especially later in the day. The boost immersion heater near the top of the tank has not worked for years, but it`s impossible to replace it with a new one as it is jammed solid and will not unscrew.
So if we have a combi boiler installed we can have on demand hot water. Then the cylinder can be ripped out, giving us much more storage space in the bathroom cupboard.
We could also have a decent mixer shower installed, to replace our electric one.
As regards central heating though, I`m not sure whether we should have it installed. It would mean major upheaval as we have solid floors downstairs so all the pipework would have to be routed under the bedroom floors.
We have electric storage heaters downstairs and convector heaters upstairs at present ( we rarely use the convector heaters). The advantage of storage heaters is that they stay warm all day, and as we are retired we are at home all day. Whereas central heating radiators go cold when the heating switches off.
Any help and advice most welcome.
So if we have a combi boiler installed we can have on demand hot water. Then the cylinder can be ripped out, giving us much more storage space in the bathroom cupboard.
We could also have a decent mixer shower installed, to replace our electric one.
As regards central heating though, I`m not sure whether we should have it installed. It would mean major upheaval as we have solid floors downstairs so all the pipework would have to be routed under the bedroom floors.
We have electric storage heaters downstairs and convector heaters upstairs at present ( we rarely use the convector heaters). The advantage of storage heaters is that they stay warm all day, and as we are retired we are at home all day. Whereas central heating radiators go cold when the heating switches off.
Any help and advice most welcome.