Prv & condensate pump | Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board | Plumbers Forums

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 Prv & condensate pump in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at Plumbers Forums

Status
Not open for further replies.

GrahamM

Plumbers Arms member
Plumber
Gas Engineer
Messages
2,044
Thoughts on this set up guys.

A load of these installs have appeared on my patch.
Prv ran into condensate pump via tundish and plastic pipework.
The condensate pump is compatible as per Saermann.
Vokera were giving no specific answer saying refer to British Standards.
Prp.jpg
 
They've recently altered the regs on this. You need to check with the manufacturer. It can go in to the pump, but in most cases the prv water shouldn't go in to that type of pipe. It needs to be rated for high temp, but the way to get around it is to put the prv in copper and go straight in to the pump rather than via the overflow pipe.
 
I'd be more worried that the outlet hose from that pump is kinked & will kill the pump sooner or later!
 
The PRV pump is probably 5 times the money... Maybe it's overkill for a problem that would never really exist... The existing pump would probably cope if the PRV started to open, they only seem to drip or run slowly, unless a fill loop is left connected & on but that's just unlikely.

I would just highlight it to the customer so there informed & Ncs if you want to cover yourself?
 
Seeing a lot of installs like this myself of late , i just tell the cust and i end up doing it properly .

I do love carp plumbers keeps me busy
 
from what i have seen from the prv/condy twin pumps,there is a flowswitch wired in after the fill valve that shuts off if the pressure goes over a certain point,for example if left on,not fitted any yet though
 
Pipe the prv into the return and fit a remote prv on rad pipework on an outside wall big problem solved.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Similar plumbing topics

That's right a plastic tube
Replies
2
Views
99
Just to round this off with what I found here...
Replies
5
Views
752
Domestic boilers are fixed rate and don’t...
Replies
21
Views
21K
I have connected the secondary pump to a wifi...
Replies
9
Views
2K
H
Hi there, thanks for your time to look at this...
Replies
0
Views
904
HRP123
H
Back
Top