Hi all,
Bit of a speculative ramble, keen for opinions and experiences.
Moved into house a couple of years ago with intention to extend and renovate. house is old and bodged.
The plumbing is very noisy when running- what i'd call 'white noise' This isn't the thunk of pipe-hammer, this is a steady white-noise hissing that is proportional to the rate of flow.
System pressure in the area is good to high (it gave next door some leaky issues).
As I go through the renovation process, the time will come in which the plumbing will be overhauled/replaced/upgraded. When designing what are some of the best practices to maximise flow yet reduce noise. I'm thinking:
Bit of a speculative ramble, keen for opinions and experiences.
Moved into house a couple of years ago with intention to extend and renovate. house is old and bodged.
The plumbing is very noisy when running- what i'd call 'white noise' This isn't the thunk of pipe-hammer, this is a steady white-noise hissing that is proportional to the rate of flow.
System pressure in the area is good to high (it gave next door some leaky issues).
As I go through the renovation process, the time will come in which the plumbing will be overhauled/replaced/upgraded. When designing what are some of the best practices to maximise flow yet reduce noise. I'm thinking:
- Increase pipe diameter where possible (it's all 15mm copper at the moment for DHW/DCW) to reduce the flow speed
- bend pipes where there's space rather than fit an elbow.
- Select valves and fittings for noise, so ball rather than gate perhaps?
- Ensure pipework is well secured to avoid water hammer.