Search the forum,

Discuss Your views please. in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Status
Not open for further replies.
D

Dannyparty92

Hello everyone. Done my first cylinder this week and would just like to ask you all for your opinions on it I don't mind good or bad I will take it as constructive criticism :).
 

Attachments

  • image.jpg
    image.jpg
    80.9 KB · Views: 216
why put a valve on the hw feed out? just isolate the cold in surely.

pull a few more bends and save on copper and fittings.

might want to consider the next one in replacing the 2 way valves, vert one bit tight?

D2 off tundish, why not drop further and save an elbow and it will drain quicker as well

is that a munsen ring and mount pushing back onto the cyl on your balanced cw drop, not to good

tidy for first effort, could do it cheaper though, copper costs remember
 
Last edited by a moderator:
That's a pre plumbed one the pump and valves including bypass is already plumbed in just have to connect ( cheating a little I know ) hence the Munsen clip I would never drilled into a cylinder :s. yeah I should have used more pulled bends but I think elbows look neater. and just incase needed to isolate the hot without disrupting the cold supply. but thanks for your advice :)
 
Last edited by a moderator:
looks good to me.

i would try and use bends on the discharge to help avoid the tundish overflowing, but they always seem to no matter what.
i would not fit the lever valve on the hot unless really needed, the one on the cold will isolate the hot and you will have local isolators at your fixtures.
dont forget it all needs lagging

maybe too many clips?? but its new build so they will all fall off anyway LOL.

well done!! :)
 
Last edited:
Bends look far more professional and are better for the flow of whatever they contain. Expecially on discharge pipework and gas runs. When you next pull out old copper keep it and practice bending on it and then scrap it. Overall good first bash!
 
tidy work.
 
looks vgood but can you still get too the two way valve at the side or is it blocked by the horizontal two way just asking?? looks tight probbs just me
deffo more bends thay look goood better flow and just less chances of a joint failing???
 
looks good to me.

i would try and use bends on the discharge to help avoid the tundish overflowing, but they always seem to no matter what.
i would not fit the lever valve on the hot unless really needed, the one on the cold will isolate the hot and you will have local isolators at your fixtures.
dont forget it all needs lagging

maybe too many clips?? but its new build so they will all fall off anyway LOL.

well done!! :)

I always chuck a lever valve on the hot so that I can isolate it and leave the balanced cold working. Customers like to have separate isolators for hot and cold,
 
Dont forget insulation I presume now its finished you have notified labc
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Thank you all for your very positive comments :) yeah clips are on curly plasterboard fixings so rubbish and the vessels are toggled fixed aswell as curly fixings.
 
Looks good to me, clips must have been on special :)

We were told on our course we still had to notify labc 48 hours prior of our intention to install.
 
We were told we had to notify after completion. It also includes vented cylinders as well.
 
Looks ok to me.
whats the price difference between pre-plumbed and not ?
Once you've got all your stuff out I can't see it would take much longer to do it all yourself.
 
How do you know you have never done so if you cannot remember ? What sort of logic is that ??

Because all I have ever done on g3 work is fit them in new houses/convertions, and they are covered by building regs based on plans, no need to notify and down my way if you replace an unvented with an unvented they dont want notifying of the change I havent ever had to do a notification, simples really
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Unless you are a member of a competent persons scheme all unvented's need notifying.
In reality very few are.
 
Looks ok to me.
whats the price difference between pre-plumbed and not ?
Once you've got all your stuff out I can't see it would take much longer to do it all yourself.

I personally will never get a preplumb cylinder ..... They are a lot more expensive
 
prefer fittiing cheaper cyls and working the valve position to give good access etc and keeping everything tight and tidy.
 
Its ok for your first one but quite a bit of your pipework needs straightening up. Whoever did the first fix should of brought the pipes up in better positions, looks much tidier and i wouldn't personally use toggle bolts to support the vessels but you've done a good job for your first one.
 
We could find faults with every install if we looked, even our own.
It is better than most.
 
Thanks everyone for your positive comments. So what could I use instead of toggle fixings for the Expansion vessels?
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Reply to Your views please. in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

    • Optimistic
Hello All, I know that this is a question for a Forum Moderator and probably should be posted in a section about the Forum itself but I was hoping to get some replies from Members about whether this is happening to anyone else: When I logged into the Forum this afternoon and went to look down...
Replies
1
Views
450
  • Locked
Hi, A little about the business: I currently own a plumbing business (website and marketing) - looking to target residential and commercial market (i.e. tendering to main contractors flats etc). My background is a commercial manager, I use to do plumbing years back so technically I would not...
Replies
0
Views
945
Hey all, Looking for some advice. My mother recently had her boiler changed but in the process the water had to be turned on and off as you would expect and the engineer broke of the handle. Luckily it seems you can close the valve with some pliers on the but I don't believe this is best for...
Replies
5
Views
220
Hello all, I have just joined, after being pushed into some DIY plumbing. Here is my first plumbing DIY effort. I had a cistern lever that didn't flush properly, and had become corroded and unsightly. I figured I'd get a plumber in to do it (after a couple of years apologising to guests for...
Replies
2
Views
411
Hello guys, a couple of months back I installed a new shower and sink into a part of the house that hadn't previously been plumbed in. This forced me to run some pipes outside the walls, so I put in stopcocks at the point where the new pipework joins the old Just In Case. I used copper pipe and...
Replies
1
Views
376
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