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.
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
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?
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.