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dontknowitall

Only used on Sundays of course (well one or two other days a week as well) ...

I've been asked to find an instantaneous water heater (under the sink type) to supply the kitchen sink (washing up coffee cups, etc) and the WC's basin.

I'm assuming that something like the Redring Powerstream 9.5Kw is suitable.

Does anyone know if it makes a difference using a standard kitchen mixer tap instead of separate hot and cold taps?
 
There is no problem, it would seem, unless it is too difficult to get the cold supply close enough to the hot. In which case a monobloc would probably be best, wouldn't you say?
 
Thank you for the replies. I'm afraid I'm still not much the wiser but I'm not dismissing any of the above - more research required methinks!
 
Zip aqualine 3 or Santon Aqualine ,Heatrae sadia Multipoint to name a few.
As previously said eletricity supply to consider usually 3kw can be run from an existing fused spur.
15litre should be fine for a sink and whb-If its a church hall and used be public remember to fit a TMV to whb if not done already.
Also some of the 9.5kw heaters are inline units and basically arelike an electric shower so can be alright for hand washing but not for filling a kitchen sink.
Id go for a 15litre unit which stores a small quantey of hot water-ok for washing up.
Also 15ltre and up needs someone with an unvented ticket to install.
Hope this helps.
 
we regularly fit the santon to church halls etc they take about 30 minutes to heat up and quantities are fine for washing up etc,
 
Thank you Quality. I've the Redring is similar to this - just want to know if ANY of these systems can go to a kitchen monobloc mixer tap as all the diagrams indicate two separate taps.
 
Thank you to the others as well. I've been asked to find one that doesn't heat a supply of hot water as they'd like instantaneous, like an electric shower.

Somehow I felt this wouldn't be a simple yes/no!!!

But thanks for all the persistence and ideas. As I said earlier, I'm not discounting any of these thoughts!!
 
sorry mate, just read it properly every one we have fitted has been seperate hot and cold water taps. and i think that is how they have to be, so you cant push mains at a higher pressure than is on the hot side,
 
Many thanks, Stani. This is what I was beginning to wonder and the "organiser's" face dropped when I told him this. I've sent a message to Redring but don't anticipate a response!
 

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