B
badexperiances
Introduction:
Recently i asked a friend (qualified plumber) to help me fit a built in shower. It was a fairly straight forward job: connect the taps with hot/cold feed and run a pipe up to the shower head. However during the install we didn't fit any one-way valves to the pipework connecting the taps to the system, effectively joining the hot and cold pipes.
The next day i noticed the hot water quickly turning cold, as cold water was now flowing through the shower taps into the hot feed. So he came back and fitted the one-way valves and we tried again. Now the hot water remained at a constant temperature, but it wasn't hot. The combi-boiler (ferroli optimax) was showing an error code (d1), an internet search pointed to a fault in the diverter valve.
So he came back and had a look at the diverter-valve, half dismantled it and we tuned the water back on to see what the valve was doing. Water began to spurt out all over the boiler, covering the boards, etc. So we dried it off and left it a day to fully dry before turning it back on. (Yes you read right, he turned it on with the valve half dismantled). Now i had no hot water or central heating and the boiler was showing error code "F15" (Fan problem).
So he came back a couple of days later and fitted a new diverter-valve and things started to work again, although i still notice code "d1" after using the hot water, but it goes away after a few mins.
Question:
After all this he has given me a bill for fitting the diverter-valve, which i am naturally reluctant to pay. So where does the responsibility for fixing the boiler lie? Clearly i feel that the fault with the boiler was caused by not fitting one-way valves to the shower taps, disrupting both the pressure and temperature of the hot feed.
I would really appreciate peoples opinions: on the cause of the faults and who's responsibility it is for fixing them. So i can get back to him with an informed response and come to an agreement about the bill, without ruining a friendship.
Recently i asked a friend (qualified plumber) to help me fit a built in shower. It was a fairly straight forward job: connect the taps with hot/cold feed and run a pipe up to the shower head. However during the install we didn't fit any one-way valves to the pipework connecting the taps to the system, effectively joining the hot and cold pipes.
The next day i noticed the hot water quickly turning cold, as cold water was now flowing through the shower taps into the hot feed. So he came back and fitted the one-way valves and we tried again. Now the hot water remained at a constant temperature, but it wasn't hot. The combi-boiler (ferroli optimax) was showing an error code (d1), an internet search pointed to a fault in the diverter valve.
So he came back and had a look at the diverter-valve, half dismantled it and we tuned the water back on to see what the valve was doing. Water began to spurt out all over the boiler, covering the boards, etc. So we dried it off and left it a day to fully dry before turning it back on. (Yes you read right, he turned it on with the valve half dismantled). Now i had no hot water or central heating and the boiler was showing error code "F15" (Fan problem).
So he came back a couple of days later and fitted a new diverter-valve and things started to work again, although i still notice code "d1" after using the hot water, but it goes away after a few mins.
Question:
After all this he has given me a bill for fitting the diverter-valve, which i am naturally reluctant to pay. So where does the responsibility for fixing the boiler lie? Clearly i feel that the fault with the boiler was caused by not fitting one-way valves to the shower taps, disrupting both the pressure and temperature of the hot feed.
I would really appreciate peoples opinions: on the cause of the faults and who's responsibility it is for fixing them. So i can get back to him with an informed response and come to an agreement about the bill, without ruining a friendship.