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Sam

posted on 30th Aug 11 at 07:59

:o

So if we have a combi boiler fitted in place of where the tank is upstairs, it sounds like the pressure won't be any better for the electric shower?

I forgot to mention, the bath tub is actually a jacuzzi bath tub :o (this was fitted by the previous owners!). Will this affect anything in my plans for wanting a stronger shower?


Siberia

posted on 29th Aug 11 at 20:37

i dont mean 3 showers at the same time:lol: if i have a showeer and the misus has one after me.. i have to listen to her moan thats theres no water mid way through her shower:thumbs: the pump drains the boiler so quickly


mattk

posted on 29th Aug 11 at 17:51

yeah if you have 15+ rads :lol:


John

posted on 29th Aug 11 at 17:38

Get big beast boilers, mum and dads one is floor standing washing machine size and can do 3 showers.


mattk

posted on 29th Aug 11 at 17:27

the same as the mains, no good if you are going to have 3 people having showers at the same time, you need an unvented hot water system for that


Siberia

posted on 28th Aug 11 at 22:42

i have a pump system which is great for 2 showers but if a third person needs a shower there is no hot water left because to pump has drained the hot water cyclinder...

whats the presure like from a combi boiler?


ash_corsa

posted on 28th Aug 11 at 20:34

Ive always found electric showers to be absolute shite, have one now and its rubbish.

Old house i fitted a mixer shower off the mains hot water from the combi boiler and the pressure was superb. Will be doing the same again when we re-do our bathroom soon.


deanmcreynolds26

posted on 28th Aug 11 at 10:17

combi boiler will not run through an electric shower or have a pump to increase flow rate to a shower.

mains pressure only!
if you have an old cylinder maybe he meant to put it on the floor above the bathroom to increase head of water... which means hes prob still talking crap :lol:


chloe16v

posted on 28th Aug 11 at 02:09

we have an electric shower and combi boiler, our boiler is in our bedroom which im not that happy about as when we first moved in it was found to be leaking :|


Dan

posted on 27th Aug 11 at 17:04

I have a condensor boiler which powers my shower, and its powerful as fuck. Im 99% theres no pump anywhere.

My taps run fast as hell as well.


John

posted on 26th Aug 11 at 14:13

Combi's can normally do mains pressure hot water so you just get a mixer shower.


Sam

posted on 26th Aug 11 at 13:54

How can I find out what sort of boiler I have? I know it's definitely not a combi boiler... :o

It looks pretty old, I'd say at least 20 years old.

John why would I not need an electric shower? (not being funny, am genuinely curious as I don't know that much about showers/plumbing etc. apart from basic things like changing/adding valves!)


John

posted on 26th Aug 11 at 10:59

Only if you have a crap combi.


sc0ott

posted on 26th Aug 11 at 10:44

With a combi you will have pressure problems if you were running a bath and a thermostatic shower in another room due to there being no cylinder.


John

posted on 26th Aug 11 at 10:07

If you had a combi you wouldn't need an electric shower.


Gary

posted on 26th Aug 11 at 08:39

Seems daft to me.

Surely the only way to increase flow is to run larger dia pipe from your water inlet to shower?


sc0ott

posted on 26th Aug 11 at 06:05

Do you have a condensing boiler just now?


Sam

posted on 25th Aug 11 at 21:02

He claims his shower flow rate is more powerful since he's had this done at his house.


Dom

posted on 25th Aug 11 at 21:00

A load of betty....


Sam

posted on 25th Aug 11 at 20:58

We had a sparky in recently to install a new consumer unit for us, I was chatting to him about showers and he reckons if we got a combi boiler and had it installed upstairs in the airing cupboard, we'd get a much stronger flow rate to the electric shower.

Is this true or is he talking bollocks? Because I thought electric showers only run off cold water feeds, so the feed to it wouldn't need to go through the boiler would it? :boggle: