Essex Flanges and getting enough head.
Essex Flanges and getting enough head.
Author
Discussion

garycat

Original Poster:

5,043 posts

230 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
quotequote all
Sorry if this thread disappoints given the Subject line wink

I want to fit a small shower pump (< 1.5 bar) to an existing gravity fed shower. I'm in a bungalow so only have about 1 metre of head. The cold water tank and expansion tank are in the loft and the HWC is in the airing cupboard.

Does this mean I need an Essex/Surrey flange on the hotwater tank and additional pipework from the HWC to the shower pump? The existing gravity fed shower is tee'ed off the bath feeds.

anonymous-user

74 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
quotequote all
I was certainly expecting something else. Sorry.

Simpo Two

90,507 posts

285 months

Wednesday 27th May 2009
quotequote all
garycat said:
Sorry if this thread disappoints given the Subject line wink

I want to fit a small shower pump (< 1.5 bar) to an existing gravity fed shower. I'm in a bungalow so only have about 1 metre of head. The cold water tank and expansion tank are in the loft and the HWC is in the airing cupboard.

Does this mean I need an Essex/Surrey flange on the hotwater tank and additional pipework from the HWC to the shower pump? The existing gravity fed shower is tee'ed off the bath feeds.
That sounds exactly like my setup and what I did. I was recommended to use a Salamander flange by the people that sold me the shower unit (Aqualisa Axis).

www.salamanderpumps.co.uk/Products/Sflange.htm