Sub-optimal shower pressure, loft tank already raised
Posted: Sun Apr 24, 2011 9:26 pm
Hi folks,
We have an upstairs shower over the bath, fed from a standard hose up from the bath taps. The hot water cylinder is in the adjacent bedroom. Meanwhile up in the loft the base of the storage tank is already roughly 1m above the loft "floor".
We have good hot and cold pressure at the bath level. But the shower, while not a dribbler, is far from invigorating, and we would like to improve this.
Having read up on a few possible solutions (me=confused), I guess my first question would be: is it possible that the hose from the taps up to the shower head could be the main problem? For example, (I assume they have a plastic inner lining) could the inner pipe be twisted such that the water is not getting back up to the head with sufficient vim and vigour?
Following on from that, could it be that the water, having travelled to the taps at bath level, where pressure is optimal, then just runs out of puff going back up hill purely due to the laws of fluid dynamics (or is the journey from shower head level, to bath taps, and back to shower head, simply irrelevant)?
I'm still hazy on the journey the hot water takes. If the tank is adjacent to the bath, I don't follow how the h/w pressure is so good at the bath - is the h/w pressure fed from the loft tank?
Sorry for the FAQ spree, and thanks for any advice,
Pete
We have an upstairs shower over the bath, fed from a standard hose up from the bath taps. The hot water cylinder is in the adjacent bedroom. Meanwhile up in the loft the base of the storage tank is already roughly 1m above the loft "floor".
We have good hot and cold pressure at the bath level. But the shower, while not a dribbler, is far from invigorating, and we would like to improve this.
Having read up on a few possible solutions (me=confused), I guess my first question would be: is it possible that the hose from the taps up to the shower head could be the main problem? For example, (I assume they have a plastic inner lining) could the inner pipe be twisted such that the water is not getting back up to the head with sufficient vim and vigour?
Following on from that, could it be that the water, having travelled to the taps at bath level, where pressure is optimal, then just runs out of puff going back up hill purely due to the laws of fluid dynamics (or is the journey from shower head level, to bath taps, and back to shower head, simply irrelevant)?
I'm still hazy on the journey the hot water takes. If the tank is adjacent to the bath, I don't follow how the h/w pressure is so good at the bath - is the h/w pressure fed from the loft tank?
Sorry for the FAQ spree, and thanks for any advice,
Pete