Ask a plumber/heating ‘engineer’ anything

Ask a plumber/heating ‘engineer’ anything

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Discussion

oakdale

1,807 posts

203 months

Sunday 25th September 2022
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g7jtk said:
Why is it that people think Plumbers get payed a lot?
I don't, I think that would be considered to be assault.

Phunk

1,977 posts

172 months

Sunday 25th September 2022
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Boiler servicing - essential to do it annually?

CharlesdeGaulle

26,327 posts

181 months

Sunday 25th September 2022
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shambolic said:
Google it ffs ...
Why respond like that to a poster asking a question on an ask me anything thread?

LookAtMyCat

464 posts

109 months

Sunday 25th September 2022
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g7jtk said:
Why is it that people think Plumbers get payed a lot?
Cards in 30-40k starting. Van, phone, tools etc provided.

Self employed 50-80k pretty easy. 100k+ if you work the hours and put the effort in. Then more if you employ people etc.


StrangeBowman

12 posts

25 months

Sunday 25th September 2022
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db10 said:
ive removed 2 radiators from our combi boiler system and have no heat to any of the radiators and when i try and bleed the upstairs rads i get no air and no water......... boiler pressure is 2.5 bar. do you reckon its an airlock and if so whats the best way of removing it given bleeding the rads is having no effect?

thanks
Check the boiler isolation valves are open. They may have been turned off when the system drained.

StrangeBowman

12 posts

25 months

Sunday 25th September 2022
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Aprisa said:
We have a non vented hot water system and gas fired central heating.
Recently despite both water and heating being set to Off in Nest the boiler fires up and the radiators get hot for a short period?
The times seem to be random.
Why would it be doing that?
Check that the setback/eco setting isn't too high on the nest. Try setting it to 10 degrees and see if that sorts it.

MrJuice

3,375 posts

157 months

Sunday 25th September 2022
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I'm thinking of getting hive or nest x2. One for upstairs, one for downstairs

Downstairs will be a reception room, an open plan kitchen, living, dining room, one en suite guest room and a WC.
Upstairs are three double bedrooms one of which is en suite and a family bathroom.

Is one thermostat upstairs and one downstairs okay?

House will mostly be empty during the day Monday to Friday.

Where best to place the thermostats?

MrJuice

3,375 posts

157 months

Sunday 25th September 2022
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What are your thoughts on evohome? Worth the money?

What heating system do you have in your home?

Evoluzione

10,345 posts

244 months

Sunday 25th September 2022
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Typical plumber then, answers one question and does a runner.....

thebraketester

14,257 posts

139 months

Monday 26th September 2022
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Why is the pump running constantly on my woscester Bosch combi even when no heating or hw was been called for for ages.

Biggus thingus

1,358 posts

45 months

Monday 26th September 2022
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thebraketester said:
Why is the pump running constantly on my woscester Bosch combi even when no heating or hw was been called for for ages.
I think it does that until the water temp in the pipework drops below a certain level which can take a certain amount of time

I'm sure the plumber will be along in a week or 2, several unanswered calls and 2 agreed times/dates he would turn up but failed, to correct me or explain why it happens



g7jtk

1,761 posts

155 months

Monday 26th September 2022
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LookAtMyCat said:
Cards in 30-40k starting. Van, phone, tools etc provided.

Self employed 50-80k pretty easy. 100k+ if you work the hours and put the effort in. Then more if you employ people etc.
Need to have a word with my boss

Monkeylegend

26,478 posts

232 months

Monday 26th September 2022
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Evoluzione said:
Typical plumber then, answers one question and does a runner.....
Probably on a call out, although he didn't say he would answer any questions.

Sheepshanks

32,828 posts

120 months

Monday 26th September 2022
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thebraketester said:
Why is the pump running constantly on my woscester Bosch combi even when no heating or hw was been called for for ages.
Do you mean it runs for many hours with no demand - if so, what kind of controller does it have?

One of our daughters has the Worcester Wave controller and that has a mode where the pump runs all the time, IIRC with an option to shut it off overnight. I think other types of weather compensation controls do the same thing.

thebraketester

14,257 posts

139 months

Monday 26th September 2022
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Sheepshanks said:
thebraketester said:
Why is the pump running constantly on my woscester Bosch combi even when no heating or hw was been called for for ages.
Do you mean it runs for many hours with no demand - if so, what kind of controller does it have?

One of our daughters has the Worcester Wave controller and that has a mode where the pump runs all the time, IIRC with an option to shut it off overnight. I think other types of weather compensation controls do the same thing.
Nest. Oddly enough it's not doing it today!

Aprisa

1,808 posts

259 months

Monday 26th September 2022
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StrangeBowman said:
Check that the setback/eco setting isn't too high on the nest. Try setting it to 10 degrees and see if that sorts it.
Thanks, I have just set it to the default 9c it was on 14 so will see if that fixs it.

Wagonwheel555

810 posts

57 months

Monday 26th September 2022
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We live in a 60's house and the hot water pressure seems very poor, at least compared to the new build we moved from.

We have an electric shower which I am told is because the hot water pressure is not enough to have a mixer.

If I run the hot water downstairs in the kitchen, it takes 60-90 seconds to actually get any hot water through and even then its not anything resembling decent pressure, similar case for the bathroom tap.

Is there anything we can do without spending a fortune?

Edit - Its open vented. Boiler is about 6 months old so fairly new. Obviously pipework is old, 15mm diameter.

Ledaig

1,697 posts

263 months

Monday 26th September 2022
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What's the rough percentage of open flue systems still in use?

Only asking as we had a plumber come round to service ours last week, who took one look, laughed and said "I don't service them" (closely followed by the 'buy a new boiler' sales pitch).

Yes it's old, but simple in operation and works so why bother replacing!

RicksAlfas

13,411 posts

245 months

Monday 26th September 2022
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Ledaig said:
What's the rough percentage of open flue systems still in use?

Only asking as we had a plumber come round to service ours last week, who took one look, laughed and said "I don't service them" (closely followed by the 'buy a new boiler' sales pitch).

Yes it's old, but simple in operation and works so why bother replacing!
I believe the logic is you spend thousands replacing it with a snazzy new boiler, save 5% on your gas usage but then buy another one in ten years because they don't last as they are "built to close tolerances to make them very efficient".

Ledaig

1,697 posts

263 months

Monday 26th September 2022
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RicksAlfas said:
I believe the logic is you spend thousands replacing it with a snazzy new boiler, save 5% on your gas usage but then buy another one in ten years because they don't last as they are "built to close tolerances to make them very efficient".
Which is exactly why I don't want to replace the existing one, making the switch would not generate savings in efficiency to cover the cost.