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Aug 17, 2018
12
0
1
Rochdale
Member Type
DIY or Homeowner
Hi everyone. I have a powermax 150 boiler which I have had since I purchased the house. As far as I know, it is was placed when the house was built and is 18 years old. It is very large, noisy and 74% efficient. Every year it is serviced, I get the same advice to change it as parts are expensive , you will save £££etc etc. I have resisted this advice as I have always felt " if it aint broke, dont fix it". We are looking to move house in the next 6 months and I have started to get issues with the burner light now becoming intermittant. Hot water is still being made but the heating doesnt appear to be working. The fact this happening in august rather then winter is benefecial as it means I can plan things! The boiler(and tank inside) fit in the airing cupboard upstairs. The house is 4 bedroom detached with 2 bathrooms.

Obviously I dont want to spend too much money that I might not get benefots of but equally, I realise that a problematic boiler might affect the sale of the house.

Can someone advise how they would deal with this and possible costs involved?

Thanks
 
I would bite the bullet and change the boiler if you have it repaired the buyer if he knows anything will try to knock down your price saying new boiler required. Also you have to have proof of servicing and that the boiler is safe. The buyers solicitor will ask for this
 
  • Agree
Reactions: king of pipes
I am in a similar situation except we have sold our house and gardens for demolition so a new dev. can take its place. My boiler is 18 year young and soldiers on. Replacement parts for yours might be available from IGNITE HEAT SPARES who remanufacture loads of bits and this keeps my 30 kw wall hung in tip top condition. We have to wait till after xmas b4 we go - get an OLD gas fella to look but tell him what you want 1st. Putting a new boiler in now means you will not get your full money back from the newbies - spend £1000 plus and get little in rtn
 
I am in a similar situation except we have sold our house and gardens for demolition so a new dev. can take its place. My boiler is 18 year young and soldiers on. Replacement parts for yours might be available from IGNITE HEAT SPARES who remanufacture loads of bits and this keeps my 30 kw wall hung in tip top condition. We have to wait till after xmas b4 we go - get an OLD gas fella to look but tell him what you want 1st. Putting a new boiler in now means you will not get your full money back from the newbies - spend £1000 plus and get little in rtn

The return you will get is that the buyer won't try to knock £5000.00 or more of the price for the installation of a new boiler.
 
on average houses sell for £4000 less than asking price anyway so give them something to wine over, most new buyers of bigger homes rip it all out anyway these days or make it way bigger and need new M.E.S. anyway
 
I would get a decent heating engineer to repair it if you are moving home as parts are not that expensive. The chances that the agent or the buyer knowing that your old boiler needs replacing are pretty slim. These boilers are terrible but would cost best part of £5000 to replace and if looked after last longer than most which do not. I have one on my books that I installed as it was specified in 2002 and is still going strong also very reliable in a small guest house which as had far use the the average domestic demand. But they are a terrible unit
 
Huh? Surely as soon as the prospective buyer/agent see the EPC they'll be wanting the cost of replacing/renewing it off the asking price?
 
By that logic, people would want the cost of wall/loft/floor insulation knocked off too. Logically, they would and you'd be right, but doesn't seem to happen from what I hear.
But if the new boiler is genuinely going to save gas, then do it and you can help save the planet (though giving up eating meat and not using air travel will likely have a much bigger impact than your old boiler).
 
In all honesty I would get the old girl replaced she's done her bit and its time for a new model, it may seem a big outlay but you will regain most of your outlay when the property is sold and with winter only round the corner you do not want a unreliable boiler, potential purchasers will love a nice warm comfortable and controllable system expect to pay £4000 to £5000 . Cheers kop
 
Thanks for all the useful advice. I have decided to change the boiler before winter arrives. I have had a number of quotes and varying types of boilers.

1. New ideal veige 40kwh combi with filter and chemical clean of system, 12 year guarantee. £2.3k

2. Worcester Bosch 30i ERP (30kwh combi)with chemical clean
£4.4k

3. Veissmann 111 with storage with 10 year guarantee.(told me combi would not be advisable) , £3.3k

Can anyone comment on any of these quotes? Im getting mixed messages on whether a combi or storage boiler would work for my home.

Thanks
 
Right - go get a quote for the install of whatever boiler you want from Mr reputable. Don't mention the clean out etc. and when you get quote face to face HIT THEM WITH I want 'a' clean out included - When I sold the central heating on a domestic basis - I would just thro it in when I had thought I had made the deal !!. its easy
and a million year guarantee.
 
Boiler and seperate unvented cylinder is the way to go - 4.4k for the Worcester is a bit steep but a combi is not really suitable for a 4 bed property. Kop
 
Boiler and seperate unvented cylinder is the way to go - 4.4k for the Worcester is a bit steep but a combi is not really suitable for a 4 bed property. Kop
whats the merchant price on this one when you buy 2-3 a week
as we used to - and carry it thro to our customers dont use a one trick installer get a medium sized set up who can pass on their discounts
 
  • Disagree
Reactions: ShaunCorbs
The Vaillant 938 isn’t the right boiler for your type of property it is still a combi boiler. Look at the Vaillant ecotec plus 4 series if open vented or 6 series if a sealed system. Also the size of business doesn’t really matter. Sometimes the bigger companies do worse jobs and charge more.
 

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