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DeltaT2
I wonder if anyone can tell me when these sludge buckets will be banned from the British Plumbing systems??
When combi boilers and other equally useless and inappropriate options are also banned ?I wonder if anyone can tell me when these sludge buckets will be banned from the British Plumbing systems??
When combi boilers and other equally useless and inappropriate options are also banned ?I wonder if anyone can tell me when these sludge buckets will be banned from the British Plumbing systems??
Your attitude simply proved that no advice you give can be trusted - because you freely admit that you could not consider options which (contrary to your statements) do have valid applications. If someone stated that there is no place or situation where a (for example) combi could be considered suitable, I think you would suggest they aren't fit to be giving advice since that competence would require them to be capable of making an objective choice of what is right for the specific application.
I'm very happy with mine, it's far better and more reliable that the alternatives that might be used in it's place.
I speak as I see. If you don't like what I see, then perhaps you should consider why that might be.Now as for your attack on my abilities ...
So now you are backtracking and saying they can work in a properly designed system ?The few sludge buckets that we've installed mate, have been in multi-heat source installations, and they have worked very well
Derogatory termSo, at the end of the day they're sludge buckets
Err, one does not lead to the other. It may be a fact that 1000s have been removed, that doesn't make "sludge bucket" into a fact - it remains a derogatory term which shows you are prejudiced against them., purely by the fact 1000s have been removed - now that's a fact.
Apologise for pointing out your attitude ?Now, as you have insulted me & my ability, I'd like to meet you, so I still await your PM or apology.
Yes, a lot of plumbers (as in people who can put pipework together, not people who can design systems) will suggest that. Bear in mind that if you do away with your cylinder, you will have a combi boiler. So : shower that stops when someone turns on the kitchen tap, bath that takes 20 minutes to fill to usable depth, up to a minute delay between turning on tap and getting hot water if the boiler's gone cold, ... and for good measure, no hot water (and no provision for backup) when it breaks down.Here are the practical options as I see them:
- throw it all away - get a modulating super boiler that drives everything and automagically saves me money because it it just does it. Not really practical but I sure some will suggest it.
Why not just run the UFH off the store as well ?- radiators and store driven off boiler direct, hot water and ufh supplied from store at low temperatures - lets assume that the store does stratification, x plate heat transfer and all that clever stuff that makes it efficient.
That would be an option - if it suits your situation. It would also mean not having high temperature surfaces that could cause burns, or at least reducing the risk (Google search)- as above but oversized radiators supplied by low temperature flow.
, you'll have a gradient down the store
* I have figured out a way of avoiding this (and putting very cold water back in at the bottom of the store). It's not what you might call trivially simple - but barely more complicated than a combi boiler.
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