I'm not a great fan of Worcester (not many people on here are...) but I wouldn't replace it for the sake of it. Keep a bit of money aside, make sure it's properly serviced and your heating system water quality is good, and you should get another 5-10 years out of it
Boilers have a wide range of failure terms, but moving them can sometimes bring that on early.
If the water is well treated I don't see why it wouldn't do another 10 with minor repairs along the way.
My boiler is 35 years old at least, it has broke down twice in that time, the transformer went after a year or two and it got sooted up after 30 years needed the jets adjusting, and that is the only time I have called some one out. I believe if not broke why fix it.
Thanks all; so should be fine to remove/refit/replumb.
Are boilers plumbing reasonably generic in that if I replace in, say, 3-5 years that the pipework should be reasonably easily adjusted to move from a Worcester to a, say, Valliant or Intergas.
I have been rethinking this. Given that I am extending the house and adding underfloor heating is it likely that the old boiler will have sufficient umph.
Get the heating requirements sized properly, and then you'll know for sure. How long is a piece of string, and what colour is it. But you could be running at the top of it's ability.
3 bathrooms suggest upgrading the incoming cold water pipe, and installing an unvented cylinder as well.
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