ChatterBank0 min ago
How Does A Condensing Boiler Heat Water ?
9 Answers
Hi,
A condensing boiler was fitted nearly 3 years ago but tenants are saying they have to wait for hot water as the immersion heater is getting hot & has to be "rested" after one of them has a shower. They've been using the immersion to heat water (the most expensive way ?).
My understanding is the immersion heater should be turned OFF & the boiler should be used, either by timer or on all the time, that will heat the water in the tank in the loft. I've asked them several times to try this, & they've had several plumber friends round, but no one seems to have taken any notice of what I've suggested.
Before I insist (or go round to do it myself !), am I right ?
Thanks
A condensing boiler was fitted nearly 3 years ago but tenants are saying they have to wait for hot water as the immersion heater is getting hot & has to be "rested" after one of them has a shower. They've been using the immersion to heat water (the most expensive way ?).
My understanding is the immersion heater should be turned OFF & the boiler should be used, either by timer or on all the time, that will heat the water in the tank in the loft. I've asked them several times to try this, & they've had several plumber friends round, but no one seems to have taken any notice of what I've suggested.
Before I insist (or go round to do it myself !), am I right ?
Thanks
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.No expert, but as I understand it, the same way as any gas boiler does. But they recover waste heat from the steam that is normally vented.
I'd have thought that an immersion was fitted purely for emergency use. Your hot tank is in the loft ? I just have a cold tank there which supplies the pressure to refill any used hot water from the tank on the top floor.
I'd have thought that an immersion was fitted purely for emergency use. Your hot tank is in the loft ? I just have a cold tank there which supplies the pressure to refill any used hot water from the tank on the top floor.
Thanks Old_Geezer, that's exactly what I'm thinking. When I lived there, with the original boiler, the only time I ever used the immersion was when there was a problem with the boiler, ie. in an emergency, & that only happened once as I recall.
The cold water tank's in the loft, I don't really know how it works from there. The immersion (hot water tank ?) is in a bedroom. The water pressure in the shower's pretty poor, hence the shower pump I mentioned in a question a while back, when they thought that was causing the problem. That, apparently, is fine.
The cold water tank's in the loft, I don't really know how it works from there. The immersion (hot water tank ?) is in a bedroom. The water pressure in the shower's pretty poor, hence the shower pump I mentioned in a question a while back, when they thought that was causing the problem. That, apparently, is fine.
British Gas were round couple of weeks ago, doing the service. No issues.
I don't want to arrange an [expensive] engineer for them to possibly (probably ??!) say "use the boiler to heat your water !". I'll *tell* the tenants to try the boiler *again* 1st, failing that will have to go there myself *sigh*
I don't want to arrange an [expensive] engineer for them to possibly (probably ??!) say "use the boiler to heat your water !". I'll *tell* the tenants to try the boiler *again* 1st, failing that will have to go there myself *sigh*
What you're saying is absolutely right CW1. There is no need at all for an immersion heater, so long as the boiler is working. The heating timer needs to be set for the boiler to come on automatically and heat the water - it can take a while, so it should be set to come on say an hour before the water is needed. Combination boilers produce instant hot water, condensing boilers heat up a cylinder full; if your tenants are used to a combination boiler they might be expecting the instant water so you will have to educate them or even set up the timer for them.
I don't think they can have the timer set to hot water. They've been there nearly 3yrs, don't know if they had a combi before, but (to me anyway), if the water's not hot on demand, I'd check the programmer, not go straight to the immersion.
I've e-mailed them instructions on how to use the programmer & asked them to let me know what happens. If they suss it without me going there, they'll be absolutely kicking themselves re the wasted electricity !
Thanks everyone :)
I've e-mailed them instructions on how to use the programmer & asked them to let me know what happens. If they suss it without me going there, they'll be absolutely kicking themselves re the wasted electricity !
Thanks everyone :)
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