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#41
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In message , at 12:50:25 on
Fri, 27 Nov 2015, e27002 aurora remarked: My limited experience with combi boilers is that they are far from reliable. I have experience with precisely one, and it has been as reliable as one might expect a system boiler to be. How many have you experienced, and how old? The technology doesn't differ that much from a system boiler. It's just that if it fails there is no hot water backup. I've had a few, and the main problem is they don't deliver hot water fast enough to fill a bath in a sensible length of time. Let alone filling up a bath at the same time someone else is having a shower. Nothing to do with low pressure British plumbing then? The reverse, actually. Try filling the bath faster and the water goes lukewarm. It's not a problem getting the water through, it's the capacity to heat it up "on demand" in the first place. -- Roland Perry |
#42
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In message , at 12:48:37 on
Fri, 27 Nov 2015, e27002 aurora remarked: My limited experience with combi boilers is that they are far from reliable. I have experience with precisely one, and it has been as reliable as one might expect a system boiler to be. How many have you experienced, and how old? The technology doesn't differ that much from a system boiler. It's just that if it fails there is no hot water backup. One, well I did say limited, :-). And, its age was, to me unknown. Before I bought this condo, I rented an apartment here in town for two years. It had a combi boiler, it heated the water for the radiators and instantaneously heated the water for the shower and faucets. Twice during my stay I called out the repairman because the hot water supply failed. The worst one we had was in a rented house, and the hot water was out of action for three weeks (in February). British Gas, who had a maintenance contract, called almost every day, and were simply unable to work out what to do with it. Eventually they called out someone from the manufacturer. For three weeks we had to boil water in pots on the cooker to wash or have a bath. The managing agents were useless; as far as they were concerned it was BG's problem. -- Roland Perry |
#43
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![]() "e27002 aurora" wrote in message ... On Fri, 27 Nov 2015 11:27:23 +0000, Neil Williams wrote: On 2015-11-27 09:33:32 +0000, e27002 aurora said: My limited experience with combi boilers is that they are far from reliable. I have experience with precisely one, and it has been as reliable as one might expect a system boiler to be. How many have you experienced, and how old? The technology doesn't differ that much from a system boiler. It's just that if it fails there is no hot water backup. One, well I did say limited, :-). And, its age was, to me unknown. Before I bought this condo, I rented an apartment here in town for two years. It had a combi boiler, it heated the water for the radiators and instantaneously heated the water for the shower and faucets. Twice during my stay I called out the repairman because the hot water supply failed. Moreover, when the pilot light went out, relighting and restarting the system was an art form, a torturous one. Added two that, two homes that I have owned, one in the US and one in the UK had instantaneous water heaters. Both worked well for the first year. After that, we experienced problems. A tank with heaters works best. My UK home has a modern tank with two immersion heaters. My US home has a tank with a gas heater. I didn't know you could get combo with pilot light! Both ours - even the one fitted approx 1990 long before we bought the house, were spark. James |
#44
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On Fri, 27 Nov 2015 15:03:27 +0000, Neil Williams
wrote: On 2015-11-27 12:48:37 +0000, e27002 aurora said: Moreover, when the pilot light went out, relighting and restarting the system was an art form, a torturous one. Quite an old one, then. Modern boilers don't have pilot lights; they ignite reliably on demand using an electronic ignition. Added two that, two homes that I have owned, one in the US and one in the UK had instantaneous water heaters. Both worked well for the first year. After that, we experienced problems. A tank with heaters works best. My UK home has a modern tank with two immersion heaters. My US home has a tank with a gas heater. Electric immersion heaters are an expensive way to operate. Heating and providing hot water for my small 3 bedroom house using gas is noticeably cheaper than doing so for my old one bedroom flat (smaller than the downstairs of my current house) was using electricity. Understood. Unfortunately this building is all electric. Since it is four floors high that is probably as it should be. As an aside, despite being a cabled town, Virgin did not run a cable to building. It is four years old, so well after the area was cabled. So, I could not move my cable, and internet access, with me. We do however have a communal dish on the roof. I assume you mean an unvented cylinder to provide your US-style high pressure system? I think if I was going for a tank system from scratch I would choose one of those. Yes, it is an unvented cylinder. It is very heavily insulated with two immersion heaters. |
#45
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On Mon, 23 Nov 2015 16:56:00 -0800, Nobody wrote:
On Mon, 23 Nov 2015 11:31:02 +0000, Recliner wrote: On Sun, 22 Nov 2015 22:23:03 +0000, Adrian wrote: In message , Roland Perry writes Or its supply of hot water. I've only stayed at two hotels (out of several hundreds) which ran out of hot water. The first was in Maidenhead in around 1980 and had suffered a one-off major outage of some kind. The other was Sharm-el-Sheikh in 2009 where no-one appeared to be that surprised that the system had broken down yet again. I stayed in one in Weymouth (the name of which I've forgotten) four years ago where the hot and cold water stopped. Fortunately the bath/sink appeared to be on a different supply to the cistern. It was back after a couple of days. I stayed in a very smart hotel recently where both the hot and cold water failed for a while. However, as it was in Livingstone, Zambia, I suppose that's not unusual. It also had slightly unusual lawn mowers: https://www.flickr.com/photos/reclin...7660656194221/ We were warned that though they look cute, they are also very bad-tempered, and it was inadvisable to get too close if we didn't want to get kicked. There were also giraffes in the hotel grounds, though I failed to get a picture of them. At least Canada geese are laid back. But the self-fertilising of lawns can be problematic. One adds: Canada Geese are not so laid back when they have their young. If you ever see two adult geese and several yellow fluffy chicks, give them plenty of space. If one of the adults starts to move quickly towards you, with its neck parallel to the ground, take several steps back. |
#47
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In article
-sept ember.org, Recliner wrote: Sam Wilson wrote: In article -sep tember.org, Recliner wrote: e27002 aurora wrote: Cleanliness is next to G_dliness. I like a real, hi-volume, hi-pressure, hot water shower. :-) Is godliness now a swear word? I'd missed that. Adrian is a Messianic Jew or something close to it. Observant Jews don't like to use the name of the Deity in either speech or writing. Leaving out the "o" seems to be sufficient to meet that requirement. Yes, I was aware of his unusual religious leanings. But if one is of that persuasion, surely one should simply avoid using any prohibited words, rather than using them with a letter omitted (which actually draws attention to the word he's not supposed to use). You'll have to ask Adrian, but I suspect godliness is a concept he might very well want to talk about. I'm not sure what other locution he might use. Sam -- The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336. |
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