Search the forum,

Discuss Different flow rates on ground floor in the USA area at PlumbersForums.net

Messages
27
Hi,

I've bought a four bed house, it's about 20 years old and has an adjacent garage. It has a downstairs toilet, utility room and kitchen and upstairs there's a main bathroom and an ensuite shower room. It has a vented system with boiler in garage heating cylinder on landing and a 40 gallon cold water tank in the loft. I believe only one cold tap (usually kitchen) has to be mains-fed but I've been told that all downstairs taps are probably off the mains. The boiler is pretty new and we don't want the expense of changing it all over at the moment so I was considering getting a pump for the poor water pressure we get upstairs. Just got a few questions about different issues we've encountered.

1. The water pressure measured on an outside tap using a gauge is between 2 and 2.5 bar but the flow rates in the kitchen cold (5 LPM), utility cold (12 LPM), and outside tap (10 LPM) are massively different to the downstairs toilet cold (30 LPM) and I'm just baffled as to why that would be?

2. Should I get a twin impeller pump for the entire house? I want to increase hot water pressure around the entire house but would it cause problems with mixer showers if I just did the hot water pressure?

3. My 40 gallon loft tank doesn't appear to be adequate for the pumps I'm researching. Should I add another tank to increase stored volume or ditch and go for a bigger tank? I doubt we'll ever run out of water, we don't tend to ever shower at the same time (two adults and a baby occupy house) but I'd rather be safe than sorry.

4. A previous plumber told me the incoming mains is 15mm and that switching it to 22mm will give me better flow rates - is that right? I mentioned this to another plumber who was giving me a quote and he didn't think it was correct. I'm a novice but I love reading up on all this and I thought a house with a vented system is likely to have 22mm running throughout house and 15mm to the taps/showers?

Any help would be great, thanks!
 

Reply to Different flow rates on ground floor in the USA area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

Hello plumbers in my internet. So the Mrs want a spray mixer tap in the kitchen as we had two separate taps. I changed the tap for a temporary two hole mixer but the cold water pressure is high mains fed and the hot is low pressure immersion tank fed. I've been trying to find info on what I...
Replies
2
Views
125
Hi, Can anyone advise as to why the cold water to my bathroom keeps airlocking? This originally happened about 12 months ago and has happened 3-4 times since. It’s an upstairs bathroom, fed from a tank in the attic. The tank is about 8 Meters away and feeds a bath, sink and toilet. The tank...
Replies
9
Views
331
Hi all I'm hoping someone can shine a light on this for me Since our stop tap on the pavement has now been filled with sand for whatever reason, we are relying on our property fitted stopcock (this is outside on our garage wall) Unfortunately turning this to the closed position only reduces...
Replies
3
Views
245
Hello all, I’m replacing a concrete paving slab patio in the back yard. The original patio used 50mm deep concrete slabs on hardcore & sand. I’m planning to pour a 100mm deep concrete patio on 100mm hardcore. In order to achieve the same final height to line up with the rest of the patio, I...
Replies
6
Views
233
Creating content since 2001. Untold Media.

Newest Plumbing Threads

Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock