Shower options to replace Aqualisa
Discussion
I rent out a property which has an Aqualisa smart shower fitted. it's an old one (I think 15 years+) - the controls are at the bottom of the shower rail (On/off and boost buttons plus a lever for adjusting temperature). The control board / pump are in the loft. A separate diverter valve is used to direct the water to the bath instead.
The on / off button seems to have broken (very hard to push in) - so it's very difficult to start and very difficult to stop. In addition, the flow looks a bit weak (it was never all that powerful anyway despite being pumped, but looked weak when I saw it).
I've contacted Aqualisa about fixing it and they've given me two options :
About £600 to replace the module with the buttons plus the unit in the loft - 2 year guarantee
About £1k to completely replace everything - same basic design with the controls in the same place, but more modern - 5 year guarantee
I obviously want to avoid anything that effects tiles etc. so even if I got a plumber to replace the shower - I assume they'd be pretty limited to using Aqualisa anyway?
I'm tempted to just bite the bullet and pay Aqualise to replace it - although I'd prefer not to spend £1k, the original has done a pretty decent run - but want to make sure I'm not missing obvious alternatives.
The on / off button seems to have broken (very hard to push in) - so it's very difficult to start and very difficult to stop. In addition, the flow looks a bit weak (it was never all that powerful anyway despite being pumped, but looked weak when I saw it).
I've contacted Aqualisa about fixing it and they've given me two options :
About £600 to replace the module with the buttons plus the unit in the loft - 2 year guarantee
About £1k to completely replace everything - same basic design with the controls in the same place, but more modern - 5 year guarantee
I obviously want to avoid anything that effects tiles etc. so even if I got a plumber to replace the shower - I assume they'd be pretty limited to using Aqualisa anyway?
I'm tempted to just bite the bullet and pay Aqualise to replace it - although I'd prefer not to spend £1k, the original has done a pretty decent run - but want to make sure I'm not missing obvious alternatives.
davek_964 said:
The on / off button seems to have broken (very hard to push in) - so it's very difficult to start and very difficult to stop.... - but want to make sure I'm not missing obvious alternatives.
Can you take the button apart and clean the contacts? (or find another one on eBay?Simpo Two said:
davek_964 said:
The on / off button seems to have broken (very hard to push in) - so it's very difficult to start and very difficult to stop.... - but want to make sure I'm not missing obvious alternatives.
Can you take the button apart and clean the contacts? (or find another one on eBay?Realistically, I don't think it's something I can fix easily - I don't really want to spend hours at the house trying to dismantle a shower, which I might make worse anyway. If I lived there, I would probably try but it's not really practical when I don't.
Plus - even if I could do that, it seems the pump is weak now - and the shower mount no longer wants to stay in place on the pole.
Overall it seems like a new shower is probably the best thing - it's just whether there are alternatives to it costing ~£1k
Geffg said:
If only a rental id go for the cheaper option.
It was tempting, but since it's a rental I also like the idea of 5 year guarantee (new) vs 2 year for repair - so I've gone for new.For reasons I will never understand, the current version of the shower I have connects to Alexa etc. and can be controlled by voice. Why you'd need to do that when you need to be physically present to actually have a shower I'm not sure.
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