D
DavidSN
All,
i appreciate you get many requests of this nature, but was hoping if you could help give me some advice with regards to our Hot water problem.
We have just moved house (4-bed, 1 bath, 1 shower, in a very hard water area), and have encountered an issue with our hot water. In short, the house has an original Boilermate system (20 years old) and a less than 2 yr old Worcester 18 Ri. The heating is ok (controlled by a Drayton1+RF), but the hot water seems to have a few issues.
A local plumber came in and found 2 leaks, a partly fried circuit board and (probably) a malfunctioning mixing valve. The result: Hot water is produced, but not at a consistent temperature. (Hot water is initially ok, but then temperature drops. Switch it off, then back on and the same problem keeps occurring. The problem is less severe if I demand a reduced flow of hot water, but opened up fully the flow of hot water is completely varied. Having a shower / bath is a bit of a nightmare. The mixing valve is thought to be the core problem, but the other indicators (bad leaks, circuit board, etc) indicate that the hot water is limping along.)
The cost to fix all these issues was said to be £900 approx, but the engineer said that he would rather not complete the work as he could give no assurances that something else wouldn't go wrong with the system within weeks. He said he would recommend that it would probably be better (in the long term) to pull out the Boilermate, and replace it with an unvented cylinder.
We have now had 3 other engineers attend and having talked through the issue with them they seem to agree that ripping out the Boilermate would probably be wise. Having previously had a Boilermate 2, I'm aware that these systems can and do go wrong, and as such I'm leaning towards removal of the Boilermate.
I'm happy to go with an unvented cylinder (Megaflo 170 litre has been mentioned twice, but 1 engineer said he would avoid a megaflo as they tend to go wrong after 6 years), but the quotes so far have been higher than expected - ranging from £1900 through to £3200. We have asked for quotes to include a different control system, such that we can programme the hot water and heating separately, on a 7-day basis, which might have pushed the cost up a little, but the predominant cost is the unvented cylinder, VAT and labour.
Before committing such a large amount of money I wanted to check whether an unvented cylinder is the best and only way to go? An offhand comment from a colleague (who is not an expert) got me wondering whether the installation of a larger capacity combi-boiler could also be an option. (I'm wondering whether in my discussions with the engineers I have guided them to only suggest an unvented cylinder. A vented cylinder and header tank were mentioned, but I'm not keen.)
If an unvented cylinder is the way to go, then any thoughts on a Megaflo?
Thanks in an advance for any advice!
regards
David
i appreciate you get many requests of this nature, but was hoping if you could help give me some advice with regards to our Hot water problem.
We have just moved house (4-bed, 1 bath, 1 shower, in a very hard water area), and have encountered an issue with our hot water. In short, the house has an original Boilermate system (20 years old) and a less than 2 yr old Worcester 18 Ri. The heating is ok (controlled by a Drayton1+RF), but the hot water seems to have a few issues.
A local plumber came in and found 2 leaks, a partly fried circuit board and (probably) a malfunctioning mixing valve. The result: Hot water is produced, but not at a consistent temperature. (Hot water is initially ok, but then temperature drops. Switch it off, then back on and the same problem keeps occurring. The problem is less severe if I demand a reduced flow of hot water, but opened up fully the flow of hot water is completely varied. Having a shower / bath is a bit of a nightmare. The mixing valve is thought to be the core problem, but the other indicators (bad leaks, circuit board, etc) indicate that the hot water is limping along.)
The cost to fix all these issues was said to be £900 approx, but the engineer said that he would rather not complete the work as he could give no assurances that something else wouldn't go wrong with the system within weeks. He said he would recommend that it would probably be better (in the long term) to pull out the Boilermate, and replace it with an unvented cylinder.
We have now had 3 other engineers attend and having talked through the issue with them they seem to agree that ripping out the Boilermate would probably be wise. Having previously had a Boilermate 2, I'm aware that these systems can and do go wrong, and as such I'm leaning towards removal of the Boilermate.
I'm happy to go with an unvented cylinder (Megaflo 170 litre has been mentioned twice, but 1 engineer said he would avoid a megaflo as they tend to go wrong after 6 years), but the quotes so far have been higher than expected - ranging from £1900 through to £3200. We have asked for quotes to include a different control system, such that we can programme the hot water and heating separately, on a 7-day basis, which might have pushed the cost up a little, but the predominant cost is the unvented cylinder, VAT and labour.
Before committing such a large amount of money I wanted to check whether an unvented cylinder is the best and only way to go? An offhand comment from a colleague (who is not an expert) got me wondering whether the installation of a larger capacity combi-boiler could also be an option. (I'm wondering whether in my discussions with the engineers I have guided them to only suggest an unvented cylinder. A vented cylinder and header tank were mentioned, but I'm not keen.)
If an unvented cylinder is the way to go, then any thoughts on a Megaflo?
Thanks in an advance for any advice!
regards
David
Last edited by a moderator: