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Corsa Sport » Message Board » Off Day » House Day » Bathroom hot water tap. » Post Reply
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Siberia |
posted on 6th Feb 11 at 13:13 |
quote: most duplex houses use this system... due to the bottom house not having an attic to locate a water tank. the water tank is located in the hot press . the system has no 'fall':look: [Edited on 06-02-2011 by Siberia] | |
Terry12 |
posted on 4th Feb 11 at 19:51 |
I'm assuming the bath and fittings were fitted around the time of the bathroom being extended which was roughly 1990. The boiler is a combi downstairs in the garage which I presume was installed after the bathroom was done, possibly Matt is right that the tap isn't suitable for the combo. There is an old water tank in the loft which is presumably form the old boiler. | |
mattk |
posted on 3rd Feb 11 at 16:40 |
yeah it might not be one suitable for a low pressure hot water system, but they arnt that common these days | |
Jules S |
posted on 2nd Feb 11 at 23:00 |
quote: Really? More of the issue is why he has a pressure drop, and given its a blended tap adds a little to the problem. So presumably the bath runs ok and the sink is run off the same 22mm feed via a 15mm tee? I'm thinking the blender valve doesn't cross over enough | |
Gary |
posted on 2nd Feb 11 at 22:46 |
He has lack of pressure on his hot water tap. Simple. | |
Jules S |
posted on 2nd Feb 11 at 22:37 |
I'm lost on this one :lol: | |
Gary |
posted on 2nd Feb 11 at 21:45 |
Could a helper pump be put in at all to give it a helping hand? | |
Terry12 |
posted on 2nd Feb 11 at 17:44 |
I'm having a similar problem on my bath mixer tap. | |
mattk |
posted on 1st Feb 11 at 16:21 |
a tap pump fed :lol: | |
Siberia |
posted on 31st Jan 11 at 23:30 |
is the tap pump fed? | |
mattk |
posted on 31st Jan 11 at 18:48 |
yeah | |
nathy_87 |
posted on 31st Jan 11 at 16:42 |
Bathroom sink? | |
mattk |
posted on 31st Jan 11 at 15:37 |
ahh right, if the kitchen and bathroom are on the same floors then it could be a problem with the tap, or you could try having a look at the pipework under the sink to have a look if there is an isolation valve under there that hasnt been turned on propperly | |
nathy_87 |
posted on 31st Jan 11 at 14:30 |
It's a first floor flat, we get the hot water tap not a problem in the kitchen, so why should it affect the bathroom? | |
mattk |
posted on 31st Jan 11 at 13:24 |
not a combi then, that will be your problem, you only have the pressure of the height of the water in that tank, it will be better downstairs because the tank is upstairs and therefore higher up in the house, if your bathroom is upstairs then you may only have 1.5 - 2m from the tap to tank | |
nathy_87 |
posted on 31st Jan 11 at 11:35 |
I think. :boggle: | |
mattk |
posted on 31st Jan 11 at 09:34 |
got a combi boiler in? | |
nathy_87 |
posted on 31st Jan 11 at 08:45 |
Right having slight problem with the bathroom sink hot water tap, everytime we tuen it on, it runs really slow takes ages to fill the sink. It's a new bathroom with one of those 'all in one' taps as I call them. Does. Anyone know how i can give it more pressure? If I can I want to avoid getting a plumber in. |