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Gas cooker installation

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Alextom

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PostPosted: Thu Jun 01, 2006 1:11 pm    Post Subject:
Gas cooker installation
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I've just had gas supplied to my kitchen so I could install a fairly new cooker, moved from my old house.
The fitter told me that he checked all his pipe work and hose and could find no leak but when attaching the cooker a small one registered on his Gauge. Is it possible that the Gauge would register something when the supply is attached to it or do I now have to get a new cooker?
Can anyone help?
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kevplumb

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PostPosted: Thu Jun 01, 2006 1:27 pm    Post Subject:
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Quote:
but when attaching the cooker a small one registered on his Gauge.


how small ???

could you smell gas ???

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Gasguru

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PostPosted: Thu Jun 01, 2006 1:28 pm    Post Subject:
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Maybe theres a leak on the hose connection - why didin't the fitter locate the leak - easy job.

It is permissable to have a drop of up to 4mbar through appliances (on a standard type meter) provided there is no smell of gas. This is to allow normal wear and tear of gas taps etc.

In practice most customers will smell a 0.5 mbar drop.

It would be unusual to have a gas leak on a cooker of this age unless it is a cheap and nasty version that requires a heatshield plate when grilling.

Users don't bother and the gas taps overheat and leak gas.
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Alextom

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 02, 2006 10:57 am    Post Subject:
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icon_cool.gif Thank you for your very helpful replies.
I've now bought my own gas guage but yet to work out how to use it.

Without wanting to bore you here's a more detailed background.

When I said the cooker was fairly new, what I should have said was that it was a new Stoves bought 4 years ago but since moving (2 1/2 years ago) it had sat in the garage. I prepared the slot in the kitchen in advance of the fitter (a young, newly qualified Corgi) arriving, which meant removing the glass 'lid'.
The fitter thought that the way I removed this could have caused a problem because I didn't follow the manual. I looked at the manual later, and removed the side panels as it suggested, incase there was something I should have done, but didn't. The result was that it was another, more complicated way of doing what I did in the first place.

I have now bought a Monument U Gauge (257c) but I'm not sure how to use it. The fitter had told my wife I could call him and he would talk me through it. Are these things easy to use?

Alextom
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corgiman

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 02, 2006 10:57 am    Post Subject:
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OMG

this has got to be a wind up

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kevplumb

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 02, 2006 11:10 am    Post Subject:
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I have now bought a Monument U Gauge (257c) but I'm not sure how to use it.


take it back if you didn't get the instructions with it icon_lol.gif icon_lol.gif icon_lol.gif

failing that go to an approved ACS centre and for a small icon_rolleyes.gif fee they will explain icon_eek.gif

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ChrisR

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 02, 2006 1:06 pm    Post Subject:
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I've bought a thing called a scalpel, and some forceps....
Nothing can go wrong can it?
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corgiman

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 02, 2006 1:16 pm    Post Subject:
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ChrisR wrote:
I've bought a thing called a scalpel, and some forceps....
Nothing can go wrong can it?


icon_lol.gif

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corgiman

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 02, 2006 1:16 pm    Post Subject:
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kevplumb wrote:
Quote:

I have now bought a Monument U Gauge (257c) but I'm not sure how to use it.


take it back if you didn't get the instructions with it icon_lol.gif icon_lol.gif icon_lol.gif

failing that go to an approved ACS centre and for a small icon_rolleyes.gif fee they will explain icon_eek.gif


yes dad The U gauge costs about 3500 plus vat but you do get free corgi registration and ACS qualifications wif it

icon_smile.gif

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Gasguru

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 02, 2006 4:28 pm    Post Subject:
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Quote:
which meant removing the glass 'lid'

The fitter thought that the way I removed this could have caused a problem


It pointing towards a leak on the lid shutoff (unless it has switchback)
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Alextom

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PostPosted: Mon Jun 05, 2006 12:11 pm    Post Subject:
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Thank you Gasguru

The problem seems to have been solved. A leak may have occurred because of the way I removed the lid originally.
There has been no smell of gas; I have managed to use the U Gauge which doesn't indicate a leak.
I'm planning to do another check for leaks just to be sure.
Alextom
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kier

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PostPosted: Tue Jun 06, 2006 7:38 pm    Post Subject:
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alextom.which part of london you live in.just a general idea please.
just asking as my cat/dog and au pair does not like loud bangs,au pair only gets a bang once a week,no need to spoil her.
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Alextom

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PostPosted: Wed Jun 07, 2006 12:24 pm    Post Subject:
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Quote:
yes dad The U gauge costs about 3500 plus vat but you do get


Corgiman, Kier either you're idiots or you are those people who like to treat others like idiots. The U gauge I bought cost £15 from the Plumbshop and I used it in exactly the same way as the Corgi engineer did (a friend of a friend who I wish I knew earlier), who came round two days later.
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Nige F

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PostPosted: Wed Jun 07, 2006 12:44 pm    Post Subject:
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They`d be the latter of the 2 options .....I`m one of the first icon_lol.gif icon_lol.gif icon_lol.gif
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corgiman

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PostPosted: Wed Jun 07, 2006 3:23 pm    Post Subject:
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Alextom wrote:
Quote:
yes dad The U gauge costs about 3500 plus vat but you do get


Corgiman, Kier either you're idiots or you are those people who like to treat others like idiots. The U gauge I bought cost £15 from the Plumbshop and I used it in exactly the same way as the Corgi engineer did (a friend of a friend who I wish I knew earlier), who came round two days later.

#

mmm sorry you missed the joke tom

I was saying that a u guage is about 15

but the the course that you are required to undertake to use it legally are about 3500 plus vat

so I am not an idiot, and I wish you luck

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