Discuss Water tank size in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

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I'm doing up my first house which is a large victorian terrace and need to install a new water tank in the loft. It only supplies the hot water system (cold is from the mains). Can anybody tell me how I calculate the size I'd need as the old one is basically an old baby's bath :blush2:

The house is 5 floors, currently 2 bathrooms (bath, shower, basin, toliet), 1 wc (sink and toilet). Then there is the kitchen and a laundry room which has 2 sinks.

I'm planning on moving it into the loft space so I'd need it to be a coffin tank as the opening to the loft is tiny. I'm looking at the 25gallon one, do you reckon this will be sufficient?

Hope you can help!
 
I know I'm jumping gun here because you have not yet decided on volume but a word to the wise, water weighs 10lb ( roughly ) per gallon. Make sure it's properly supported.
 
you should really go for a 50 gallon cwst if you can get it in. are you doing the work yourself or getting a plumber in? there are certain regulations that need to be followed.
 
Wow, thanks for the quick replies.

It'll be well supported as I'm making an atomic bomb proof structure for it to live on.

I don't plan on having any power showers so shouldn't need a pump as the house has excellent water pressure.

I was planning on doing the job myself as I've done quite a few other plumbing jobs before building up to this one, which regulations are you referring to?
 
Even without pumps I recommend 50 gallons, by law 30 the kit will come with the tank use all the bits not throw them away or leave in a bag in the loft like I've previously seen. If possible position the tank over a supporting wall
 
anyone else thinking unvented cylinder would be perfect ?
 
anyone else thinking unvented cylinder would be perfect ?

Yes, - so obvious if the OP is correct about the pressure and if a plumber could confirm the flow rates then should be the cheapest and best way by far to fit an unvented cylinder. Buying a new cold water tank and kit, plus all new pipework, pipe insulation, valves, overflow pipe, etc, alone would cost a fair bit.
Needs a G3 plumber but and not DIY.
If the OP does still go with a traditional gravity hot water system, I would go with reasonably large cwt capacity - 50 gallon min. You need storage for when mains water if off, that's why they are called cold water storage tanks.
 
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