Search the forum,

Discuss 38kw combi boiler supplying a shower. 22mm or 15mm pipework? in the USA area at PlumbersForums.net

Messages
41
38kw combi boiler supplying a shower. 22mm or 15mm pipework?

I am refurbishing a 1st floor bathroom and installing a shower to replace a bath and have a 22mm/15mm pipe quandary. There is currently a newish Worcester Greenstar 38CDi Classic combination boiler and my question is should I redo historic mixed diameter pipework. The boiler has 15mm mains-in and DHW out connections. At some point in the past there was a cold water tank in the attic and presumably a hot water tank somewhere. There is a half meter of 15mm pipe coming from the DHW boiler output which becomes 22mm supplying the bathroom bath and sink 3m away. The 15mm mains water pipework comes up from the ground floor into the boiler cupboard and also is connected to an historic 22mm pipe to supply the bathroom. This looks an easy route that the previous installer took.
I was considering replacing all the 22mm pipework with 15mm as that seems to be the general internet consensus from what I can gather but I want to make sure I am not going to throttle the supply to my shower as the aim is to have a GREAT shower. Any advice gratefully received.
 
I was considering replacing all the 22mm pipework with 15mm as that seems to be the general internet consensus from what I can gather but I want to make sure I am not going to throttle the supply to my shower as the aim is to have a GREAT shower. Any advice gratefully received.
Not many people would describe a combi-supplied shower as 'GREAT'. They're okay, particularly if you use a well-designed spray but 'economical' is the first adjective that comes to my mind.

Not much point in using 22mm from a combi, it just means you waste more water and time waiting for the hot water to arrive. The boiler power is the limiting factor.
 
15mm, and the 22mm should have been removed.
Thanks. Apart from the benefit of quicker to arrive hot water through a 15mm pipe run (although at 3m it is a short run) are there any downsides to leaving the 22mm there that you can think of?
[automerge]1599033715[/automerge]
Not many people would describe a combi-supplied shower as 'GREAT'. They're okay, particularly if you use a well-designed spray but 'economical' is the first adjective that comes to my mind.

Would there not be some difference in the power of a shower with boiler of a higher wattage (assuming a high enough mains pressure)? 38kw boiler is quite powerful no?

Not much point in using 22mm from a combi, it just means you waste more water and time waiting for the hot water to arrive. The boiler power is the limiting factor.

I find flow a little confusing. In my mind, bigger pipes mean a higher flow rate which means more water coming out of my shower head (assuming, again, a high enough pressure and a boiler powerful enough to heat that increased flow). Is that wrong thinking?
Would the amount of time and water wasted with a 22mm pipe be that significant over a short run such as 3m?
 
Last edited:
If you’ve only got 15mm coming into Combi, not much point having 22mm going out.
But try it both ways and see if there’s any difference as you seem quite resistant to advice.
Report back your findings as it could be useful to others.
 
Thanks. Apart from the benefit of quicker to arrive hot water through a 15mm pipe run (although at 3m it is a short run) are there any downsides to leaving the 22mm there that you can think of?

If you leave the 22mm in you may lose some heat, but probably negligible.

Chuck has explained about taking longer to heat up, so although you will get more flow through the 22mm you will also be trying to get the boiler to heat up a bigger section if you had 22mm coming out of it - if this makes any more sense? Bigger flow rates were required for gravity fed systems as it wasn’t pumped like your mains is.
 

Reply to 38kw combi boiler supplying a shower. 22mm or 15mm pipework? in the USA area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

Hi, I have an old steel water mains pipe (approx 45mm) that I need to connect to a new pehd water mains (25mm). I can't get at it to create a new thread so what's the best way of connecting the two? Cheers, Peter
Replies
2
Views
186
Hi All I have a leak coming from within my Mira Elite QT shower. It seems to be flowing from behind the switching Control. Any ideas what could be causing this leak. Already Changed the Pump Elbow as one of the clips had popped which was causing a second small leak, Any idea? Is it time to buy...
Replies
0
Views
224
Hi, Can anyone advise as to why the cold water to my bathroom keeps airlocking? This originally happened about 12 months ago and has happened 3-4 times since. It’s an upstairs bathroom, fed from a tank in the attic. The tank is about 8 Meters away and feeds a bath, sink and toilet. The tank...
Replies
9
Views
301
I have a plumber coming tomorrow to change a cartridge on a badly dripping tap on my bathroom mixer unit. There is no separate isolating valve for this tap so I'll have to close the stopcock. I tried closing it today but it won't go absolutely 100% closed and there is still a very slight flow...
Replies
1
Views
232
Hi, basic question, any insight much appreciated. Looking to have an outdoor tap in my front porch fed from 15mm pex coming up from suspended floor. Pic 1 is inside porch, pex temporarily clipped to give an idea of pipe placement (ignore shoddy blockwork of booted cowboy builder!), Pic 2 is...
Replies
6
Views
218
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