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IMM
 
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Default Thermostatic or electric shower from combi


"Andy R" wrote in message
...

"Eno Case" wrote in message
. ..
IMM

I don't see any downside whatsoever from running a shower from a

combi.

Maybe I misunderstand how they work, but I'd been led to believe that if

the
shower is supplied from the combi, then for the time that the shower is

in
use, the radiators won't get supplied with water therefore cooling the
rooms down? (And some showers take longer than others... ;-) )


Very true


But not an issue.

Also, if the shower is in use, and someone does use a hot tap, the

shower
would be affected somehow, even if it is a good thermostatic one?


The shower will almost certainly slow down as you're drawing off the same
mains as the shower is, whether it cools down or not depends on whether

the
boiler can supply enough hot water to keep the shower and the tap going at
once, probably not.


1. It will not cool down if it has a pressure equalising valve either: in
the shower mixer, on the mains pipe when t eneters the property or just
before the shower mixer. They are £30 and available in B&Q Warehouse. The
versions that do the whole hosue are 22mm and more expensive.

2. It will not cool down if the combi is powerful enough.

If these points are wrong, I'll gladly stand corrected, and be even more
keen to get a thermostatic shower!


You're not wrong but I'd still say go for the shower off the combi, it's

far
far better.


I suppose there's also the issue of not having a backup hot water supply
(like an electric shower could give me) if the combi boiler breaks down,

but
that's not a big worry to me.


It would be in the middle of winter in a freezing cold house with no hot
water other than what you can boil in a kettle.


See my post on this point.

FWIW I had a combi installed a year or so ago, reasonably happy but

wouldn't
even consider it again unless I had a decent (22mm at least) incoming

water
main with decent pressure/flow rate.


Well uprate the supply. What is the problems anyway. I find that many have
decent flow and pressure, but the system is not piped up correctly or
pressure equalizing valves are not used.


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