my father in law has asked me to assist in installing a pump one of their 3 showers. its in an ensuite and they have recently completed a big renovation (would've made sense to do it then but it's one of those afterthoughts...)
ergo, reluctant to pull up carpets and floorboards and wants to put the pump in the bedroom close to the shower, creating as little disruption and lifting as fewer carpets and boards as possible.
i've explained that the pump needs a dedicated supply from both CWSC and hot cylinder but this would mean quite extensive work. he is prepared just to stick the pump on the shower pipes.
i have explained that the kitchen hot water (which tees off the same pipe and drops down through the ceiling, closer to the cylinder than the pump would be) could starve the pump of water if the kitchen tap, washing machine or dishwasher were running whilst somebody were in the shower. and of course that any warranty or guarantee that came with the pump would be invalid from the moment that it was installed.
simple question, is there any other reason that i can offer as to why a pump should NOT be fitted in the way he intends? i'm doing my best to talk him out of it and to do it properly or not at all! and if he goes ahead and fits it that way what is the worst that may happen, excluding damage to the pump (which, bizarrely, he is prepared to risk)
alternatively are there any pumps out there (negative head pump perhaps?) that could be fitted retrospectively in the way he intends? or do they all require independent feeds on both sides? i've tried researching on the net (haven't approached any merchants as its BH weekend) and the info does not stretch this far.
many thanks!
chris