Latest Moan From You and Me 2024

Discussion in 'Off-Topic Discussion' started by JWK, Jan 1, 2024.

  1. pete

    pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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    Actually it wasn't, it was fairly normal.:)
    I just haven't upgraded it or done much maintenance in recent years.
     
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    • Bluejayway

      Bluejayway Plantaholic

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    • pete

      pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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      What make is what?
       
    • Bluejayway

      Bluejayway Plantaholic

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    • pete

      pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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      Its a Baxi, it was put in 23 yrs ago to replace the one that was put in 40 yrs ago, the original was only replaced because I wanted the boiler moved to upstairs so the flue was out of the way of the conservatory I wanted to build.
       
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      • Bluejayway

        Bluejayway Plantaholic

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        :dbgrtmb: Thanks @pete , good to know some things still last!
         
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        • ViewAhead

          ViewAhead Head Gardener

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          My old one was a Baxi too. Put in in early 1999 ... and probably would have lasted a bit longer, but I wanted to avoid a terminal breakdown in mid-winter, so opted for a replacement in the summer. All my immediate neighbours have changed their original Baxis in the last two yrs. I held out the longest. :biggrin:
           
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          • cactus_girl

            cactus_girl Super Gardener

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            Our 41 year old boiler is a Stelrad Mexico floor standing boiler. It's very quiet and great for drying things on top too. Our cat used to love lying on top, getting singed.
             
          • simone_in_wiltshire

            simone_in_wiltshire Keen Gardener

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            Just for the records: I had to correct myself after reading the article again. Starmer and Reaves received together £150k.
             
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            • shiney

              shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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              When our boiler, very old, needed replacing a few years ago I opted to replace with a similar but more modern version. It's a 'regular' boiler now generally known as a condensing boiler and works extremely well. It provides hot water and heating at the same time but requires a hot water cylinder and a cold water tank.

              This works better than a combi boiler for our conditions as the water pressure here can be fairly low. Being in a bungalow the cold water tank and hot water cylinder are in the loft so the system needs a pump as well. The cylinder has built in insulation and an immersion heater in case we don't want the boiler on (can't think of any time we don't want it on) or if there is a problem with the pump (happened only once and a hard whack with a spanner sorted it and the engineer charged £20 cash for the two minute job :heehee: as no call out fee because he was passing our place for another job).

              Cost of a regular/condensing boiler tends to be quite a lot cheaper and, at the time of purchase, said to last longer than a combi (think it may still be the case). We have it serviced annually at a cost of £70.
               
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              • fairygirl

                fairygirl Total Gardener

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                That definitely doesn't sound right with your water @ViewAhead . My boiler is about 10 years old, and the heating doesn't go off when hot water is run. My shower runs from the central heating as opposed to the upstairs one, which is leccy, and it certainly doesn't go off when I shower.
                I'll be looking out for that now though, once the heating's in use more often! Maybe I've just never noticed it.
                 
              • ViewAhead

                ViewAhead Head Gardener

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                That's pretty much my set up, @shiney ... except the bungalow bit. :)

                @fairygirl, the heating doesn't go off. I can have hot water from the storage cylinder through the taps/shower, etc, and hot radiators simultaneously (the luxury :biggrin:). What I don't seem able to do is to get the boiler to heat cold water in the cylinder (eg when I've just run a bath and the cylinder has refilled from the cold water tank in the loft) whilst the timer for the radiator heating indicates it is on (even if the boiler is resting as the room thermostats say the house is warm enough). :scratch:

                No matter. If it was January and I lived within the Arctic Circle, I would be on an urgent mission to sort it. But Sept on the south coast is pretty benign even by the wimpy standards of us soft southerners! :biggrin:

                That said, this Sept has been dreary beyond belief and I am not happy. :th scifD36: Where are my misty mornings and blue-skied, warm days, eh? Wind, rain, and 100% grey cloud blanketing are not an acceptable substitute! :nonofinger:
                 
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                • pete

                  pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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                  What I will add is I do know when mine was working normally a few years ago the water always seemed to get preference, so in a case of starting the whole system from cold the main heat always went to the hot water cylinder first.
                  But I think that was just down to the fact that that was the shortest route for the water to take so it cycles faster around that part of the system.
                  Of course I rarely start from a dead cold system so it's unnoticeable during normal usage.
                   
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                  • shiney

                    shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                    You're just in the wrong part of the wimpish south :whistle:. We had two days of rain from mid July until just over a week ago.

                    I don't know whether your boiler has the same sort of controls as ours. Our boiler control (electronic timer on the wall below the boiler) has two settings. One for heating and one for hot water. We have both set for 'ON' all the time. Even if we use the water for a bath and shower at the same time we don't seem to run out of water as the boiler fires up to heat the cylinder almost immediately after the hot tap is turned on. So by the time we have finished our ablutions the hot water has been replaced. :noidea:
                     
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                    • pete

                      pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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                      There will presumably be a thermostat on the tank and also one on the boiler, the boiler will only fire up when the the water going through the boiler drops,not when the tank temperature drops, as such, so there will be some kind of lag if you have an indirect system.
                       
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