Advise appreciated please. I'm currently rennovating a 4 bed Edwardian property. Stripping out is just about complete - everything has been removed, steel gas pipe, gas lighting pipes, cloth insulated cable etc.
I'm in the middle of making decisions about what to install, I've already decided on push-fit plastic for the CH and DWS to cut down the fit-out time.
Q then, is what's the general preference re brands, cost is a consideration, but not the only one. My thoughts were either Polyblumb or JG Speedfit for both the heating and the water?
Next Q, the old - but never seems to have been used - multipoint boiler has been removed from the an awkward wall in the kitchen as all the plaster had blown. I'd like to relocate this to an old outside toilet attached to the main building. The privvy has been stripped to bare bricks and has had a rotten window removed. Due to the flu on the old boiler it has to go on this wall, which currently has a 3ft by 2ft windown shaped hole.
So second Q, can the boilder be temporarily mounted on board (ply, builders' etc) which is attached to the wall until the brickwork is made good? I understand that if I brick up the old window so there's just the flu there probably isn't going to be enough air getting under the old toilet door to sustain the gas burn?
How do I overcome this please?
I'm in the middle of making decisions about what to install, I've already decided on push-fit plastic for the CH and DWS to cut down the fit-out time.
Q then, is what's the general preference re brands, cost is a consideration, but not the only one. My thoughts were either Polyblumb or JG Speedfit for both the heating and the water?
Next Q, the old - but never seems to have been used - multipoint boiler has been removed from the an awkward wall in the kitchen as all the plaster had blown. I'd like to relocate this to an old outside toilet attached to the main building. The privvy has been stripped to bare bricks and has had a rotten window removed. Due to the flu on the old boiler it has to go on this wall, which currently has a 3ft by 2ft windown shaped hole.
So second Q, can the boilder be temporarily mounted on board (ply, builders' etc) which is attached to the wall until the brickwork is made good? I understand that if I brick up the old window so there's just the flu there probably isn't going to be enough air getting under the old toilet door to sustain the gas burn?
How do I overcome this please?

