by Perry525 »
Fri Mar 07, 2008 6:38 pm
The Americans have a saying. "If it ain't broke don't fix it."
If you have a system that works OK.
Why consider changing it?
Why should a combi boiler be the best choice for you?
You have the best system now!
Just think about it, you have an emergency store of water in the loft.
If the water is cut off for some reason, say a broken pipe up the road, you can still wash, flush the toilet, boil a kettle do all the things you do now, without thought or inconvenience.
Fit a Combi, no back up water store, can't flush the loo etc; problem you take a shower, someone turns on a tap elsewhere, you are standing there no water, cold, covered in soap, waiting for the water to come back.
Or worse! Some years ago I had just started a shower, when mud came through the shower head, covering my legs and feet. A broken main up the hill. Ended up wiping the mud off with kitchen paper towels.
Took three days before we turned off the garden tap, running all that mud out of the pipes from about a mile up the hill.
Size of pipes, if the 8mm pipe delivers the correct amount of heat to the radiator, then the man who designed your system got it right.
Why should someone come along and say different, when you know its right.
As an aside, if you want more heat from a radiator and its on full at the lock shield valve, then turning up the pump a click will push more heat through.
Final point. Combi boilers are sold on the basis that they are more energy efficient, that is sometimes true to a very small degree. There claim is based on the saving in energy made when the boiler first starts up by claiming back the heat from the exhaust gas. This situation only holds good until the home reaches its running temperature, once the returning water is no longer cold or cool - the effect is lost.
Think of the cost of your proposal, think of the minuscule amount of money you will save each year by changing your system and the time it will take to to recover your money, take into account the interest lost on your money in an ISA.
Its just not worth it.