I have tenants happily ensconced in a flat in an old house. Unfortunately, on renewal of the Gas Safety Certificate, the engineer declared the boiler faulty and disconnected it - leaving us all in the lurch.
The boiler and its cubby hole have become a bit dusty with soot, so the diagnosis is that the boiler seals are leaking.
The boiler is not actually inside the habited premises - it is in a small external concrete boiler room with a door that won't close - its essentially open to the elements. Even if the boiler were pumping out pure CO, there is no chance of it harming anyone.
Normally, I'd just accept the fact and replace the boiler, but:
(a) the building is likely to be demolished for development in about 18 months; the current boiler otherwise functions perfectly;
(b) the layout of the flat and distance between boiler and bathroom/kitchen/radiators means that it will involve major disruption and works (ie tearing up carpets, floor, walls) to either replace the old boiler in situ, or place a new boiler inside the dwelling.
Two questions:
1. Given the boiler's external location, does it necessarily have to be condemned, or is that an over-interpretation of "the rules"?
2. Is there anyone in Surrey/Sussex/Kent likely to be able to repair to "acceptable safety standard" this Ideal E Type boiler?
The boiler and its cubby hole have become a bit dusty with soot, so the diagnosis is that the boiler seals are leaking.
The boiler is not actually inside the habited premises - it is in a small external concrete boiler room with a door that won't close - its essentially open to the elements. Even if the boiler were pumping out pure CO, there is no chance of it harming anyone.
Normally, I'd just accept the fact and replace the boiler, but:
(a) the building is likely to be demolished for development in about 18 months; the current boiler otherwise functions perfectly;
(b) the layout of the flat and distance between boiler and bathroom/kitchen/radiators means that it will involve major disruption and works (ie tearing up carpets, floor, walls) to either replace the old boiler in situ, or place a new boiler inside the dwelling.
Two questions:
1. Given the boiler's external location, does it necessarily have to be condemned, or is that an over-interpretation of "the rules"?
2. Is there anyone in Surrey/Sussex/Kent likely to be able to repair to "acceptable safety standard" this Ideal E Type boiler?
