Afternoon all, here's your central heating / hot water poser for the day....
We've got a gas powered Rayburn in the kitchen that heats our hot water in a tank upstairs. Our central heating is powered from a separate combi boiler in the cellar. The problem is that there doesn't seem to be any way of regulating the maximum temperature of the water, and even when the cooker is down to a very minimum the water seems to get ridiculously hot. Our power shower really doesn't like it and cuts out on a fairly regularly basis, I assume because the water is too hot. (The pump, and all others that I've seen, are only regulated up to a maximum temperature of 65 degC.)
I'm going to have a good look at the hot water tank to check how things are plumbed in but I assume that there is a pipe which travels through the cooker, heating the water within the pipe which then travels up to the tank and enters the coil within it, heating the surrounding water in the tank which is itself fed from a header tank in the loft. (Hope you're understanding this, I'm confusing myself! ) As far as I can tell there isn't any obvious way to regulate the maximum temperature other than turning the cooker down, but it's already on the very minimum temperature.
Anyone got any bright ideas?
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