using a mixer shower in conjuction with an electric shower | Showers and Wetrooms Advice | Plumbers Forums

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L

louise007

I am wondering if anyone here can tell me if a mixer shower can be used in conjunction with a power shower?
I currently have an electric shower with a galvanised steel tank.. so it's gravity fed. I orignally was going to get a combi boiler so I bought a themostatic mixer shower and was going to get a pump to help increase the pressure. I've been advised that my boiler/tank is in perfect working order so dont need to replace it.. plus it costs nearly £2.5k...
So I now need to know.... if I buy an electric shower can this be 'attached' to the mixer shower (TRITON EXCELLENTE) that I already have (ie: remove the shower head and attached the hose to the back of the one I have) cause I love this shower and really dont want or like the electric shower heads etc!

PLEASE HELP!!
smile.gif


Thanks
 
Am I right in thinking that you want to use an electric shower to feed a mixer shower

E.g. Outlet of electric shower to hot feed of mixer.

If im right, NO is the answer
Electric showers use the outlet as a safety device and you will be disabling that. Risking loads!
 
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I currently have an electric shower with a galvanised steel tank...

So I now need to know.... if I buy an electric shower can this be 'attached' to the mixer shower (TRITON EXCELLENTE) that I already have (ie: remove the shower head and attached the hose to the back of the one I have) cause I love this shower and really dont want or like the electric shower heads etc!

I'm confused...do you have an electric shower or a mixer shower?
You can swap the shower heads, if it's a standard fitting.

Would be easier if you explain what the problem is and what you are trying to achieve. Is it a more powerful shower (increased pressure)?
 
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lol sorry guys

Right i have a normal boiler (not combi)
I have bought a mixer shower
I do not want to have to put on the hot water heater everytime i want a shower (hot & cold feed)
I want to be able to hit the on switch and have hot water immediatley.
The pressure in the house is fine with my current electric shower
so... my 'new' shower is a fixed head rainforrest sytle one which has a thermostatic valve.. can i just connect the hose from the electric shower into the back of this.. so i have a nice shower head plus the convenice of an electric one?
 
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Get a local plumber

I don't think DIY is your forte
 
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i a plumber in my area would turn up for the job i would... hence the reason i'm on here asking so i can see if what i want to do is possible or if i have to buy a new shower.. wasnt going to do it myself!!!
 
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Draw a picture of what your trying to acheive

I find it very difficult to imagine what your trying to explain
Sorry
 
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my 'new' shower is a fixed head rainforrest sytle one which has a thermostatic valve.. can i just connect the hose from the electric shower into the back of this.. so i have a nice shower head plus the convenice of an electric one?

If you are asking can you put your new hose and shower head on your existing shower, almost certainly yes. Don't need any tools. Undo by hand, put on new one, with supplied washers inside, and hand tighten. You can use either existing or new hose, either existing or new head. 99.999% are universal sizes and will fit.

If you are asking can you have your electric shower running through your thermostatic bar unit, no. And I doubt it's what you mean as I can't picture how you'd arrange it.
 
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Does your new mixer shower connect to the raindance (or rainforest?) shower head with a flexible shower hose? If so, you just need to fix the new shower head in position and then connect it to your electric shower using the flexible shower hose.

What shower mixer/head have you bought - maybe we can look up the model to check.
 
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This is your shower, is it not Louise007?

I think it would be very difficult to adapt, you would need to connect the flexi hose from the removable handset to the electric shower and then blank off the feeds to the mixer shower and remove any non return valves and somehow disable the divertor so its on all the time and cannot be turned off. You'd also need to disable the thermostatic cartridge and on/off valve to make the whole thing a straight through pipe to the fixed showerhead.

You would also need to spend at least £300 for a decent 10.8KW electric shower.
 
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yeah phil thats my shower.. sounds like it's far too much work.. probably gonna have to sell it and buy a new one.. do you know if you can get the same style shower but working electrical???
i cant seem to find anything like the one i have ? :(

thanks
 
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