M
Mewcenary
Hi there,
I'm getting quotes at the moment for a new boiler. Given the old one is 20+ years old, this means the fun of condense pipes.
The boiler is currently located in an upstairs bedroom cupboard. Moving it to the downstairs kitchen would involve a non-trivial amount of work so I'm keen to avoid that if possible.
I've had a few people out to quote and the general ideas so far are:
1. Route the condense pipe along the bedroom wall above the skirting board, so it exits into the guttering.
2. Route the condense pipe out through the adjacent external wall, then down into the ground (into a soakaway kit).
3. Use a pump, so it can go into the adjacent bathroom and the soil stack. This would involve increasing the height of the soil stack as in this property it terminates half-way up the bathroom wall (and is tiled over). Note a new bathroom is coming anyway so any temporary removal of tiles and exposed pipe is fine by me.
Any thoughts?
I'm getting quotes at the moment for a new boiler. Given the old one is 20+ years old, this means the fun of condense pipes.
The boiler is currently located in an upstairs bedroom cupboard. Moving it to the downstairs kitchen would involve a non-trivial amount of work so I'm keen to avoid that if possible.
I've had a few people out to quote and the general ideas so far are:
1. Route the condense pipe along the bedroom wall above the skirting board, so it exits into the guttering.
2. Route the condense pipe out through the adjacent external wall, then down into the ground (into a soakaway kit).
3. Use a pump, so it can go into the adjacent bathroom and the soil stack. This would involve increasing the height of the soil stack as in this property it terminates half-way up the bathroom wall (and is tiled over). Note a new bathroom is coming anyway so any temporary removal of tiles and exposed pipe is fine by me.
Any thoughts?