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GQuigley67

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Hello folks

Got a customer who wants one of these fitted in his house. House has 2 bathrooms with a combination boiler and 18-20 litres per minute coming from the kitchen sink cold mains tap.

His problem is that when he's in the shower and someone turns on the cold tap, he gets reduced flow(mixer taps)

When the house had an extension the plumber has came off the mains stopcock in 15mm.

So my question is, will the home boost help with this problem? and will it work with the hot outlets also ? I don't think it will but I have no experience with them.
 
one word accumulator
 
I think you can only pump 12 lpm from the mains which is below what you have anyway
 
If you've got 18-20 lpm anyway I won't do nothing ot will only pump to 12 anyway,
 
it advertises as if it increases the pressure when there is a drop so you get 12 lpm from each outlet simultaneously, he thinks thats what it does, I don't.
 
As Shaun says accumulater, home boost won't make any difference as you already have more than they pump
 
That's what I thought, I tried to talk him out of it he was one of those know it all types and was a medic, so he was going on about pressure and flow as if he knew better than me haha, had me questioning myself.
 
I much prefer the fuller answer given here, it helps people understand the why.

Accumulators offer an effective way to improve the supply pressures by providing a buffer of stored water, Air within the Accumulator (contained within a rubber diaphragm) is compressed by the mains water or charging pump (if necessary).

When a tap is opened, the water is forced out of the Accumulator to the tap,

Accumulators are an ideal solution for properties where the mains water supply cannot keep-up with the required demand; this may be the case with larger properties where multiple bathrooms may in-use simultaneously.

Sizing is important too; An Accumulator can run out of water. It won't do any harm, but when emptied, it will revert back to the original mains supply flow rate until it has re-filled.
 
As others have said, the Salamander product is only legally allowed to pump 12 litres per minute from the main, and if the incoming main was over 12 lpm, then the unit switches off and just goes into bypass mode. Its a very useful product, but not for this scenario.

Stuart Turner have a range of reasonably priced domestic units called flomate extra, comprising a mains pump mated with a range of accumulator vessels. The chart below gives the performance details

STflomateextra.jpg
 
I was simply comparing #2 to posts #3,4 & 6, where a one word answer is somewhat lacking imho.

? I'm sure op could of used the search function or google it as he already said the home boost wouldn't work but then again the op customer shouldn't of had a combi fitted with more than one shower
 
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I'm sure op could of used the search function or google it as he already said the home boost wouldn't work

Guess you were tired then considering how much you normally like to help by posting links etc to posts. I remember once I directed a newbie to the "I need a plumber or ...." section and you quoted me and gave them a link which I thought was a little OTT.
 
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Guess you were tired then considering how much you normally like to help by posting links etc to posts.

True been a long old slog this one has too much work too little time
 
it advertises as if it increases the pressure when there is a drop so you get 12 lpm from each outlet simultaneously, he thinks thats what it does, I don't.

He is misunderstanding it, if the incoming mains is 18-20 and you turn two taps on and get 12lpm from each, the incoming will still be 18-20.

Good product but not for his requirements
 
Would one of those inline shower booster gizmos work in this instance?
 
Thanks for the help guys.

I'm quoting for a boiler replacement for the customer as its a 24kw boiler in a house that's had 2 extensions, and the mains has been reduced to 15mm. Gave him quote for boiler replacement and some information on accumulator system, told him to wait until higher spec combi is in before considering booster system.
 
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