Hi forum,
This is my first post and having looked on the internet I'm not sure just how feasible what I want to achieve is but I thought its worth an ask before I ask a heating engineer face to face and come away looking like an idiot.
I'm buying a 5 bed house with 1 family bathroom, 1 downstairs cloak/washroom and a master bedroom en suite, plus kitchen obviously. I'm also planning to run underfloor heating with a greener heating system being added later.
At the moment I live in a 3 bedroom house which is supplied by a Baxi combi boiler, my partners house is a system boiler and cylinder.
What I want to do is use a combi boiler to run an unvented cylinder with 2 coils, I have seen some notes written on this, and I'm assuming this is ok as a kind of 's plan' with the flow and return going through one coil with the other coil to be used for solar or air source later. And zone valves for the coil and heating depending on timers and thermostat settings of heating/hot water.
Can a combi be used to heat an unvented cylinder and pass the relevant regs? Yes or no? I've seen that this can be ok but want to make sure.
Now the reason why I want to use a combi and not a system boiler is, as my partner can run the best part of a cylinder off in one shower I'm trying to introduce a back up system for the running off of the water. Not just an immersion back up which we would have to wait for.
On cylinders you can have multiple thermostats, so what I propose is if I set 1 thermostat at a 'lower limit' once the cylinder has lost some/all of its heat then could this thermostat switch over 2 zone valves, one shutting the cylinder supply, the other opening the combi hot water supply allowing normal use as a combi( normally open, normally closed on the thermostat).
I understand that it possibly isn't as simple as this or not possible and non returns and other zone valves might be needed, that's what a heating engineer would know.
What I want to know is,
Can this be done? If so why is it not done often?
Thank you in advance.
Andy.
This is my first post and having looked on the internet I'm not sure just how feasible what I want to achieve is but I thought its worth an ask before I ask a heating engineer face to face and come away looking like an idiot.
I'm buying a 5 bed house with 1 family bathroom, 1 downstairs cloak/washroom and a master bedroom en suite, plus kitchen obviously. I'm also planning to run underfloor heating with a greener heating system being added later.
At the moment I live in a 3 bedroom house which is supplied by a Baxi combi boiler, my partners house is a system boiler and cylinder.
What I want to do is use a combi boiler to run an unvented cylinder with 2 coils, I have seen some notes written on this, and I'm assuming this is ok as a kind of 's plan' with the flow and return going through one coil with the other coil to be used for solar or air source later. And zone valves for the coil and heating depending on timers and thermostat settings of heating/hot water.
Can a combi be used to heat an unvented cylinder and pass the relevant regs? Yes or no? I've seen that this can be ok but want to make sure.
Now the reason why I want to use a combi and not a system boiler is, as my partner can run the best part of a cylinder off in one shower I'm trying to introduce a back up system for the running off of the water. Not just an immersion back up which we would have to wait for.
On cylinders you can have multiple thermostats, so what I propose is if I set 1 thermostat at a 'lower limit' once the cylinder has lost some/all of its heat then could this thermostat switch over 2 zone valves, one shutting the cylinder supply, the other opening the combi hot water supply allowing normal use as a combi( normally open, normally closed on the thermostat).
I understand that it possibly isn't as simple as this or not possible and non returns and other zone valves might be needed, that's what a heating engineer would know.
What I want to know is,
Can this be done? If so why is it not done often?
Thank you in advance.
Andy.

