Sorry but the sentence:
"As for checking it try looking in section 5 page 77 last paragraph of the corgi handbook and you will find this is what it says"
doesn't make sense.
Not a spelling test but you need to use the right words to make yourself clear.
I guess you might be referring to ""the reg is the pipework must be designed to ensure the maximum pressure loss to each appliance does not exceed 1mbar when subjected to maximum load. "
If that's what the corgi book says, then it's drivel, as anyone with half a brain can see. The truth is that the pipework must ACHIEVE a drop less than 1 mbar. The design is irrelevant. In Kev's real world we all know you don't necessarily get anything like as low a drop as the book predicts.
If you're going to quote regs OR make statements, you gotta get it right instead of ballsing it up all the time.
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The situation, as I have explained, is not dangerous.
The letter would not need to be answered. I'm not going to explain the obvious here.
Except that your silly suggestion of the call to Transco just makes you look just that.
Re the "what would you do if you found underpressure due to undersizing" I assume your answer is
"Original question was answered I said correct size of pipe or existing layout altered to give correct pressure."
I already reasked "suppose there is no option but to take the floor up"
Presumably you would take the floor up .
But I asked "suppose you find one" eg. on a Landlords Gas Safety Record. I suggest that you would not rip the floor up if you wanted to stay in business. So you ballsed it up again.
You presumably don't know the textbook course of action. Which if you look carefully enough is to declare the appliance AR. NOT NCS even if the flame picture is not altered. (specifically it's AR if the low pressure is due to undersized pipework)
That would cover half the appliances I see, but I only declare them NCS. I think that reg is unreasonable, and I ought to write to the powers to say so, but I'm not that good. I've only had half a dozen corrections made to the corgi handbooks.
CroydonCorgi has gone on to what would have been the next imponderables - Transco gaurantee 14mbar, appliances need 20, which you wouldn't even get with 20mbar at the meter, etc etc.
I agree , Namsag you have to live in the real world. IF you insist on quoting and "regs" all the time then keep ballsing it up, I suggest you stop before you dig a bigger hole for yourself.
And the more you try to stand up for regs which defy common sense when taken literally, the deeper you get.
And if you come back with another silly suggestion I'll fill thebloody hole in.
The cynical old beggars I was referring to way back are the ones who for example, justify leaving compression joints under floors because they "know how to make "and theirs "don't leak".
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"so measured pressures are permitted to vary + or - 1 millibar. "
ummm, no comment!