News1 min ago
Shower problem, plumber advice required
5 Answers
We have just recently had a new bathroom installed and are having problems with the shower.
The shower runns off a pump installed directly above the thank. It is the same pump (about 1 year old) as was there before and it worked fine.
When the bathroom was installed, the plumber had to fit another pump for the hot water to the basin taps and bath taps. This is installed off the same hot water pipe as the shower pump.
But, now when I switch the shower on it takes over 30 mins for the pump to kick in.
Anyone know what it could be? My theory is that the main pump is pulling water from the input side of the shower pump and that because that is installed above the tank, it takes time for the water to work its way up to the shower pump and trigger the flow switch.
If you start the shower within about 2 mins after its has been working its usually starts straight away
The shower runns off a pump installed directly above the thank. It is the same pump (about 1 year old) as was there before and it worked fine.
When the bathroom was installed, the plumber had to fit another pump for the hot water to the basin taps and bath taps. This is installed off the same hot water pipe as the shower pump.
But, now when I switch the shower on it takes over 30 mins for the pump to kick in.
Anyone know what it could be? My theory is that the main pump is pulling water from the input side of the shower pump and that because that is installed above the tank, it takes time for the water to work its way up to the shower pump and trigger the flow switch.
If you start the shower within about 2 mins after its has been working its usually starts straight away
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Compostella. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hi compo to my mind you can't have 2 pumps needing the same water which pump has first call of hot water draw off ? you did not say, are the sink and bath hot and cold on pump?.
Also if the new pump to sink & bath is not on but the shower is on demand then that should be as it was before any modifications I would get the plumber back HTH Tez
Also if the new pump to sink & bath is not on but the shower is on demand then that should be as it was before any modifications I would get the plumber back HTH Tez
Its just the hot that is on pump with the basin/bath
On the shower it is both.
Both pumps have equal call as they are off the same feed.
The plumber has been back and he says that the only fault that there could be is the shower pump. He's not saying that its broken but that is the only thing left that it could be. Before I replace the pump I wanted to check it out on here.
On the shower it is both.
Both pumps have equal call as they are off the same feed.
The plumber has been back and he says that the only fault that there could be is the shower pump. He's not saying that its broken but that is the only thing left that it could be. Before I replace the pump I wanted to check it out on here.
two points.
1) was the shower changed? if the original one sealed when it was switched off no air could enter via the shower head and allow all the water to run back through the system and empty it. (put a drinking straw in a bowl of water, place your finger on one end and lift that end up out of the water, it stays full until you let air in and the water drops. ) note: it could be the new bathroom fittings that are letting the water run back.
2) if the pump is above the tank (immersion i assume ) is it below the static tank that is in the loft? the pump needs to be in a position that keeps it primed with water so it pumps water not air. it isn't very good at pumping air to draw water up.
1) was the shower changed? if the original one sealed when it was switched off no air could enter via the shower head and allow all the water to run back through the system and empty it. (put a drinking straw in a bowl of water, place your finger on one end and lift that end up out of the water, it stays full until you let air in and the water drops. ) note: it could be the new bathroom fittings that are letting the water run back.
2) if the pump is above the tank (immersion i assume ) is it below the static tank that is in the loft? the pump needs to be in a position that keeps it primed with water so it pumps water not air. it isn't very good at pumping air to draw water up.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.