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Jan 26, 2014
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So I'm about to have my hot and cold water pipes upgraded from 22mm poly to 28mm copper. This is to resolve the flow restriction to multiple shower outlets. There's approx 15m of pipe for each hot and cold leading to the bathrooms which will all be upgraded to 28mm. However, the megaflo inlet and outlet remain at 22mm. My understanding is that this is fine - the increase in pipe size anywhere on the circuit will reduce the overall pressure loss and increase the flow - can someone please confirm this for me?

I also have the option of having my megaflo 22mm PRV replaced to a 28mm, as well as a small section (maybe half a metre) of 25mm MDPE upgraded to 32mm MDPE. My incoming main is 32mm MDPE. It sounds like the effect of these would be negligible if what I assumed above is correct, but again, any pointers, as having it done all at once would be more cost effective. My water softener is 22mm (high flow kit), but is stated to work at 54 l/min, so this would remain straight after my mains anyway.

Thanks!
 
Yes increasing the hot and cold supplies from 22- 28mm should help to resolve the drop in flow rate when using multiple shower outlets provided the flow from the incoming mains supply is sufficient and the water softener isn't reducing the flow which it shouldn't if it works at 54 L/min.
What flow do you have on the incoming mains?
Also test all of the shower outlets with the softener bypassed to see if this is making a difference.
Another option would be to run separate hot and cold supplies in 22mm to each shower.
If you do increase to 28mm you should have a bronze pump for a secondary hot water supply.
 
Your incoming mains flow rate is the most important thing here, no point upgrading if you're only getting 15 litres a minute, I imagine with a 32mm MDPE it is quite substantial though.
 
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Your incoming mains flow rate is the most important thing here, no point upgrading if you're only getting 15 litres a minute, I imagine with a 32mm MDPE it is quite substantial though.

Spot on, check your incoming water main dynamic flow rate first before spending money on pipe reruns.

If you have already done this then what is it?
 
Last night I measured the flow rate from both outside taps running at the same time. It's hard to measure and I'll do a more substantial test (much larger bucket) on the weekend, but I achieved 25l/m from both taps (so 50 l/m) . I also measured the pressure from a washing machine outlet (after my 3 bar megaflo prv) and got just over 1 bar pressure, with both taps running. Static pressure before the prv is 4 bar.

Just now I measured the dynamic pressure on my shower hose outlet with the shower running. The gauge showed just over half a bar. This ties in with the showers MI which quotes 16 l/m at 0.5 bar. Static pressure at the shower is 2.5 bar.

Am I right in saying that increasing the pipe diameter will lower the pressure loss and give a greater dynamic pressure at the shower?
 
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Last night I measured the flow rate from both outside taps running at the same time. It's hard to measure and I'll do a more substantial test (much larger bucket) on the weekend, but I achieved 25l/m from both taps (so 50 l/m) . I also measured the pressure from a washing machine outlet (after my 3 bar megaflo prv) and got just over 1 bar pressure, with both taps running.

Unless I`m missing something all your flow rates are now reduced from what you said before, am I missing something and apologises if I am.
 
50 l/m and you are having issues with the flow rate with multiple outlets open? Something isn't right here. I don't think it's a pipe upgrade needed. I have several customers with 25 or 32mm MDPE and the rest of the house is all piped in 22mm copper and they have no drop in flow with multiple outlets open. Are the garden taps fed off the balanced supply or before it? Be good to know the flow rate after the combination valve.
 
Garden taps measured before 3 bar PRV.

The washing machine connector just after the PRV (from a washing machine style outlet) gave me 28 l/m.

Some more info about the pipe runs - all are 22mm poly before teeing off to 22mm copper to the showers. First shower is roughly 15m, second is roughly 25m, and last is about 30m pipework.

The dynamic pressure at the shower is what's confused me most. Only half a bar with 18 l/m being delivered. That's a 2.5 bar drop, and increase in height is only 5m (so 0.5 bar drop expected). Yet dynamic pressure at the outside tap (delivering about 25 l/m) is a 0.5 bar drop. Is the dramatic pressure drop an indication of undersized pipework?
 
50 l/m and you are having issues with the flow rate with multiple outlets open? Something isn't right here. I don't think it's a pipe upgrade needed.

Correct me if Im wrong here, but isn't it the dynamic pressure which is the problem, rather than the flow rate. The shower MI state 16 l/m at 0.5 bar. So even though my mains can deliver far in excess of that, isn't it the shower dictating the flow rate, because of the low pressure.

And whilst I havent measured this, with a second shower on, the dynamic pressure probably drops to a paltry 0.1/0.2 bar, and hence flow drop dramatically to both.

I'm not saying I've gotten my head around this completely, but my understanding is that if I can raise the dynamic pressure (by increasing the pipe size), then the shower will have a higher flow rate?
 
try some different plumbers, yours dont seem to understand the basics of a secondary return and how it works. So the advice on increases the pipe sizing for little gain will probably be suspect as well.
 
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Just now I measured the dynamic pressure on my shower hose outlet with the shower running. The gauge showed just over half a bar. This ties in with the showers MI which quotes 16 l/m at 0.5 bar. Static pressure at the shower is 2.5 bar.

Ok, scrap what I said here. Must have something to do with measuring gauge being on the same shower valve (gauge on hose outlet, with main shower running).

Just redid the dynamic pressure test by running a different shower. Gauge dropped from 2.5 bar to 2.1 bar. Now Im even more confused. What does this mean?
 

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