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Electric Shower Low Water Pressure.

Eccles-on-Sea, or nearly covered by the sea. There exists at Eccles a remote shanty town and many holiday "chalets." The water supply is just about o.k. to allow the use of an electric instantaneous shower at most times. BUT, at high season at peak times of use, the water pressure drops very low and the showers will not work due to low water pressure. Apart from building a high water tower at each chalet, what is an economical practical solution to the problem per chalet? Some are let out and guests like to shower regularly and not have to wait until night time. Some chalets have flat rooves and no "loft" space for a tank.

Z.

  • My mother was very particular about the use of words, I remember a particular discussion after a regular customer passed comment on her use of rooves as the plural of roof in a quotation.

    I never thought I’d see the day Zoomup reminded me of my mother!

  • We have this set up at our sailing club. With a mains fed storage in the loft and 6 pumped Triton showers to the ladies and gents. Works just fine.

  • @Zoomup “Yes Anglian Water has checked the pressure and said that nothing can be done to improve the water pressure, as the pipes are small, the chalets remote and high demands during the holiday season causes the pressure loss.”

    I would guess the flow is insufficient as well, you cannot pump more out of it than is flowing in although you can increase the pressure of it.

  • Well, you can increase the flow to a limited extent as the "sucking" action of the pump will help to overcome pipe friction. But we're talking theory rather than practice so I would suggest the only long term solution is cold water storage and a pump.

    But then you're into re-piping the shower supply as you don't want to be drinking stored water etc.

  • I guess the moment someone without a pump turns a tap on, then air will be sucked into the system, and the chalet owners will be left trying to sort out airlocks in the system.

  • This all reminds me of the camp site in the middle of the circuit at Le Mans. Cold only. Plenty on Thursday, none by Sunday.

    It's all Ohm's law for plumbers.

    I don't think that pumps should be used to suck water up the mains - that potentially introduces a negative pressure. I rather doubt that the water pressure will drop to nothing so it should be possible to fill a tank at ground floor level. Then pump the water up to the shower head.

    I might add that peoples' expectation of showers seems to have grown over the years.

  • well the line pressure will drop, but the approved pumps stop sucking when it drops below atmospheric. The most you can do with an unrestricted pump is to reduce the line pressure to vacuum, or approx -10m head.

    Mike,

  • if only plumbers understood ohms law - opening a tap is more like pssc, i.e. maxflow into no pressure showers and combis have resistance  so if a pump adds pressure the incoming  line pressure may be near zero gauge then now you can have the downstairs pssc upstairs through a bit of resistance.

    Mike.

  • Oh yes the water is mains' fed as it supplies the kitchen cold tap first. It is potable water.

    Z.

  • So the world has had at least two wonderful people in it. And me, very modest as well.

    Z.