Hi
It has just been pointed out by our servicing engineer that our oil fired boiler is missing the firevalve - he told me which one I'd need (Teddington KBB C/65) and I'm looking in to installing it.
The installation diagram with the valve (and the boiler, a Grant Combi 70) show the valve must be installed externally at the point the oil pipe enters the building.
My problem is that on my property (a mid terrace barn conversion), the oil pipe enters at the front, runs under the floor boards in to the kitchen at the back of the house, then around the back of the kitchen units and in to the boiler room - so there is no way I could fit the valve at the front and get the temperature sensor in to the boiler.
The only option I can think of is to take the pipe back outside again in the kitchen and run it externally along the back of the house and fit the firevalve just before bringing it back in to the boiler, but I'm not sure that really helps me given that the pipe would be inside the building for the 8 or metres before it gets to the back wall.
Can anyone offer me any other solutions to this (or confirm the above idea would be ok) - I assume that as the property was converted in 2000 then the firevalve regs do apply (and in anycase it sounds like a very sensible thing to have regardless of the regs)
Thanks
Simon
It has just been pointed out by our servicing engineer that our oil fired boiler is missing the firevalve - he told me which one I'd need (Teddington KBB C/65) and I'm looking in to installing it.
The installation diagram with the valve (and the boiler, a Grant Combi 70) show the valve must be installed externally at the point the oil pipe enters the building.
My problem is that on my property (a mid terrace barn conversion), the oil pipe enters at the front, runs under the floor boards in to the kitchen at the back of the house, then around the back of the kitchen units and in to the boiler room - so there is no way I could fit the valve at the front and get the temperature sensor in to the boiler.
The only option I can think of is to take the pipe back outside again in the kitchen and run it externally along the back of the house and fit the firevalve just before bringing it back in to the boiler, but I'm not sure that really helps me given that the pipe would be inside the building for the 8 or metres before it gets to the back wall.
Can anyone offer me any other solutions to this (or confirm the above idea would be ok) - I assume that as the property was converted in 2000 then the firevalve regs do apply (and in anycase it sounds like a very sensible thing to have regardless of the regs)
Thanks
Simon