Absolutely Brilliant Martin! Congratulations. Chris
Absolutely Brilliant Martin! Congratulations. Chris
We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the drugs began to take hold. I remember "The Medway Handyman" saying something like:
Seth Effriken besteds?
Nah. Thet wud beee blicken......
When I was studying ecology, four ways in which male seals might deal with each other came up.
The coward - always runs away. Loses. The bully. Makes a show of it, but doesn't fight back.
The next two, whose proper titles I forget:
The fighter: One that always fights (and often gets injured) The responder: One that doesn't start fights, but finishes them.
The last one beats cowards and bullys, comes out even with fighters, and they don't normally hurt each other.
It's funny how often these four simple groups work...
Andy
My house insurance includes legal cover.
Let's not go to court over that :P
Andy
Worcester/Bosch
Has it's own loop built it.
In message , EricP writes
you just need to take the boiler off the wall to access it
I fit a lot of room stats and programmers on WB combi boilers. Where is the internal loop?
I read it as just supplying a £6 filling loop hose and screwing it onto the already prepared pipework.
I do believe that you are supposed to remove the hose after filling and only connect it when you need to top up. I am sure I read that on this NG. Some of the plumbers I do the room stats for disconnect the hose after filling up. They then just leave it hanging on the nearest pipe!
Adam
Surprisingly it is inside the boiler. For the WB there is a plastic key to be inserted and turned before using another valve to fill/top-up.
Sorry. I missed that bit. So they were simply dropping off a hose for use with the existing fittings. A hose whose, purpose and use should have be shown to the customer and left with the customer.
That would be the absolutely correct. I tend to leave them connected unless I think there is any possibility of an inspector coming. The snag if they are left connected is that should the valve let-by the system will be over filled. That is not a common fault.
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