Hi everyone - this is only my second thread on here, so I hope I'm observing all the rules...would appreciate your thoughts...
We're in the middle of rebuilding a house and going from this system...:
- 2 x bathrooms, relying on a gas combi and mains water pressure @ 6.5 barr, 1/2 inch main to the house and 15mm water pipes
...to this one:
- 4 x bathrooms (only one running as yet), system boiler, UVC and a limiter @ 3.5 barr. 22mm hot water loop (copper), 20mm (pex-al-pex) cold loop. 32mm main to the house. We have a low-loss header - whatever that is...
We have a 1/2 inch BSP manifold in each bathroom, which spurs off to16mm pex-al-pex to each set of taps (shower / basin / bath) and the loo. Those 16mm are never very long runs.
Since doing all this at great expense (using a professional plumber, in whom I'm v confident - friend and v highly rated locally), I've noticed a significant drop in hot water pressure - especially in the shower. Before we start putting up too many walls etc, I want to make sure of the reason...
- At the moment, we have a very cheap set of thermostatic bathtaps, with a shower diverter in the one functioning bathroom. (Ultimately, I've some pretty decent in-wall Bristan shower values, that I haven't yet installed.) The pressure is poor through these cheap taps and their shower valve. The cold pressure is significantly better - but not great. My builder thinks it might be the cheap/rubbish tap having a small bore internally for the hot - in leiu of a proper thermostatic value. The hot water pressure in the bathroom mixer tap on the basin appears to be slightly better than the hot water pressure in the shower (although not sure it's as good as the cold in the basin). My plumber's perspective is we'll inevitably have less pressure that we did previously - he's back in April, but I want to make sure I'm prepared to ask the right questions and have some pressure stats to compare, so we can isolate the issue. I'm keen to find out how / why there's a difference between the hot and the cold pressures, and compare the pressures (and/or flow rate) of each (shower vs basin / hot vs cold.). Is there an inexpensive way of doing the latter?
We're in the middle of rebuilding a house and going from this system...:
- 2 x bathrooms, relying on a gas combi and mains water pressure @ 6.5 barr, 1/2 inch main to the house and 15mm water pipes
...to this one:
- 4 x bathrooms (only one running as yet), system boiler, UVC and a limiter @ 3.5 barr. 22mm hot water loop (copper), 20mm (pex-al-pex) cold loop. 32mm main to the house. We have a low-loss header - whatever that is...
We have a 1/2 inch BSP manifold in each bathroom, which spurs off to16mm pex-al-pex to each set of taps (shower / basin / bath) and the loo. Those 16mm are never very long runs.
Since doing all this at great expense (using a professional plumber, in whom I'm v confident - friend and v highly rated locally), I've noticed a significant drop in hot water pressure - especially in the shower. Before we start putting up too many walls etc, I want to make sure of the reason...
- At the moment, we have a very cheap set of thermostatic bathtaps, with a shower diverter in the one functioning bathroom. (Ultimately, I've some pretty decent in-wall Bristan shower values, that I haven't yet installed.) The pressure is poor through these cheap taps and their shower valve. The cold pressure is significantly better - but not great. My builder thinks it might be the cheap/rubbish tap having a small bore internally for the hot - in leiu of a proper thermostatic value. The hot water pressure in the bathroom mixer tap on the basin appears to be slightly better than the hot water pressure in the shower (although not sure it's as good as the cold in the basin). My plumber's perspective is we'll inevitably have less pressure that we did previously - he's back in April, but I want to make sure I'm prepared to ask the right questions and have some pressure stats to compare, so we can isolate the issue. I'm keen to find out how / why there's a difference between the hot and the cold pressures, and compare the pressures (and/or flow rate) of each (shower vs basin / hot vs cold.). Is there an inexpensive way of doing the latter?