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Jun 7, 2019
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hello i'd like to know if the following quote is broadly fair. house is four bed, three reception rooms and two bathroom, kitchen plus utility.

Flush system as per manufacturer’s instructions.

• Protect your home with carpet protector and dust sheets as required.

The works for your system upgrade and radiators is as follows:

• Removal of your existing boiler, tanks and cylinder.

• Supply and installation of a new Worcester combination boiler options are

set out separately below.

• Modifications to pipework to suit the new installation.

• Supply and installation of a Worcester Greenstar system filter.

• Run new gas pipework from the meter to the new boiler.

• Supply and installation of a Worcester Comfort 2 time control.

• Brick up of the existing flue hole to be carried out by us.

• Supply and installation of new standard radiators and valves and 3 x

designer radiators and valves. All pipework to be adjusted and we may

need to alter the pipe sizes for the designer radiators.



Making good to be carried out by customer.



• Removal of debris from site and our engineers will tidy up their area of work

and leave your home as they found it.



Following works our office team will:

• Notify your appliance to the manufacturer for your warranty and to Gas

Safe as per building regulations. You will receive this information in the

post.



Your boiler price and information is set out below.

All prices are inclusive of VAT



YOUR SYSTEM UPGRADE AND RADIATOR ESTIMATE

Boiler


Worcester 440 Highflow floor

standing combination boiler

Worcester system filter


Worcester 42 CDi wall hung

combination boiler

Worcester system filter


Total cost

including

VAT


£7992.00 including VAT


£7608.00 including VAT


sounds a bit expensive i would have expected a whole new heating for that.
 
It’s very difficult to comment without seeing the site that could be a lot of work involved that we don’t know about
 
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I can tell you, the 440 high flow is over £2k alone. Designer radiators can really up the price and location can too. Best thing to do is get 3 quotes and compare.
 
another quote came at 6300.
waiting for third.
the more expensive quote is from a firm with office and secretary so overheads are inevitable.
 
Supply and installation of new standard radiators and valves and 3 xdesigner radiators and valves.

I would be wanting to know specs: make.midel and size.

Making good to be carried out by customer.•
Removal of debris from site and our engineers will tidy up their area of work and leave your home as they found it.

How can they leave home as they find it if you have to make good? Have they explained exactly what you have to do, and what they do?

Finally, you called it a QUOTATION, they called it an ESTIMATE. Are you aware of the difference?



 
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The price is the price. There is no fair or not. Is a Ferrari fair at 250k?

It is an estimate it is up to you to decide if you want to pay that or not. Maybe go for the cheaper one if you want they may be better they may be worse but at least it's cheaper hey.

This is a reason I want to get out of installs you give someone a price they think you've ripped them off even if you haven't done a thing.
 
wouldn't want a combi for two bathrooms unless your planning on not running more than one outlet at the same time

Tis a good point.

OP: whose idea was a combi? Assuming space and cold water pressure is available, unvented is generally better, IMO.
 
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Who is more likely to get it right first time? What reference and recommendations do they have? If I were you I'd ask friends colleagues and family is the know a good local guy.
 
Three points:

Clarify that the proposal is a fixed price offer.

A combi (in my view) is a poor choice for a large family home with two bathrooms. A system unvented hot water solution is a preferable solution.

Be wary of “making good decoration et al” for you to undertake - unless you understand the extent of the work involved.

If you have doubts, go elsewhere - there is very little in the document that you have published that is specific to your property - it is a generic proposal that has been edited to include the “designer radiators”, boiler type and price.
 
“Designer” radiator covers from £200. - £2000 so you need to know what you’re getting.

Similarly I recently quoted for a shower enclosure specifying Matki product; they went with a competitor who said “ shower door” as his overall quote was £800 less.
My door was £1ooo, his a cheapo £200 - there’s the difference and they got a shocking job done to boot.

My point is, the devil is in the detail and must be specified - if they don’t want to do that , they are trying to hide something so walk away now.
 
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“Designer” radiator covers from £200. - £2000 so you need to know what you’re getting.

Similarly I recently quoted for a shower enclosure specifying Matki product; they went with a competitor who said “ shower door” as his overall quote was £800 less.
My door was £1ooo, his a cheapo £200 - there’s the difference and they got a shocking job done to boot.

My point is, the devil is in the detail and must be specified - if they don’t want to do that , they are trying to hide something so walk away now.

I went out to a job that I quoted for as they wanted a price for a new bathroom. I walked in and their they were nice new radiators. The thing is he told me he wanted column radiators and a nest what he had fitted was softlines and a cheap programmer, I said oh didnt go for the column rads then he said no you were about £300 more expensive, i turned around and said if you told me you wanted softlines and a cheap programmer i would of been £500 cheaper!
 
hello again it would only be the two of us living in the house and Brambles is right when he says it appears like a generic document.

all firms quoting have a recommendation.
 
hello again it would only be the two of us living in the house and Brambles is right when he says it appears like a generic document.

all firms quoting have a recommendation.
Combi is still wrong for two bathrooms
 
Not for 2 people though. Surely the system should be designed for the proposed usage.
I agree with the sentiment but I’m more of a future proofing guy. How do we know the family won’t grow and this venture isn’t suitable. In selling in the future I find more and more buyers are clued in and will be looking to knock money off for the wrong hot water install. Ultimately even if there’s just two of them they won’t be able to have two showers at the same time if in a rush so I would personally say not fit for purpose. I find so many engineers that don’t explain that part
 
I agree with the sentiment but I’m more of a future proofing guy. How do we know the family won’t grow and this venture isn’t suitable. In selling in the future I find more and more buyers are clued in and will be looking to knock money off for the wrong hot water install. Ultimately even if there’s just two of them they won’t be able to have two showers at the same time if in a rush so I would personally say not fit for purpose. I find so many engineers that don’t explain that part

I agree with the future proofing and if you say had a young couple looking to have a family then yes stored water all the way.

Problem is when you have a couple with no intentions of having more people there apart from the odd guest, so for the size of the house you would be looking for say 250-300L cylinder and if they only have quick 5 minute showers daily they may only use 20-30litres tops.

I cant see that the wasted energy to heat and keep heated a cylinder just so if one day they are rushed for time they could have 2 showers at the same time is worth it.

So I'm a big believer in chatting to the customer explaining the pros and cons of both systems and let them choose what they would prefer or would suit there needs better.
 
I always find that they are combi obsessed. Any other option isn’t what they want even if it’s wrong. I’ve told many people that I won’t fit a combi as they won’t be happy with the results.
 
I always find that they are combi obsessed. Any other option isn’t what they want even if it’s wrong. I’ve told many people that I won’t fit a combi as they won’t be happy with the results.

Yes a lot of people are that's why I try and explain the pros and cons then it is up to them to decide.

I've told people who live in a 3 bed 1 bathroom house to keep the unvented that was installed when the house was build 15 years earlier because of the hot water as they were adamant they wanted a combi but after a quick chat and showing what flow rate they would get from a combi they changed their mind.
 
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i see your point but we are in our 40s
and this is the forever home so not too fussed about future sale value.
 
Mark,

For two people a properly installed large combination boiler would work fine - on a personal basis for a large house I would still go the system / unvented route.

To compare quotes, be sure you know exactly what is being installed. Where it is going to go. What pipework is going to be different from the current installation and is it going to be visible. Where is the flu going and again how much is going to be visible. If the boiler / flue is being relocated is the brick / stonework to the exterior wall going to be properly matched? Is the inside wall going to be properly replastered if left visible.

A walk through the house with the person who is physically going to undertake the installation is often very productive (on both sides) - the key for getting a good neat installation is combing through the detail. Particularly, if the boiler is going into an existing fitted kitchen. A large combi is a bulky item and has a lot of pipe work feeding in and out ( and sometimes exposed external filters ) - once installed they don’t quite look the same as the hidden pipework versions shown in the brochures!

Talk through the new control system, where is it going to be placed, is it wireless, is it easy to operate. For a large house with only two occupants, zoning is important - to optimise energy useage. An Evohome type system may be appropriate where each room can be individually zoned.

Talk through your existing heating and hot water system, are you happy with it, any problems you experience, noise, any cool spots, radiators that never seem to do the job properly etc. Now is the time to rectify any issues.

Are you happy with your current cold water pressure and flow? Is it adequate for the proposed large combi? - I do a lot of work in Knutsford, the incoming water pressure there is dreadful!

Ask him / her how long is the installation going to take (how many people).

Most good plumbers want to deliver a quality job that you will be pleased with, to do that they need to know what is important to you. I have a few customers who do not want to see any exposed pipe runs - so for them I always quote with the option for fully concealed pipework, I generally get the work.

Thereafter, you will start to get a better feel on the value of the offers you have received and exactly what you can expect both visually and performance wise from the new system.

Hope this helps
 
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i was disappointed with the more expensive quote as the project manager spent two hours measuring up and taking pics but the document i got was thin and very generic.
the property is empty btw if that majes a difference it is being refurbished.
 
Mark

You have an ideal opportunity to get a system installed that suits you and your lifestyle. From your notes, I think that you would benefit from a couple more quotes
 
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yes i have just posted the job on the other forum if anyone interested. based in north manchester.
 
i was disappointed with the more expensive quote as the project manager spent two hours measuring up and taking pics but the document i got was thin and very generic.
the property is empty btw if that majes a difference it is being refurbished.

A lot of my quotes are very generic as I dobt write everything from scratch every time. If you do quite a few quotes you can soon lose a lot of time writing up everything personally for that customer.

So a lot of mine is supply and fit x boiler and flue
Supply and fit new programmable room thermostat
Supply and fit magnetic filter

And so on.

If they are doing 3/4 quotes a day you have to keep them generic
 
i see your point but we are in our 40s
and this is the forever home so not too fussed about future sale value.
But you will likely be hacked off and embarrassed if you have visitors and you have to say one at a time for the shower even though you have two. That’s what’s daft to me having two showers that you can’t use together. You might as well turn one bathroom into a walk in cupboard or something
 
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Nowt wrong with it if it’s properly installed and clean and you’re not putting huge rads on
 
A lot of my quotes are very generic as I dobt write everything from scratch every time. If you do quite a few quotes you can soon lose a lot of time writing up everything personally for that customer.

So a lot of mine is supply and fit x boiler and flue
Supply and fit new programmable room thermostat
Supply and fit magnetic filter

And so on.

If they are doing 3/4 quotes a day you have to keep them generic

thats fair enough.
 
I agree with the future proofing and if you say had a young couple looking to have a family then yes stored water all the way.
I cant see that the wasted energy to heat and keep heated a cylinder just so if one day they are rushed for time they could have 2 showers at the same time is worth it.
So I'm a big believer in chatting to the customer explaining the pros and cons of both systems and let them choose what they would prefer or would suit there needs better.

Serious question: On a modern UV cylinder, how long does the water keep hot?

We are 2 adult home ( +1 when son visits for weekend every month or so), 2 bathrooms/3 showers. I shower, she bathes. The water is on for about an hour, ending before we get up and again in the PM ending before we get home. That way, the HW doesn't cycle every time water is drawn. We never run out of HW. If I was bothered, I would try to run it just in the morning OR, more logically, the PM. Personally, changing from a combi to UV was a good move - simply on the basis of faster flow rates to bath.

I would NEVER recommend fitting the wrong boiler to the house. The OP says they are stopping there for ever. Life is rarely that simple.
 
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also one of the installers said they do not unstall wickes or n
b and q bathrooms as they always fail. is it a fair point in your opinion?
 
I see your point but we are in our 40s
and this is the forever home so not too fussed about future sale value.

Sorry, Mark, but someone in their 40's has a long way to go (hopefully). There is a lot of water to go under the bridge, and life rarely pans out as you expect (that is from personal experience).

The heating is part of the house, and should be designed as such.

I did not see where you said the heating circuit is 10mm, but if it is, and you are totally refurbing, then definitely repipe.
 
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also one of the installers said they do not unstall wickes or n
b and q bathrooms as they always fail. is it a fair point in your opinion?

Yes, they have. But, personally, if I did bathrooms, I would fit anything you wanted. But you would be aware that YOU are buying/supplying the gear, any time spent chasing missing/extra bits would be chargeable at my standard rates, and ANY call backs would be fully charged as normal, unless it was a leak on my soldered joint. I also would not be booking a firm date until the gear has arrived, and YOU have checked it over and confirmed satisfactory condition.

Ultimately, all the above means you would probably decline my quote and T&C's, so, perhaps, after a while and many declined quotes, I would refuse to waste my time and take a similar stance?
 
Serious question: On a modern UV cylinder, how long does the water keep hot?
Our 17 year old 170l Megaflo loses 8/9oc of heat over night, measured at 1/3 up from the bottom of the cylinder. That's with introduction of a bit of cold before we go to bed, and in the morning when we get up.

We only heat during periods 4pm > 10pm. None in the morning. Hope that gives you an idea.
 
We'll fit anything but I always advise customers that the fitting costs/labour costs are the same as fitting expensive/upmarket gear unless it involves more work (Such as concealed cisterns, shower valves etc). So it seems daft to me to skimp on the materials if it'll have to be replaced sooner, as you'll only have to incur another fitment cost sooner.
 
Our 17 year old 170l Megaflo loses 8/9oc of heat over night, measured at 1/3 up from the bottom of the cylinder. That's with introduction of a bit of cold before we go to bed, and in the morning when we get up.

We only heat during periods 4pm > 10pm. None in the morning. Hope that gives you an idea.

Thanks. But I did say modern. 🙂

seriously though - are very new ones any different?

Do you find the 4 hours serves you with HW all day? Is the main usage post 4pm?
 
Install a viessmann vitodens 111-w Its a Combi boiler with a hot water storage unit it’s a bit of beast but would easily work for your needs
 
But you will likely be hacked off and embarrassed if you have visitors and you have to say one at a time for the shower even though you have two. That’s what’s daft to me having two showers that you can’t use together. You might as well turn one bathroom into a walk in cupboard or something

If you would get embarrassed by saying dont take 2 showers at the same time then I think you need to live a little.

Or have 1 electric shower 1 mixer. Problem solved as long as you have the flow rate on the cold.
 
Serious question: On a modern UV cylinder, how long does the water keep hot?

I would NEVER recommend fitting the wrong boiler to the house. The OP says they are stopping there for ever. Life is rarely that simple.

If you take no water out of the tank so introduce no cold what so ever then they reckon it's a couple of degrees loss a day. However as soon as you start to introduce cold water that loss becomes a lot greater.

But you would force someone to have what you want them to have even though a combi boiler would be ample for their needs and what they would like just because of the size of the house and because when they sell the house which they have no plans to do it then the next people have a system that may suit their needs.

What would you say if a customer wanted to remove the only bath in a property? No you cant do that the next people to buy your house might need a bath so you shouldn't remove it or would you say no problems have that out in a minute.
 
If you take no water out of the tank so introduce no cold what so ever then they reckon it's a couple of degrees loss a day. However as soon as you start to introduce cold water that loss becomes a lot greater.

Thanks

But you would force someone to have what you want them to have even though .........

I wouldn't try to fore anyone to do anything - I don't think I even implied as much. However, as the invited proffessional, it is expected that you offer advice. Sometimes the punter takes the advice, sometimes not. Ultimately, provided it is safe and legal, I would follow the instructions provided by the punter. But I am a great beleiver in paperwork, and my quotation would make mention somewhere that the quotation offered is for work specified, as opposed to recommended.

As for removing the only bath to fit a shower, unless personal circumstance dictates neccesity, then it is nuts. IMO.
 
I wouldn't try to fore anyone to do anything - I don't think I even implied as much. However, as the invited proffessional, it is expected that you offer advice. Sometimes the punter takes the advice, sometimes not. Ultimately, provided it is safe and legal, I would follow the instructions provided by the punter. But I am a great beleiver in paperwork, and my quotation would make mention somewhere that the quotation offered is for work specified, as opposed to recommended.

As for removing the only bath to fit a shower, unless personal circumstance dictates neccesity, then it is nuts. IMO.

So what you would do is explain the pros and cons of both systems and that a combi boiler would easily cover the hot water usage of 2 people and let them decide?

So pretty much exactly what I said yet you disagreed with me then said you would NEVER recommend the wrong boiler to the HOUSE. How much water does a house use?
 
If you would get embarrassed by saying dont take 2 showers at the same time then I think you need to live a little.

Or have 1 electric shower 1 mixer. Problem solved as long as you have the flow rate on the cold.
Not a case of living a little and we will obviously agree to disagree but I think the whole purpose of two bathrooms is to have the option to use them simultaneously. Otherwise you might as well have one bathroom. I agree the electric shower option is a suggestion but surely you come across people who get an idea in mind and want to stick rigidly to it. These are the ones I won’t involve myself with because they are ultimately the ones that will moan afterwards or bad mouth you for doing the wrong thing even if it’s exactly what they asked for.
 
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So what you would do is explain the pros and cons of both systems and that a combi boiler would easily cover the hot water usage of 2 people and let them decide?

So pretty much exactly what I said yet you disagreed with me then said you would NEVER recommend the wrong boiler to the HOUSE. How much water does a house use?

It wasted 10 minutes of my life, bit I eventually found where I disagreed with you:

Not for 2 people though. Surely the system should be designed for the proposed usage.

Which is a bit different to what you are now saying.

And |i still disagree with you, on that specific point 🙂
 
It wasted 10 minutes of my life, bit I eventually found where I disagreed with you:



Which is a bit different to what you are now saying.

And |i still disagree with you, on that specific point 🙂

So you disagree that a combi wouldnt be suitable for a house with 2 people in it? Well loads of couples have them fitted in houses that they wont cope then even though they cope just fine. Best start ripping them all out and chucking unvented systems in then.
 
So you disagree that a combi wouldnt be suitable for a house with 2 people in it? Well loads of couples have them fitted in houses that they wont cope then even though they cope just fine. Best start ripping them all out and chucking unvented systems in then.

Probably the end of the road for this, once you run out of arguments annd start talking like a child.
 
Look it’s what each individual does. Make the best recommendation for the property. I win more jobs than I lose on this basis.
 
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Probably the end of the road for this, once you run out of arguments annd start talking like a child.

My point isnt talking like a child because If two people cant cope with using a combi then the country is screwed because there must be 10's of thousands if not 100's of couples that have combi boilers.

But obviously all customers with 2 bathrooms have exactly the same hot water requirements. So let's just ignore them and do what the hell we want to.
 
As for removing the only bath to fit a shower, unless personal circumstance dictates neccesity, then it is nuts. IMO.

In my experience this is now considered an out of date opinion.

Not really relevant to the discussion, sorry, but just chipping in!
 
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If I've missed it sorry, but nobody seems to have mentioned that you can have an immersion heater with a cylinder.
Having had two boiler failures, a programmer and a meter regulator fail the back up has been useful.
 
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I disagree if it’s a family home people with kids want a bath

If your doing a house up with the intention of selling then do what is best for the house if there is no intention of selling the do what the customer wants.

I have loads of customers that have had the baths ripped out and trays put in its personal preference and if the next person to buy the house wants a bath an unvented cylinder etc then that is up to them to sort.
 
If your doing a house up with the intention of selling then do what is best for the house if there is no intention of selling the do what the customer wants.

I have loads of customers that have had the baths ripped out and trays put in its personal preference and if the next person to buy the house wants a bath an unvented cylinder etc then that is up to them to sort.
I agree with the sentiment mate. As you say it’s down to the customer. Completely get that. I’m all about communication with my customers so I’ll be honest with them if they still want to proceed and I am completely anti then I will suggest they get a couple more quotes
 
Problem is you’ll always find someone to fit something no matter how wrong it is. There is a difference with conversation and miss-selling I speak to so many customers where their “plumber” has said such and such will work brilliantly
 
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What about the WB 550, if it really can produce 20L/m g given the right supply and conditions it might be an option.
 
Problem is you’ll always find someone to fit something no matter how wrong it is. There is a difference with conversation and miss-selling I speak to so many customers where their “plumber” has said such and such will work brilliantly

I fully agree with you that you get people that will just sell whatever they want to and that the best way is to talk to your customer and advise them.

However I totally disagree with the point blank oh you have 2 bathrooms a combi wont cope that gets said on here. There is never usually a question about what showers etc they have it's just assumed that they want to have 2 showers running at the same time. Yes an unvented system is the bee knees but if the customer has the flow rate for an unvented cylinder on the cold then they would have enough flow rate to run a mixer and an electric shower.

In my opinion as well if you have a combi it is not a bad idea to have an electric shower as if/when you have a problem with the boiler you still have means of washing.

There is another post and somebody was asking about what combi to buy and mentioned they might have an extension done and without knowing anything else someone put well if you have 2 bathrooms a combi wont cope never asked anything else just said it wont cope which is absolute rubbish and if you are having an extension you could work an electric shower etc in.

I know I have a different view to other people on this and I do understand fully what the others are saying I'm just saying that this point blank no combi for 2 bathrooms is not factually correct without knowing what showers they have and what usage they have of the hot water only then you can advise on what system would be best suited for your customers needs. If they are doing a house up to sell then you go for the houses needs not the customers.
 
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I agree with you with the shower and an electric shower however nobody mentioned an electric shower. A lot of people seem to think they are a lot better than they actually are. I think the thread you are talking about I commented on and it was just to get the point across early doors that depending on what they were doing with the extension a combi wouldn’t be suitable for two bathrooms. All that was, was to stop them getting a plan in place that they may need to change. I think the point being that a combi boiler Is not suitable for two bathrooms you are still subsidising it with an electric shower
 
nobody mentioned an electric shower.

I think the point being that a combi boiler Is not suitable for two bathrooms you are still subsidising it with an electric shower

Nobody has mentioned they want to run 2 12" head showers at the same time either. It gets assumed so therefore the op is not getting the best advice. What would be better would be to say that a combi wont run 2 taps at the same time so if you have 2 mixer showers they wont work at the same time not just a combi wont work for 2 bathrooms.

I would say the majority of the times I take a heat only boiler out and put a combi in they have electric showers installed as they were easier to put in than putting a pump in and running new pipework to the shower positions. But as I said it's not a bad idea to have 1 electric shower as if and when the boiler breaks down overnight they still have a means of washing.

But I suppose we will have to agree to disagree until the next time someone says they want a combi and they are told it wont work with 2 bathrooms.
 
But you and I both know that most people these days want a good strong shower experience. A combi boiler will not give the required water supply. Even if MIs state different we all know that a year down the line with scale etc the showering experience will have diminished. I was in a property a few days ago where if you turned on the shower in the main bathroom then the one in the en-suite you literally got no water out of the en-suite as it was a floor above. That to me is just wrong no ifs no buts. I totally 100% agree with you re electric shower as a back up and giving the option of two showers at once. However electric is never going to give a better shower than via a boiler
 
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But you and I both know that most people these days want a good strong shower experience. A combi boiler will not give the required water supply. Even if MIs state different we all know that a year down the line with scale etc the showering experience will have diminished. I was in a property a few days ago where if you turned on the shower in the main bathroom then the one in the en-suite you literally got no water out of the en-suite as it was a floor above. That to me is just wrong no ifs no buts. I totally 100% agree with you re electric shower as a back up and giving the option of two showers at once. However electric is never going to give a better shower than via a boiler

It's no different to a 1 bathroom house and someone turning on a kitchen tap then? So using that logic you would never ever fit a combi boiler.
 
It's no different to a 1 bathroom house and someone turning on a kitchen tap then? So using that logic you would never ever fit a combi boiler.

Personally I am not a fan of combis when there is room for a cylinder but as long as the customer is well informed, preferably in writing so it's harder for them to bad mouth you when they later move the goal posts and the system doesn't perform as they'd hoped. Obviously not every customer is like this but we know they are out there. I am NOT talking about OP here though!

Combis are "over recommended" in so many cases I believe.

The funny thing is that I have a combi boiler in my own house. I have three bedrooms but only one bathroom and one kitchen. Bathroom has a bath with an electric shower over bath. With only two hot taps and the electric shower my combi is perfect.

If I had two bathrooms and the kids still lived at home no way would I bother with a combi. OP has their own needs.

An informed customer and realistic expectations is the key I think.
 
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It's no different to a 1 bathroom house and someone turning on a kitchen tap then? So using that logic you would never ever fit a combi boiler.
But now you are just being pedantic you and I both know that it would affect the flow and the pressure of the shower, I guess they work on the basis that the kitchen tap will not be using as much water for such a long time. I do completely see where you’re coming from mate but you’re not going to sway me. I will continue to spec the correct heating and hot water system based on the property not the occupants. If they don’t like it as I said previously they can use a different tradesmen
 
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I have said this story before on here a couple of times. But I will say it again.

Many years ago I worked for a woman in her 60's who lived by her self. She had no intentions of leaving the house she lived in as she liked the house the neighbours etc. Her house was a 4 bed and had a bathroom and ensuite. She had a leak on her old thermal store and her boiler was getting old so she wanted that replacing too. She had 2 people come in and they were both saying she had to have a 300l invented cylinder installed she was in tears because of the cost they wanted to charge her for this tank.

I went in and got chatting to her and she only ever used the shower she rarely had visitors so literally she had a 5 min shower daily and wash her hands a couple of times. I explained to her the reasons why they wanted to install a cylinder I explained to her we could get another thermal store but they were not cheap back then, she then asked about a combi because one of her friends had a combi I replied to her my usual for the size of the house I recommend you go for stored water but because you are using virtually no water your water usage would be fine, I said the problem comes when you turn on a tap you will use pressure on something. She was perfectly happy with that as she never had guests etc.

Needless to say the company I worked for got the job to install a combi (unfortunately she got a Worcester though) I went back to a very happy customer for the remainder of my time working for that company to service the boiler and she couldn't compliment me enough for explaining to her about her system and her options.

If the next people who move in then want the combi removed and a 300l cylinder installed then that is there choice and for them to sort out someone to do it. If you have your name written on the boiler then you may get a call and explain to that customer their options the reasons the last customer went for that system and you may just get another boiler change and system upgrade so can earn more money.
 
When I did up my place, 13 years or so ago, the Worcester rep and technical convinced me to fit a 42Kw combi. Worse thing I did. I had 3 showers but I had one of those as elec for back up reasons. The shower, IIRC, was 10.5Kw, and was, just, okay. 2 years ago, I ripped it all out and went with sealed CH / UV HW. It is like a different world. And 3 proper showers.

Having 2 bathrooms on a combi isn’t the end of the world, necessarily, but why would you recommend something that we all know can be bettered? Agreeing that one designs a heating system based on the individual rather than the house is nonsense. Agreeing with client demands, and fitting accordingly, is fair enough, but it does not make the selection correct.
 
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When I did up my place, 13 years or so ago, the Worcester rep and technical convinced me to fit a 42Kw combi. Worse thing I did. I had 3 showers but I had one of those as elec for back up reasons. The shower, IIRC, was 10.5Kw, and was, just, okay. 2 years ago, I ripped it all out and went with sealed CH / UV HW. It is like a different world. And 3 proper showers.

Having 2 bathrooms on a combi isn’t the end of the world, necessarily, but why would you recommend something that we all know can be bettered? Agreeing that one designs a heating system based on the individual rather than the house is nonsense. Agreeing with client demands, and fitting accordingly, is fair enough, but it does not make the selection correct.

Ok so you size to the house a 2 bed house with an ensuite would you fit a 120l unvented cylinder? No didnt think so because they would run out of water in minutes, that would be sized to the house though.

As I said let's just agree to disagree until the next time as I'm bored to death now.
 
The amount of complaints I have in regards to someone opening a kitchen tap while someone’s in the shower is unreal ripped a few combis out due to this

And how millsy as the cost is nearly the same eg Combi Boiler vs a heat only and unvented/ thermal store under £ 200 difference

So i guess there labour prices were high
 
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The amount of complaints I have in regards to someone opening a kitchen tap while someone’s in the shower is unreal ripped a few combis out due to this

And how millsy as the cost is nearly the same eg Combi Boiler vs a heat only and unvented/ thermal store under £ 200 difference

So i guess there labour prices were high

Depends on what your fitting

300l megaflo well over a grand. So mega flo and system boiler £2k easy.
 
Alpha GS40 flow smart

hi guys me again.
could i have an opinion on this boiler please?
i've read conflicting reviews on its reliability.

regards
 
Worcester do a 50kw combi now that does 18lpm, i'll just throw that in the mix 😛 Probably needs a 35mm gas run nearly.

OP - you need to be looking at something more decent like a german manufacture (Stay clear of Worcester though).
 
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me again

as part of the works i am after a gas first fix in kitchen.
there is an existing gas pipe in kitchen and one guy said that is already a first fix.
shouldn't a gas tap be installed?
see pic

20190518_133606.jpg
 
Is the pipe still live? The tap would be fitted between that outlet and the appliance. What are you expecting the kitchen supply to serve?
 
Very difficult question without seeing what is actually involved. But if they give you what you want with a Worcester filter and are accredited by Worcester that’ll give you a 10 year warranty. The appliances are not cheap, but I would have a few quotes and not estimates. Recommended installers are worth paying for
 
hi just to update you.
got another two quotes and ended up choosing the installer who will install a valliant echotec 838, 13 stelard rad and two towel rail rads. this quote was 3k more than the alpha installer but a very similar price to the two worcester 42cdi quotes we got.
 

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