Pipe run between Cold water tank and hot water cylinder.

Can anyone advise - I have a 50 gallon tan in the loft which has two outlets - one provides the feed to the cold side of the pump for the shower and the other feeds the hot water cylinder. If many showers are had one after the other the hot supply appears to run out - however the cold water tank is still 2/3 full and the cold feed is therefore still happy. I am concluding that the problem is the rate at which the cold water tank can replenish the level in the hot water cylinder as the feed from the cylinder is pumped and the feed in is not (i.e. gravity from the cold water tank). To make matters worse their is one section of pipe between the loft tank and the cylinder which rises about 12" and falls - this, I would imagine is air lock inviting - but I cleared the airlock originally present.

The obvious answer would seam to be to reroute to eliminate the raised pipework and possible airlock but would this still get around the basic fact that the pump will always draw water from the cylinder (41 gallons by the way) faster than gravity will feed it?

Any advice welcome - I realise these are fairly basic questions....

John

Reply to
John Durham
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On Tue, 2 Mar 2004 18:36:50 -0000, in uk.d-i-y "John Durham" strung together this:

It's more than likely the rate at which the boiler can reheat the tank, not at the rate at which the tank can be refilled. Have a look at fast recovery cylinders for starters. ..

SJW A.C.S. Ltd.

Reply to
Lurch

I have a fast recovery cylinder. The problem is that the water drops below the outlet height on the cylinder i think.

Any ideas?

Reply to
John Durham

You're saying that the water flow ceases entirely?

The way that a gravity fed cylinder works, if the flow rate is too high, then the hot water will start drawing air through the vent quite quickly. Perhaps the hot feed on the cold tank isn't near the top? Alternatively, the system is marginal and the reduced head when the tank is 2/3 full is enough to reduce the hot water cylinder replenishment enough to draw air.

Does the shower pump run off a flange on the cylinder, or off the top vent? If the top vent, you should install a flange.

Christian.

Reply to
Christian McArdle

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