HI there. I've posted another thread on this forum regarding my high gas consumption. This thread is specifically regarding the awkward hot water cylinder setup I've inherited with the house but am now looking to change.
The house came with two Geminox EBS-1 200 litre hot water tanks which seem to be plumbed in parallel with a secondary hot water circulator. Since living in the house, one tank has always drained first and the second tank later, although the pipework shows them both feeding the same hot water pipe going throughout the house.
The plumber some time ago installed balancing hot watert flow restrictors on the tanks, suggesting that this would help to balance them out. It did not work as if I close both restrictors fully, the hot water flow reduces to a trickle. If I open only the slow tank, it stays at a trickle. If I close the slow tank and open the fast tank, it flows normally. However as mentioned occasionally after a lot of people showering, if I check the tanks, even the slow one has fallen maybe 10-20 degrees (the fast one will have fallen 40 degrees).
Perhaps there is an issue inside the tank, but I think its time to change the system rather than investing further in a bad one.
Being a large house with multiple bathrooms, it does happen that different kids / adults may have showers at similar times and in theory be using 300 litres of hot water for 3 x showers within a short space of time. So far we have never run short of hot water - although I cannot tell whether my capacity is the one 200 litre working tank, or the second slow tank is kicking in after the fact.
I am looking to replace these two tanks (now around 15 years old) and put one tank instead. This will eliminate the confusing unbalanced drawdown problem and ensure the boiler is only heating what is required, rather than filling the slow drawing tank because of heat loss and occasional (and unexplained) drawdowns.
I've seen the the heat loss on the old tanks is 2.331kwh/24h according to the tech specs so x 2 tanks is 1,679kwh/year.
The Megaflo Eco Solar PV Ready tank I was looking at says 617kwh/year. So there is a saving already.
The reason I am looking at the Megaflo Eco Solar PV Ready one, as I already have a solar array which has surplus energy to my battery storage some days, so this could boost the tank.
Questions
1. Anyone have experience of this specific tank? I know Megaflo has brand premium attached, but I'm looking for a tank that will cause the least problems for the next 10 years for heavy usage and this also comes with the iboost kit integrated.
2. The current tanks are on the third floor of the house on a timber intermediate floor. Assuming we strengthen the base under the new tank (more concentrated load from one tank than two), plumbing into the same pipework would be easier than plumbing the new tank on the ground floor near the garage and rerouting pipework. Any other considerations to think about having the tank on the third floor as opposed to putting it in the garage?
3. I'll be replacing the hot water brass circulator with a new one - the shop recommended the Grundfos Alpha version of the same product because of the Auto Adapt function. Any opinions on this? I know a timer can be connected to the secondary pump (I have this already but it is on all day as our pattern of usage is unpredictable) or PIR sensors (difficult to wire into all bathrooms / wireless ones won't work because of the second floor/block wall construction) ... so does the Auto Adapt actually help if the pump is on all daytime? It costs more than the standard brass pump (which we currently have set at speed setting one).
Thanks a lot for taking the time to read and for your replies in advance.
The house came with two Geminox EBS-1 200 litre hot water tanks which seem to be plumbed in parallel with a secondary hot water circulator. Since living in the house, one tank has always drained first and the second tank later, although the pipework shows them both feeding the same hot water pipe going throughout the house.
The plumber some time ago installed balancing hot watert flow restrictors on the tanks, suggesting that this would help to balance them out. It did not work as if I close both restrictors fully, the hot water flow reduces to a trickle. If I open only the slow tank, it stays at a trickle. If I close the slow tank and open the fast tank, it flows normally. However as mentioned occasionally after a lot of people showering, if I check the tanks, even the slow one has fallen maybe 10-20 degrees (the fast one will have fallen 40 degrees).
Perhaps there is an issue inside the tank, but I think its time to change the system rather than investing further in a bad one.
Being a large house with multiple bathrooms, it does happen that different kids / adults may have showers at similar times and in theory be using 300 litres of hot water for 3 x showers within a short space of time. So far we have never run short of hot water - although I cannot tell whether my capacity is the one 200 litre working tank, or the second slow tank is kicking in after the fact.
I am looking to replace these two tanks (now around 15 years old) and put one tank instead. This will eliminate the confusing unbalanced drawdown problem and ensure the boiler is only heating what is required, rather than filling the slow drawing tank because of heat loss and occasional (and unexplained) drawdowns.
I've seen the the heat loss on the old tanks is 2.331kwh/24h according to the tech specs so x 2 tanks is 1,679kwh/year.
The Megaflo Eco Solar PV Ready tank I was looking at says 617kwh/year. So there is a saving already.
The reason I am looking at the Megaflo Eco Solar PV Ready one, as I already have a solar array which has surplus energy to my battery storage some days, so this could boost the tank.
Questions
1. Anyone have experience of this specific tank? I know Megaflo has brand premium attached, but I'm looking for a tank that will cause the least problems for the next 10 years for heavy usage and this also comes with the iboost kit integrated.
2. The current tanks are on the third floor of the house on a timber intermediate floor. Assuming we strengthen the base under the new tank (more concentrated load from one tank than two), plumbing into the same pipework would be easier than plumbing the new tank on the ground floor near the garage and rerouting pipework. Any other considerations to think about having the tank on the third floor as opposed to putting it in the garage?
3. I'll be replacing the hot water brass circulator with a new one - the shop recommended the Grundfos Alpha version of the same product because of the Auto Adapt function. Any opinions on this? I know a timer can be connected to the secondary pump (I have this already but it is on all day as our pattern of usage is unpredictable) or PIR sensors (difficult to wire into all bathrooms / wireless ones won't work because of the second floor/block wall construction) ... so does the Auto Adapt actually help if the pump is on all daytime? It costs more than the standard brass pump (which we currently have set at speed setting one).
Thanks a lot for taking the time to read and for your replies in advance.