Would this be ok to run a high pressure shower? | Showers and Wetrooms Advice | Plumbers Forums
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Discuss Would this be ok to run a high pressure shower? in the Showers and Wetrooms Advice area at Plumbers Forums

WaterTight

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Don't know anything about them. She has heart set on overhead drencher type shower requiring combi/HP set up. Didn't have time to measure pressure but kitchen hot seemed to have very decent oomph when turning it on.

IMAG1011.jpg
 
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Is that boiler a combi ???? Never heard of these don't know why but looks like a baxi solo lol. If that is a combi then you can treat it as a combi.
 
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Ah just checked it's an instantaneous water heater soz
 
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it's a "multi point water heater"

i don't know if that is just an old name / early version of a combi or something a little less and therefore with special considerations for running showers etc
 
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The heater gives 6 litres per minute @ a &0 deg rise or 10 lpm @ 30 deg rise
 
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Aqualisa say as long as it is a "minimum of 24 KW" it will be fine.

The instaneous heater manual says it has:

Heat input nominal: 23 kW - 78,480 Btu/h
Heat output nominal: 21 kW - 71,650 Btu/h

Is it the input or output that they would be referring to and how close makes no difference in this case? Or can 1-3 KW (depending which one they'll mean) make all the difference?

Thanks
 
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I imagine they are stating a minimum appliance kW to guarantee a minimum flow rate and to ensure a warm enough shower will be able to be delivered.. Ie to heat water by 35 degrees which is the industry standard for instantaneous water heaters with a 24kw appliance it will deliver that at 9.79 l/m. However this does not allow for heat/energy wastage as this is an input calculation so the flow rate will be infact lower than that but average correction factors can be applied. I think they would be referring to heat output (net) rather than input (gross) as it will then guarantee a minimum litres per minute. Ie 24 kW will deliver X ammount of water a minute at a minimum temp of X hope this helps.
 
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Blimey, youngsters today!

The whole country used to heat their water with Britonys, Ascot and the Main "River" series - Trent, Severn, Medway, Mersey etc.

Just think of it as a combi on summer setting. It'll be fine.

Incidentally, the Britony IIT was that rarest of things - a market leading product from Chaffoteaux et Maury.
 
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Blimey, youngsters today!

The whole country used to heat their water with Britonys, Ascot and the Main "River" series - Trent, Severn, Medway, Mersey etc.

Just think of it as a combi on summer setting. It'll be fine.

Incidentally, the Britony IIT was that rarest of things - a market leading product from Chaffoteaux et Maury.

Brilliant piece of kit. Chaffoteaux went wrong when they started putting electricity in their appliances haha!
 
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