If it was a rain head type shower, absolutely!So to you a high flow rate with poor pressure is OK for a shower to you. Struth!
If it was a rain head type shower, absolutely!So to you a high flow rate with poor pressure is OK for a shower to you. Struth!
My experience is that installers just make an assumption that a new supply pipe will be needed, with a new boiler, without even considering doing the pipe capacity calcs.
My experience is that installers just make an assumption that a new supply pipe will be needed, with a new boiler, without even considering doing the pipe capacity calcs.
Load of rubbish. Assuming the tapping point is equivalent on the 2 boilers ie at the boiler inlet, before any internal losses, and the meter is unchanged, if the old one showed 13.5mb the only way the new one could show 16.5mb is if the gas flow is lower. That's possible if the efficiency is higher (and maybe the output lower, he didn't say otherwise) but not because the new boiler works differently.
What about 4 mb absorption?Load of rubbish. Assuming the tapping point is equivalent on the 2 boilers ie at the boiler inlet, before any internal losses, and the meter is unchanged, if the old one showed 13.5mb the only way the new one could show 16.5mb is if the gas flow is lower. That's possible if the efficiency is higher (and maybe the output lower, he didn't say otherwise) but not because the new boiler works differently.
And, as has come up a few times on the forum, pressure must be 21+/-2 mb at the meter outlet, max 1mb pipe loss so minimum 18mb at the boiler inlet. So on that basis 13.5 and 16.5mb don't meet the regs, whether or not the boilers would work fine at those pressures.
Also a 21.5mb reading was thrown in without comment. We need to know the pressure at the meter to make any sense of that.
Absorbed where?What about 4 mb absorption?
Absorption where?Never heard of meter absorption?
It's 21+/-2mb at meter outlet. If 19mb at outlet is achieved with 20mb inlet, no problem.What happens with 20 mb on inlet to meter?
Absorption where?
I guessed that too, but never heard it called that before."meter absorption" seems to be posh words for pressure drop. Unless gas is absorbed into the materials the meter is made from.
IMO absorb, absorption, adsorb, adsorption are all correct. None of them is relevant here though!I guessed that too, but never heard it called that before.
It's why I said assuming the tapping points are equivalent on the 2 boilers. If pressure is measured part way along the gas train inside the boiler you could prove anything.
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