Unvented - how many showers/performance? | Showers and Wetrooms Advice | Plumbers Forums
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Discuss Unvented - how many showers/performance? in the Showers and Wetrooms Advice area at Plumbers Forums

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155
I have a megaflo unvented cylinder which feeds 3 bathrooms. In particular, it feeds 3 showers which have pura thermostatic valves:

http://www.purabathrooms.co.uk/catalog/index.php?route=product/product/datasheet&product_id=24158

The MI state the valve uses 32 litres/min at 3 bar. Two of my showers have 200mm heads and the other has a 250mm head.

Individually, these showers perform wonderfully. Pressure and flow is great. However, the first of these showers (closest to the cylinder, with the larger 250mm head) definitely has a noticeable drop in performance if either of the others are turned on. It's still adequate, but given my incoming mains is 32mm MDPE and over 60 litres/min flow, I'm surprised they don't all work without a drop in performance together.

All the showers are fed using a mixture of 22mm polyplumb and copper.

Are my expectations too high? Is it the pipe route which is the problem? Trying to get my head around what (if any) solution there could be in the future if I ever undertake any work.

Thanks.
 
Every elbow, every meter of pipe, every valve reduces your flow. There is another issue I see with having two showers at 30l/m running simultaneously is your megaflo will fill will cold water in about 10 minutes. Thats assuming a 400 litre cylinder.

One thing I can say is 32l/m at 3 bar must mean the shower head is very large. Typical hand helds push out 9l/m at 3 bar. You can see how no matter what your mains is if the hole is large enough you will always lose pressure and flow the more you open up.
 
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Have a look into accumulators, TWS GAH and plenty more manufacturers make them but be warned it would have to be massive to be any real help!

Might be a good idea to get a G3 qualified plumber round to give you a better idea about what's achievable with your set up and demands.
 
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Am I right in saying that if I have adequate pressure and flow from the mains, an accumulator would not be required?

I have had G3 qualified plumbers round. The advice seems to vary from upgrading the internal pipework to 28mm, but this will result in more heat loss and wasted water, to changing the PRV to >3 bar (which I know is against the regulations!). I'm trying to gauge if others with unvented setups and multiple large showers get great performance, and if so, compare setups.

I've bought a pressure gauge today, so will measure this at various outlets to see if maybe my PRV is faulty or has debris.
 
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if you have around 60ltr a min incoming on the mains and you have 3 showers each at 32ltr a min even with just 2 running your over your max incoming ltr a min, what's your dynamic water pressure?
 
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Just used the pressure gauge. So on outside taps, which bypass the PRV, I am getting a solid 4 bar.

On an outside tap after the PRV, I am getting 2.2 bar. Also tried on the bath taps and on all 3 shower outlets, all giving 2.2 bar.

PRV strainer need cleaning? Faulty PRV? Or something else.
 
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That's static pressure put on outside tap and run an the kitchen sink will give you the working pressure

and could be something simple get your G3 Eng to investigate
 
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Would you expect the gauge to read exactly 3 bar, or would pressure be lost in the pipework? For the outside tap, we're talking 2m of 22mm and then 3m of 15mm to outside. I would have thought it should be pretty close to 3 bar.

I did try the dynamic pressure test. It drops by 0.5 bar. So bypassing the PRV, I have 4 bar static, and 3.5 bar dynamic.

G3 engineer is coming tomorrow. Would still like to understand what should be expected from the setup and what typical real world scenarios achieve. Haven't ruled out the gauge itself may be inaccurate (monument gauge from amazon).
 
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Would you expect the gauge to read exactly 3 bar, or would pressure be lost in the pipework? For the outside tap, we're talking 2m of 22mm and then 3m of 15mm to outside. I would have thought it should be pretty close to 3 bar.

I did try the dynamic pressure test. It drops by 0.5 bar. So bypassing the PRV, I have 4 bar static, and 3.5 bar dynamic.

G3 engineer is coming tomorrow. Would still like to understand what should be expected from the setup and what typical real world scenarios achieve. Haven't ruled out the gauge itself may be inaccurate (monument gauge from amazon).

its unlikely for the pipework to cause a drop of more than 1 bar, sorry we cant give any more info out just incase you decided to have a go (you have said you wont but we cant guarantee that and you could damage something/ mess with a safety device)

hope you understand
 
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This is what I was told by the guy who put the new mains in for me and tested it.

Regardless, what I would say is that if I try to fill a bucket using the outside tap, it's almost impossible to do so at full flow. The water just bounces straight out there's so much of it. So I'm assuming flow is going to be as good as it gets in London.
 
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You can have better flow if you want it, many ways to skin this cat. Many of my customers have six plus bathrooms and have no issues to usage concurrency.
 
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Could you tell me specifically about the PRV and the reading I am getting of 2.2 bar on the first outside tap after this PRV? Cleaning the strainer will be the first thing the plumber does, but is there anything else I could try or suggest in case that does not work?
 
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Get a decent plumber that know what he's doing and you'll be fine. I'm not going to offer an suggestions about working on an UV cylinder and it's associated controls and safety devices.
 
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Fair enough. I have a G3 plumber coming later today.

Whilst I can understand why a lot of members who are RGIs default to not giving advice in case somebody decides to have a go themselves, there are many of us who want advice only so we can use that to help a qualified professional arrive at an answer. I've had a lot of plumbers/RGIs during building works a few years ago and they varied massively in how competent or capable they were. To be fair, even the good one's when sometimes prompted would arrive at an answer quicker or look at something they may otherwise have not of.
 
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Fair enough. I have a G3 plumber coming later today.

Whilst I can understand why a lot of members who are RGIs default to not giving advice in case somebody decides to have a go themselves, there are many of us who want advice only so we can use that to help a qualified professional arrive at an answer. I've had a lot of plumbers/RGIs during building works a few years ago and they varied massively in how competent or capable they were. To be fair, even the good one's when sometimes prompted would arrive at an answer quicker or look at something they may otherwise have not of.

Once he's told you what's wrong you can ask us if it sounds about right
 
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