Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
Reply |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#41
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
YAPH wrote: I know it's old news and way too late for any of us to do anything about it but when you look at the reliability of modern boilers, the repair costs, the useful total life and compare to old traditional types like my Potterton which ran for over 20 years with only a new thermocouple every now and then you wonder how things have improved. That's like saying why can't modern cars be as reliable as the old Moggie 1000s and so on that are still pottering on. Minors weren't particularly reliable. More likely they appealed to those who looked after cars and kept them a long time. Nowadays we only see the /reliable/ older cars: where are the Marinas, 1100/1300/1800s, Scavengers, name-just-about-any-Ford-rustbuckets, etc? Plenty still around - but not necessarily in daily use. I'm sure there are models of boiler from 20 years ago which were so crap they're practically extinct by now. Many get scrapped before their time because people like BG lie about spares availability, or say it *might* not last much longer. I changed my Potterton because it was a good time to do so - major works going on in the room it is housed in - not because it was in any way faulty. At near 30 years old. Of course the huge rise in gas prices tipped the balance. -- *Always remember you're unique, just like everyone else. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#42
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , YAPH
writes On Wed, 21 Jan 2009 23:17:11 +0000, geoff wrote: In message , A.Lee writes The stock answer was/is Worcester/Bosch. Then someone (Geoff?) reported a lot of circuit board failures as they reached ~5 years old. Yeah, pcbs AND fans the 24i and 28i are in the premier division for both I take it you mean the old standard efficiency models? Are the PCB faults generally that pin on the fan relay breaking away from the track? relay hammer ... Have you actually looked at the state of the relay contacts ? I'm getting quite glad I carry a soldering iron on the van, between those and Profile PCBs :-) -- geoff |
#43
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Dave Baker wrote: Why do PCBs fail so often? They are reliable enough in other appliances. If they are getting too hot is it beyond the wit of the designers to site and insulate them better? Basically ****e design, components and build. Looks to me that those makers operate the principle of saving a penny on each unit adds up to a fortune overall. Of course PCBs can have a very long life. Customers with burnt fingers have even longer memories. They may save a penny today, but they lose out big time later. -- JJ |
#44
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Mark" wrote in message ... On Wed, 21 Jan 2009 23:10:24 -0000, Colin Wilson o.uk wrote: Funnily enough, the PCB on our Worcester Bosch has had to be replaced either two or three times now, along with pretty much everything else electrical in it (fan, transformer and so on) The PCB on the WB is also a POS that is designed to break if the fan goes - no damage limitation devices such as (gasp) a fuse. The PCB on my WB boiler did not fail when the fan died. It could be that the first guess for a repair is the PCB, then when this is replaced and is found to have not cured the problem, the real culprit is detected and replaced, i.e. the fan. The original PCB should have been refitted after the new replacement had made no difference, and before fitting a new 'fan', but it is easier, and more profitable, to say that the fan has damaged the PCB, so the new PCB is left in situ and charged for, along with the fan. I accept that a faulty component 'can' damage a PCB, and that PCB's do fail on their own, but there seems to be a lot of PCB's being replaced, a lot more than should be expected. |
#46
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Harry Stottle wrote:
.... snipped It could be that the first guess for a repair is the PCB, then when this is replaced and is found to have not cured the problem, the real culprit is detected and replaced, i.e. the fan. .... snipped When BG came to fix my Glowworm (according to Wife) they had a device that could interrogate the PCB so I assume there's a standard interface that allows them to read fault history and parameters before replacing. Dave |
#47
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 10:05:37 -0000, "Harry Stottle"
wrote: "Mark" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 21 Jan 2009 23:10:24 -0000, Colin Wilson o.uk wrote: Funnily enough, the PCB on our Worcester Bosch has had to be replaced either two or three times now, along with pretty much everything else electrical in it (fan, transformer and so on) The PCB on the WB is also a POS that is designed to break if the fan goes - no damage limitation devices such as (gasp) a fuse. The PCB on my WB boiler did not fail when the fan died. It could be that the first guess for a repair is the PCB, then when this is replaced and is found to have not cured the problem, the real culprit is detected and replaced, i.e. the fan. The original PCB should have been refitted after the new replacement had made no difference, and before fitting a new 'fan', but it is easier, and more profitable, to say that the fan has damaged the PCB, so the new PCB is left in situ and charged for, along with the fan. I accept that a faulty component 'can' damage a PCB, and that PCB's do fail on their own, but there seems to be a lot of PCB's being replaced, a lot more than should be expected. I'm sure you're right - it's more down to profit. In my case it was a fixed price job so there was no benefit for WB to replace the PCB if it was not faulty. When my fridge/freezer went wrong a repairer said that the PCB always blows when the defroster goes. He would not even try to replace just the defrost unit. In the end it turned out that replacement parts were no longer available, so the fridge went to landfill (Only 6 years old too!). Don't buy a Samsung! -- (\__/) M. (='.'=) Owing to the amount of spam posted via googlegroups and (")_(") their inaction to the problem. I am blocking most articles posted from there. If you wish your postings to be seen by everyone you will need use a different method of posting. See http://improve-usenet.org |
#48
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mark wrote:
On Thu, 22 Jan 2009 11:20:29 +0000, (A.Lee) wrote: Stuart Noble wrote: Moral of this is, boiler insurance is probably a good deal these days (cost of parts is the killer), but make sure it covers "scale damage". Too many wriggle-out options otherwise. I would dispute that. Yes, it is good if a £300 PCB goes, but for many people, it is just money wasted. FWIW Worcester Bosch do a fix-priced repair that covers everything exept the Heat Exchanger IIRC. This could be good value if the PCB or other expensive component fails. I used this when the fan died on mine. It's not bad value when you consider the job is done in an hour, whatever the fault, and in my case a couple of extra parts were replaced as a precaution. As the boiler's now 5 years old I decided to go for an annual insurance which, given the price of parts, seemed like a good deal. I don't trust manufacturers of cars, boilers, and printers when it comes to built-in obsolescence. I'm sure they don't program the chips to fail, but it certainly seems that way sometimes. |
#49
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Stuart Noble wrote: It's not bad value when you consider the job is done in an hour, whatever the fault, and in my case a couple of extra parts were replaced as a precaution. As the boiler's now 5 years old I decided to go for an annual insurance which, given the price of parts, seemed like a good deal. I don't trust manufacturers of cars, boilers, and printers when it comes to built-in obsolescence. I'm sure they don't program the chips to fail, but it certainly seems that way sometimes. It's pretty rare for 'chips' to fail - unless another fault causes then to be abused. Most likely 'PCB' failures are poor soldering, connector troubles and maybe capacitor failure. Pretty well all of these caused by penny pinching in design/manufacture. Think Geoff also mentioned relay failure. These do have a known life - and most with some sense would use plug in types for easy servicing if not willing to specify high quality ones. -- *The most common name in the world is Mohammed * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#50
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dave Baker" wrote in message ... Lobster wrote: Vass wrote: Whats the boiler of choice at the moment? Suggest you try: http://www.makewrite.demon.co.uk/BoilerChoice.html ...then come back with queries David I think most people, myself included, would just like a definitive recommendation to a make or model rather than a general treatise on the ins and outs. The most important thing I suspect is which makes are most reliable. I still have no idea. exactly, thanks Dave -- Vass |
#51
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Vass coughed up some electrons that declared:
"Dave Baker" wrote in message ... Lobster wrote: Vass wrote: Whats the boiler of choice at the moment? Suggest you try: http://www.makewrite.demon.co.uk/BoilerChoice.html ...then come back with queries David I think most people, myself included, would just like a definitive recommendation to a make or model rather than a general treatise on the ins and outs. The most important thing I suspect is which makes are most reliable. I still have no idea. exactly, thanks Dave Could you tell us more then, as per my first message - some of these things depend on what your goals are. Cheers Tim |
#52
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 22 Jan 2009 23:28:57 +0000, geoff wrote:
relay hammer ... Que? Have you actually looked at the state of the relay contacts ? Nope I just found that soldering up the cracked track has got them working again. If that's not the fault I can't fix it ... but I know a man who can :-) -- John Stumbles -- http://yaph.co.uk This message has been rot13 encrypted twice for added security |
#53
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 10:19:29 +0000, Mark wrote:
FWIW Worcester Bosch do a fix-priced repair that covers everything - the fixed price currently being about £200, but if you're in a London pstcode it's almost £300. -- John Stumbles -- http://yaph.co.uk I used to think the brain was the most interesting part of the body - until I realised what was telling me that |
#54
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 22 Jan 2009 20:41:32 +0000, geoff wrote:
I think that if you asked anyone who has an Ideal Icos, they might strongly disagree with you In the course of my work I come across relatively few condensing boilers and, of those, fewer Ideal Icos/Isar/Istors, but of the handful I have encountered all but, I think one, has had a PCB replaced. (That's ones I come across 'incidentally' - doing some non-boiler-related job. I've also replaced a couple of Ideal PCBs, and one fan.) Talking to one of my landlord friends today I mentioned this and he just smiled and said he knows what to do. No, not chuck it out, get it on a BG service/breakdown contract :-) -- John Stumbles -- http://yaph.co.uk What is a simile like? |
#55
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 22 Jan, 23:02, "Doctor Drivel" wrote:
"David" wrote in message ... On 21 Jan, 15:58, "Vass" wrote: New rads and pipes installed last year to an ageing Wicks boiler Would like to put in a new one either in same position or garage (directly below) Whats the boiler of choice at the moment? 1960's Semi, 3 bed. TIA -- Vass Hi, We had a Vaillant ecoTEC+ 937 fitted in October, it's been brilliant far, it's very quiet and the hot water performance is excellent. Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flowrated one the 15 litre is empty. Take your medication and go to sleep. |
#56
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , Harry Stottle
writes "Mark" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 21 Jan 2009 23:10:24 -0000, Colin Wilson o.uk wrote: Funnily enough, the PCB on our Worcester Bosch has had to be replaced either two or three times now, along with pretty much everything else electrical in it (fan, transformer and so on) The PCB on the WB is also a POS that is designed to break if the fan goes - no damage limitation devices such as (gasp) a fuse. The PCB on my WB boiler did not fail when the fan died. It could be that the first guess for a repair is the PCB, then when this is replaced and is found to have not cured the problem, the real culprit is detected and replaced, i.e. the fan. The original PCB should have been refitted after the new replacement had made no difference, and before fitting a new 'fan', but it is easier, and more profitable, to say that the fan has damaged the PCB, so the new PCB is left in situ and charged for, along with the fan. I accept that a faulty component 'can' damage a PCB, and that PCB's do fail on their own, but there seems to be a lot of PCB's being replaced, a lot more than should be expected. As I said, fans on WBs are relay driven, and, with the exception of a dead short on the windings blowing a track (I've never seen it happen and few have seen more than I have) The point that you seem to not quite have grasped is that the PCB is the most complicated and mystifying part of the boiler to a fitter, and once they have replaced that, they are back on relatively safe ground So they replace the PCB - just in case it's where the fault lies and then they invent some bull**** like "Oh and the fan is faulty as well - it blew the pcb" ... utter rubbish -- geoff |
#57
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , NoSpam
writes Harry Stottle wrote: ... snipped It could be that the first guess for a repair is the PCB, then when this is replaced and is found to have not cured the problem, the real culprit is detected and replaced, i.e. the fan. ... snipped When BG came to fix my Glowworm (according to Wife) they had a device that could interrogate the PCB so I assume there's a standard interface that allows them to read fault history and parameters before replacing. Fine when it works an example ... The other day, we were testing some Ideal Icos modules and we started getting an "HE" fault - which points to a module fault. Actually, it was a broken earth wire to the flame box So ... take PCB diagnostics with a pinch of salt -- geoff |
#58
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "David" wrote in message ... On 22 Jan, 23:02, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: "David" wrote in message ... On 21 Jan, 15:58, "Vass" wrote: New rads and pipes installed last year to an ageing Wicks boiler Would like to put in a new one either in same position or garage (directly below) Whats the boiler of choice at the moment? 1960's Semi, 3 bed. TIA -- Vass Hi, We had a Vaillant ecoTEC+ 937 fitted in October, it's been brilliant far, it's very quiet and the hot water performance is excellent. Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flowrated one the 15 litre is empty. Take your medication and go to sleep. You are an idiot! |
#59
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Doctor Drivel wrote:
The Glow Worm Majorca with the McLaren gas valve for one. Most Vulcans. Most cast iron sectioned boilers that ended up leaking at the seals. The Chaffataux boiler with no electrics and a pressure operated valve like a multi-point to bring the burner in. Many Glow Worm Fuelsavers. All the early Vaillant combis. Boy there was some dross out there. I've got a 20-year-old Fuelsaver. Mind, it is on its third fan... Andy -- Did someone say "plantpot"? |
#60
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 23 Jan, 22:47, "Doctor Drivel" wrote:
"David" wrote in message ... On 22 Jan, 23:02, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: "David" wrote in message ... On 21 Jan, 15:58, "Vass" wrote: New rads and pipes installed last year to an ageing Wicks boiler Would like to put in a new one either in same position or garage (directly below) Whats the boiler of choice at the moment? 1960's Semi, 3 bed. TIA -- Vass Hi, We had a Vaillant ecoTEC+ 937 fitted in October, it's been brilliant far, it's very quiet and the hot water performance is excellent. Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flowrated one the 15 litre is empty. Take your medication and go to sleep. You are an idiot! You have no experience with my boiler, I live with it and enjoy powerful showers with it. Even when the store is exhausted 15l/min is pretty good and hardly anyone spends more than 10 minutes continuously under the shower. So just take your medication my old friend and go to sleep. |
#61
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , YAPH
writes On Thu, 22 Jan 2009 23:28:57 +0000, geoff wrote: relay hammer ... Que? It comes from the mechanical action of the relay cracking the solder joint -- geoff |
#62
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "David" wrote in message ... We had a Vaillant ecoTEC+ 937 fitted in October, it's been brilliant far, it's very quiet and the hot water performance is excellent. Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flow rate once the 15 litre tank is empty. Take your medication and go to sleep. You are an idiot! You have no experience with my boiler, I know everything about that boiler and there are better boilers around that are far cheaper as well. I said "Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flow rate once the 15 litre tank is empty." The Worcester-Bosch 440 and 550 are superior although washing machine sized. The Ethos 54C beats the hell out the 937. You are bitter because you paid too much and bought a models with poor DHW performance to others. |
#63
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 24 Jan, 12:26, "Doctor Drivel" wrote:
"David" wrote in message ... We had a Vaillant ecoTEC+ 937 fitted in October, it's been brilliant far, it's very quiet and the hot water performance is excellent. Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flow rate once the 15 litre tank is empty. Take your medication and go to sleep. You are an idiot! You have no experience with my boiler, I know everything about that boiler and there are better boilers around that are far cheaper as well. I said "Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flow rate once the 15 litre tank is empty." The Worcester-Bosch 440 and 550 are superior although washing machine sized. The Ethos 54C beats the hell out the 937. You are bitter because you paid too much and bought a models with poor DHW performance to others. No I am NOT being bitter because I paid too much. Worcester are overrated. Ethos is an unknown brand to many. Imagine the gas supply needed to run the 54C, the 937 suits our household perfectly and is good quality. The 937 is superior to the Ethos and Worcester. |
#64
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "David" wrote in message ... On 24 Jan, 12:26, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: "David" wrote in message ... We had a Vaillant ecoTEC+ 937 fitted in October, it's been brilliant far, it's very quiet and the hot water performance is excellent. Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flow rate once the 15 litre tank is empty. Take your medication and go to sleep. You are an idiot! You have no experience with my boiler, I know everything about that boiler and there are better boilers around that are far cheaper as well. I said "Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flow rate once the 15 litre tank is empty." The Worcester-Bosch 440 and 550 are superior although washing machine sized. The Ethos 54C beats the hell out the 937. You are bitter because you paid too much and bought a model with poor DHW performance to others. No I am NOT being bitter because I paid too much. Beter around than that for less. Worcester are overrated. Reliable but the control system is lacking like Vaillants. The HighFlow 550 ****es all over your expensive shed. Ethos is an unknown brand to many. Top quality. Imagine the gas supply needed to run the 54C, 28mm down to 22mm, and maybe a bit 35mm at the meter depending on run. No great shakes. the 937 suits our household perfectly and is good quality. The 937 is superior to the Ethos and Worcester. You clearly haven't a clue and bought the wrong model. |
#65
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 25 Jan, 21:00, "Doctor Drivel" wrote:
"David" wrote in message ... On 24 Jan, 12:26, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: "David" wrote in message ... We had a Vaillant ecoTEC+ 937 fitted in October, it's been brilliant far, it's very quiet and the hot water performance is excellent. Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flow rate once the 15 litre tank is empty. Take your medication and go to sleep. You are an idiot! You have no experience with my boiler, I know everything about that boiler and there are better boilers around that are far cheaper as well. I said "Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flow rate once the 15 litre tank is empty." The Worcester-Bosch 440 and 550 are superior although washing machine sized. The Ethos 54C beats the hell out the 937. You are bitter because you paid too much and bought a model with poor DHW performance to others. No I am NOT being bitter because I paid too much. Beter around than that for less. Worcester are overrated. Reliable but the control system is lacking like Vaillants. The HighFlow 550 ****es all over your expensive shed. Ethos is an unknown brand to many. Top quality. Imagine the gas supply needed to run the 54C, 28mm down to 22mm, and maybe a bit 35mm at the meter depending on run. No great shakes. the 937 suits our household perfectly and is good quality. The 937 is superior to the Ethos and Worcester. You clearly haven't a clue and bought the wrong model. I researched and asked questions on this group and on other forums. Honestly I might have considered the Worcester if my DHW requirements were more than what they are, they are not so high but just a little higher than normal which is why the 937 suits us perfectly. At one time you were recommending Atmos now it is mostly Broag and Ethos. The control system on a Vaillant is much better than a Worcester IMHO. |
#66
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article
, David wrote: I know everything about that boiler and there are better boilers around that are far cheaper as well. I said "Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flow rate once the 15 litre tank is empty." The Worcester-Bosch 440 and 550 are superior although washing machine sized. The Ethos 54C beats the hell out the 937. You are bitter because you paid too much and bought a models with poor DHW performance to others. No I am NOT being bitter because I paid too much. Don't concern yourself. Dribble's favourite boiler changes more often than his underpants. [shudder] And what was fabulous last week is now crap. That's what happens when your 'knowledge' comes purely from adverts. -- *Succeed, in spite of management * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#67
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "David" wrote in message ... On 25 Jan, 21:00, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: "David" wrote in message ... On 24 Jan, 12:26, "Doctor Drivel" wrote: "David" wrote in message ... We had a Vaillant ecoTEC+ 937 fitted in October, it's been brilliant far, it's very quiet and the hot water performance is excellent. Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flow rate once the 15 litre tank is empty. Take your medication and go to sleep. You are an idiot! You have no experience with my boiler, I know everything about that boiler and there are better boilers around that are far cheaper as well. I said "Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flow rate once the 15 litre tank is empty." The Worcester-Bosch 440 and 550 are superior although washing machine sized. The Ethos 54C beats the hell out the 937. You are bitter because you paid too much and bought a model with poor DHW performance to others. No I am NOT being bitter because I paid too much. Beter around than that for less. Worcester are overrated. Reliable but the control system is lacking like Vaillants. The HighFlow 550 ****es all over your expensive shed. Ethos is an unknown brand to many. Top quality. Imagine the gas supply needed to run the 54C, 28mm down to 22mm, and maybe a bit 35mm at the meter depending on run. No great shakes. the 937 suits our household perfectly and is good quality. The 937 is superior to the Ethos and Worcester. You clearly haven't a clue and bought the wrong model. I researched and asked questions on this group and on other forums. Honestly I might have considered the Worcester if my DHW requirements were more than what they are, they are not so high but just a little higher than normal which is why the 937 suits us perfectly. Better are around and cheaper. At one time you were recommending Atmos now it is mostly Broag and Ethos. Atmos are still the best quality. Their flowrates are not all that brilliant, well the models imported into the UK. Broag are the best price/performance - built in weather compensation,and quality too. 5 yr guarantee Ethos are the highest flowrated wall mounted infinitely continuous combis - built in weather compensation, and quality too. The control system on a Vaillant is much better than a Worcester IMHO. Both are crap. Both are 5 years behind. W-B are working on theirs. |
#68
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , David wrote: I know everything about that boiler and there are better boilers around that are far cheaper as well. I said "Very expensive for what it is, massive on the wall and poor flow rate once the 15 litre tank is empty." The Worcester-Bosch 440 and 550 are superior although washing machine sized. The Ethos 54C beats the hell out the 937. You are bitter because you paid too much and bought a models with poor DHW performance to others. No I am NOT being bitter because I paid too much. Don't Please eff off you a complete idiotic Jocko plantpot. |
#69
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 20:25:47 GMT, YAPH wrote:
On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 10:19:29 +0000, Mark wrote: FWIW Worcester Bosch do a fix-priced repair that covers everything - the fixed price currently being about £200, but if you're in a London pstcode it's almost £300. Another good reason not to live in London then ;-) -- (\__/) M. (='.'=) Owing to the amount of spam posted via googlegroups and (")_(") their inaction to the problem. I am blocking most articles posted from there. If you wish your postings to be seen by everyone you will need use a different method of posting. See http://improve-usenet.org |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
boiler question: put in new block assembly or replace boiler? | Home Repair | |||
Replacing conventional boiler with combi condensed boiler | UK diy | |||
combi boiler - pressure increases then boiler shuts down | UK diy | |||
Help - I have a back boiler and want a combi boiler fitted but have plastic pipes! | Home Repair | |||
Complicated central Heating; Back-Boiler and Combi-Boiler | UK diy |