How NOT to plumb a power shower... and more...
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How NOT to plumb a power shower... and more...
My girlfriend moved into a house a few years ago, which had previously been owned by an incompetent muppet who thought he was a DIY expert.
There was a power shower above the bath, connected up by yellowing plastic pipes with push-fit elbows. It looked a right state, but we just though, oh well, at least it's there.
Until we tried to use it...
Water would flow at first, but would quickly stop, stutter and get cold. The pump would whirr like crazy as it tried to pump non existant hot water.
Did a little investigating and found that both the hot and cold supplies to the shower ran from the loft, across the ceilings and into the bathroom. The cold was taken from the rising main to the header tank, no problem there.
The hot however, had been taken from the cylinder vent pipe, by a tee 10 feet above the hot water cylinder!
This is the same house where:
- The electric feed to the garage ran through the flower bed in a PVC pipe, with a 13amp plug on the end which plugged into a socket in the understairs cupboard
- They had removed an internal door... Or not... They'd trimmed the frame off, left the wooden door in place and just papered over it
- The bathroom extractor in the ceiling above the shower has no ducting attached, it sucks nice steam straight into the loft!
- Sockets in the master bedroom spurred from the hot water circuit and wired THROUGH furniture...
Photos to follow...
There was a power shower above the bath, connected up by yellowing plastic pipes with push-fit elbows. It looked a right state, but we just though, oh well, at least it's there.
Until we tried to use it...
Water would flow at first, but would quickly stop, stutter and get cold. The pump would whirr like crazy as it tried to pump non existant hot water.
Did a little investigating and found that both the hot and cold supplies to the shower ran from the loft, across the ceilings and into the bathroom. The cold was taken from the rising main to the header tank, no problem there.
The hot however, had been taken from the cylinder vent pipe, by a tee 10 feet above the hot water cylinder!
This is the same house where:
- The electric feed to the garage ran through the flower bed in a PVC pipe, with a 13amp plug on the end which plugged into a socket in the understairs cupboard
- They had removed an internal door... Or not... They'd trimmed the frame off, left the wooden door in place and just papered over it
- The bathroom extractor in the ceiling above the shower has no ducting attached, it sucks nice steam straight into the loft!
- Sockets in the master bedroom spurred from the hot water circuit and wired THROUGH furniture...
Photos to follow...
Last edited by DNS on Fri Oct 08, 2010 11:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.