Shower issues
Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2008 5:22 pm
I've got a pretty ancient 'Dolphin 1000' electric shower (so only cold feed to shower) which is plumbed via a small satellite header tank to the main water tank. The supply is boosted by a real noisy pump sited next to the small tank in the loft.
The shower seems to be gradually dying - pitiful supply of water and cuts out ocassionally. The pump is also very noisy (does not help that it is connected via copper pipe to tank and can slip slide around as has no rubber feet).
My questions are
1) What is likely to be causing the pitiful performance, the shower or the pump?
2) If I replace the shower should I replace the pump?
3) Should I replace the copper pipe feeding the pump with a flexible one and if so will this diminish the noise?
4) Could I move the pump from the shower and site it next to the bath fed from the loft tank?
5) Could I just abandon the whole pump thing and fit a 9.5kW electric pump instead? Would the water pressure from my loft tank be sufficient for this 1st floor bathroom shower?
6) Would I notice much of a difference between a pumped 10.5kW electric shower and a non-pumped 9.5kW electric shower?
7) Finally where does the switch that operates the pump live? In the pump, or as I suspect is it likely to be the switchy looking thing attached at the junction of the water inlet and the shower........
Biscuitman
The shower seems to be gradually dying - pitiful supply of water and cuts out ocassionally. The pump is also very noisy (does not help that it is connected via copper pipe to tank and can slip slide around as has no rubber feet).
My questions are
1) What is likely to be causing the pitiful performance, the shower or the pump?
2) If I replace the shower should I replace the pump?
3) Should I replace the copper pipe feeding the pump with a flexible one and if so will this diminish the noise?
4) Could I move the pump from the shower and site it next to the bath fed from the loft tank?
5) Could I just abandon the whole pump thing and fit a 9.5kW electric pump instead? Would the water pressure from my loft tank be sufficient for this 1st floor bathroom shower?
6) Would I notice much of a difference between a pumped 10.5kW electric shower and a non-pumped 9.5kW electric shower?
7) Finally where does the switch that operates the pump live? In the pump, or as I suspect is it likely to be the switchy looking thing attached at the junction of the water inlet and the shower........
Biscuitman