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- 11 Sep 2023
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Hi guys, any help here would be appreciated before I undertake a lot of work that I would ideally like to avoid. I need to boost the pressure and flow of my showers. Currently the flow rate of the weakest shower is 2.3 litres a minute which is upstairs. There is one more downstairs and will eventually be a third shower ( upstairs) but we are a way off that. There is a small caveat in that the downstairs shower only has its hot fed from the vented system and the cold feed is direct from mains with pressure reducer on this cold side, just before shower , to help balance the two feeds. The cold main for this shower is plenty strong and I have no need to boost this side.
I had thought that the best way to solve my problem was to fit a whole house booster pump, on to the vented system. Most likely a Stuart turner monsoon universal 3.0 bar (from the advice of Stuart turner sales).I had planned to install this just as manufacturer intended. All relatively straight foward , beside hot water cylinder. Feed from s flange for hot. Cold supply coming direct from CWS tank ideally in an existing pipe running near the airing cupboard. Obviously this is the real world and none of that worked out.
I have attached photos of the airing cupboard showing the setup. The reason I am potentially rethinking my plans is that the hot water outlet goes immediately into a cavity wall and travels up to the attic where you find the t junction ( also pictured ) that splits the hot water away from the expansion pipe. This isn’t ideal as I am told the pump shouldn’t go in the attic so I’m unsure of how to get my hot supply down to the airing cupboard now without having to run pipe down through the cavity walls in order to to split the expansion pipe from hot water.
The next problem is that any cold pipe feeds from the CWS tank are running no where near airing cupboard. They (also pictured ) are coming out of the other side of loft tank. There are two. One feeding the upstairs shower and the other feeding the cold water needs of the rest of upstairs. This obviously means I will have to connect these so that one pump feeds both.
This all means that the only way I can see of using my whole house pump idea requires a lot of pipe work. It would also have to be run up and down in a cavity wall with poor access. This makes me nervous as I don’t have a pipe bender or blow torch to do copper work and I would worry about plastic where I can’t access it to check.
Alternatively can I get away with the pump in attic some way and reconfigure the piping up there but use plastic? At least here I can check it. Or finally the last idea is to just buy multiple smaller pumps and connect them directly to showers. But then this wouldn’t be a direct uninterrupted feed to the shower pumps plus the downstairs shower is a fair distance from the hot water cylinder which I don’t think is ideal either so this is maybe a non starter. What do you gents think is the best option in terms of ease , cost effectiveness and also the right way to do the job? I had budgeted a little over £600 for the whole house pump. Thank you for any help you can provide. I really appreciate it
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I had thought that the best way to solve my problem was to fit a whole house booster pump, on to the vented system. Most likely a Stuart turner monsoon universal 3.0 bar (from the advice of Stuart turner sales).I had planned to install this just as manufacturer intended. All relatively straight foward , beside hot water cylinder. Feed from s flange for hot. Cold supply coming direct from CWS tank ideally in an existing pipe running near the airing cupboard. Obviously this is the real world and none of that worked out.
I have attached photos of the airing cupboard showing the setup. The reason I am potentially rethinking my plans is that the hot water outlet goes immediately into a cavity wall and travels up to the attic where you find the t junction ( also pictured ) that splits the hot water away from the expansion pipe. This isn’t ideal as I am told the pump shouldn’t go in the attic so I’m unsure of how to get my hot supply down to the airing cupboard now without having to run pipe down through the cavity walls in order to to split the expansion pipe from hot water.
The next problem is that any cold pipe feeds from the CWS tank are running no where near airing cupboard. They (also pictured ) are coming out of the other side of loft tank. There are two. One feeding the upstairs shower and the other feeding the cold water needs of the rest of upstairs. This obviously means I will have to connect these so that one pump feeds both.
This all means that the only way I can see of using my whole house pump idea requires a lot of pipe work. It would also have to be run up and down in a cavity wall with poor access. This makes me nervous as I don’t have a pipe bender or blow torch to do copper work and I would worry about plastic where I can’t access it to check.
Alternatively can I get away with the pump in attic some way and reconfigure the piping up there but use plastic? At least here I can check it. Or finally the last idea is to just buy multiple smaller pumps and connect them directly to showers. But then this wouldn’t be a direct uninterrupted feed to the shower pumps plus the downstairs shower is a fair distance from the hot water cylinder which I don’t think is ideal either so this is maybe a non starter. What do you gents think is the best option in terms of ease , cost effectiveness and also the right way to do the job? I had budgeted a little over £600 for the whole house pump. Thank you for any help you can provide. I really appreciate it