Hi,
I have a mixer-shower fed via. a double-impeller pump receiving hot water from a cylinder (open-vented) and cold water from a feeder tank which also feeds the cylinder. The pump is level with the bottom of the cylinder, about 3m below the feeder tank. The pump was installed because the shower head is only 1m. below the feeder tank.
Now the problem. When the mixer is set to max. cold, the water is medium-hot (just bearable for a shower). When set to max. hot, the water is scalding - far to hot for anyone to stand under.
First I thought cold water was not being drawn through the pump, but the above suggests to me that cold water is reaching the shower, just not enough of it :-(
My next test was to block the hot feed to the pump, then turn on the shower. The pump did not activate, suggesting the cold pressure was not enough to activate the pump, but how come the hot pressure is enough to activate the pump, when they originate from the same tank? Is it possible the microswitch on the cold side is not working properly (I assume it expects roughly the same pressure as the hot side to activate the pump).
I have considered using a pressure-equalising-valve, but as the cold pressure is so low, the hot pressure would become unacceptable. Could I use cold feed from the mains instead, and pass it through a PEV before it reaches the pump? For the record, the pump is a Newteam Duraspeed.
Any ideas would be appreciated.
Alan
I have a mixer-shower fed via. a double-impeller pump receiving hot water from a cylinder (open-vented) and cold water from a feeder tank which also feeds the cylinder. The pump is level with the bottom of the cylinder, about 3m below the feeder tank. The pump was installed because the shower head is only 1m. below the feeder tank.
Now the problem. When the mixer is set to max. cold, the water is medium-hot (just bearable for a shower). When set to max. hot, the water is scalding - far to hot for anyone to stand under.
First I thought cold water was not being drawn through the pump, but the above suggests to me that cold water is reaching the shower, just not enough of it :-(
My next test was to block the hot feed to the pump, then turn on the shower. The pump did not activate, suggesting the cold pressure was not enough to activate the pump, but how come the hot pressure is enough to activate the pump, when they originate from the same tank? Is it possible the microswitch on the cold side is not working properly (I assume it expects roughly the same pressure as the hot side to activate the pump).
I have considered using a pressure-equalising-valve, but as the cold pressure is so low, the hot pressure would become unacceptable. Could I use cold feed from the mains instead, and pass it through a PEV before it reaches the pump? For the record, the pump is a Newteam Duraspeed.
Any ideas would be appreciated.
Alan