Hi,
Found some great answers here but first time posting, go easy on me please 😋.
Looking to fit a salamander rp50tu shower pump to a gravity system. It's a 'universal' (negative head compatible) pump which will be going in the loft (2 story house) just below the bottom level of the cold water cistern. The hot water cylinder is all the way downstairs in the ground floor.
Just a couple of things I am unsure about after going through the manual, may be stupid questions so please bare with me but here goes -
1. The existing hot water supply for the pump (which used to feed an ancient relic pump that no longer works) is teed from a line that also supplies hot water to the other taps in upstairs bathrooms. Is there anything wrong with that? IE there's no danger that if other hot taps are opened while the pump is in operation, this could result in air being sucked into the pump? I realise I may be misunderstanding the basic physics of a gravity system here!
2. The manual shows a few different example setups but none seem to be mine exactly. Some of the examples dictate that air vents should be fitted to the outlets (not the inlets) from the shower pump before it heads down to the shower. I can't work out if this is required or not in this situation? If so, what are the correct type to look for?
Thanks in advance to anyone that can shed some light!
Found some great answers here but first time posting, go easy on me please 😋.
Looking to fit a salamander rp50tu shower pump to a gravity system. It's a 'universal' (negative head compatible) pump which will be going in the loft (2 story house) just below the bottom level of the cold water cistern. The hot water cylinder is all the way downstairs in the ground floor.
Just a couple of things I am unsure about after going through the manual, may be stupid questions so please bare with me but here goes -
1. The existing hot water supply for the pump (which used to feed an ancient relic pump that no longer works) is teed from a line that also supplies hot water to the other taps in upstairs bathrooms. Is there anything wrong with that? IE there's no danger that if other hot taps are opened while the pump is in operation, this could result in air being sucked into the pump? I realise I may be misunderstanding the basic physics of a gravity system here!
2. The manual shows a few different example setups but none seem to be mine exactly. Some of the examples dictate that air vents should be fitted to the outlets (not the inlets) from the shower pump before it heads down to the shower. I can't work out if this is required or not in this situation? If so, what are the correct type to look for?
Thanks in advance to anyone that can shed some light!