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mutley racers

Esteemed
Plumber
Gas Engineer
Subscribed
Jun 10, 2009
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Hampton court, Surrey
The boss and I are installing a boiler tomorrow, and to be honest, the only place to install the condensate is into the rain water pipe. Is this allowed?

I can not see any where that says no.

Also, is there a boss for this type of thing, or do you just cut and seal with silicone?

This is my home work from the governor.

Cheers fellers
 
I personnally would first fit the acidic neutraliser if practically possible in the boiler location, then the ph value would be nil then run condense into rainwater pipe, i once had a customer who was concerned that the acidic condense would pollute the local river & harm the fishes, have fun.
 
I personnally would first fit the acidic neutraliser if practically possible in the boiler location, then the ph value would be nil then run condense into rainwater pipe, i once had a customer who was concerned that the acidic condense would pollute the local river & harm the fishes, have fun.
Never seen one, anybody else fitted them ?
 
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i seen em at a trade show, its a sock filled with salts that remove the acidity. has the added bonus that it lowers the freezing temp of the discharge. by a degree or 2. but the sock liner has to be changed yearly........(assuming of course that the rads are set up correctly and the boiler does actually kick into condensing mode) lol

last week i saw a condensate cut off flush with wall, trickling down onto flat roof extension, eating away at the flat roof
 
I am no expert but I had a new Worcester Greenstar 12Ri gas boiler installed 20 months ago. The installation engineer asked me where the soakaway was? I had no idea but there is a waste drain that goes through the house with a plastic threaded cap front and back of the house. That would have entailed him having to run condensate pipework to front drain under porch or back under decking. He said the other alternative according to the fitting instructions was a pot with neutralising material in it (pot with holes in) I checked installation manual and it did offer that as an alternative so I agreed! Not sure how often the material in and around the pot have to be checked or changed tho? I guess at regular services?
 
I don't know ! condensate drains, condensate pumps, trace heating, acidic neutralizers..........all to save approximately 13% in efficiency over the old Band D boilers ! & that is if its all working to optimum efficiency all the time which is highly unlikely unless the system is a low temperature underfloor system or similar.
Can't help thinking that the boiler manufacturers saw the ££££ signs & managed to hoodwink "two jags" into all this under the guise of "protecting the environment".

Its all a bit "Emperors new clothes" for me I'm afraid 🙁
 
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acid my bum,

ever seen a pig 'dog' pee on the lawn?.

2 weeks later all the grass is burnt.

tell me the condensates more acidic as this and if not i will stop my missus using the bog in order to save the environment....
 
Yeah you can put it in a limestone soakaway, think it need to be about 500-600mm away from the house. Different manufacturers may vary on distance, just remember the limestone chippings need changing every year.

You can definitely put it into a rainwater pipe if it leads to a combined drainage system, if the area has a seperate drainage system for rainwater and waste water then you can.
limestone chippings need changed every year, never heard of this , anyone know of this
 
The boss and I are installing a boiler tomorrow, and to be honest, the only place to install the condensate is into the rain water pipe. Is this allowed?

I can not see any where that says no.

Also, is there a boss for this type of thing, or do you just cut and seal with silicone?

This is my home work from the governor.

Cheers fellers

My property has been receiving water/fluids from the cellar sump of next door. They have been draining their condensate hose from two commercial boilers into what they thought was a Victorian soak way. In fact it was ending on my property and within 2 meters of the back corner of my house. I am totally reliant upon the condensate being neutralized and that is reliant upon annual maintenance. Failure to deal with the condensate in the correct manner will result in my newish house needing underpinning within 3 years.

Needless to say, the help of the local councils drainage engineer and building control inspectorate has been sought and work is in progress.
 
I know where there is a condensate that runs across a wall at a heck of an angle and drops onto a sloping roof above a bay window and ultimately discharges into a rhone gutter!
It is on the front face of the building!
I will try to get a picture the next time I am passing.
 

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