Discuss Could 4 bar static pressure prevent shower off combi getting hot enough? in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

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i think i need to go back to school with regards to the relationship between pressure and flow, always found it confusing.
 
i just tell myself pressure is how much it wants to get out of the pipe, flow is how fast it does when it gets it's chance. but i would have thought fitting a prv would automoatically reduce flow too....?
 
Very interesting, thanks. Not sure it covered why fitting a PRV wouldn't reduce flow too though? It's got to hasn't it? If all other things are kept constant?
 
I like the iso+flow restrictor.

That'd presumably be a good retro fit for when people have turned down an individual iso (like on a tap to a small cloakroom basin) but it then becomes noisy
 
I like the iso+flow restrictor.

That'd presumably be a good retro fit for when people have turned down an individual iso (like on a tap to a small cloakroom basin) but it then becomes noisy

just need to find the flow rate of the boiler now so you can match them up, then all you need to do is install them onto the shower pipes
 
Think it's going to come down to what boiler is producing, if it's a old style combi poss. 24Kw flow rate is going to be low around 8/9 lts pr min + the factor the incoming cold water temp is quite low this time of year, so boiler struggles to reach + maintain water temp.
 
Water Flow Control Products by Aquaflow Regulators Ltd

It is most likely that you need to reduce the flow on the cold side as much as controlling the flow through the boiler to end up with a stable showering temperature. It is all about the flow rates not the static pressure, so try using these rather than a PRV.

The shower is mixing cold & hot, if the cold is providing more, you are having to open the hot side up so much that the boiler is not capable of delivering hot water at a high enough temperature for the thermostatic control to work and deliver a suitable shower temperature.

Lots of shower manufacturers use to supply the brown or green restrictors to be put into the cold inlet side to sort this out when you were initialling them.




Sorry slow typist so most of my post already covered. If they are not so worried about other fittings just try a yellow or brown on the cold side as it should bring the shower back in range.
 
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Lots of shower manufacturers use to supply the brown or green restrictors to be put into the cold inlet side to sort this out when you were initialling them.

Yeah actually I think/hope that's still not uncommon, I've fitted a few within the last couple of years that did.
 
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