We had a pulsacoil 2000, a vented thermal store like yours, and it was the most error prone and over complicated thing we had ever seen. It had a PCB board, flat plate heat exchanger, pump and other bits and pieces that would fail one after the other every couple of years. It was designed to fail and Gledhill must have made tons on repair call outs. And we had to remember to manually refill the overhead tank every year otherwise the whole thing would fail. The copper cylinder concealed inside ended up corroding and leaking as all copper stuff do.
In the end we replaced it with an unvented stainless steel hot water cylinder which does away with all the components I mentioned above. It is simplicity itself - fewer bits means less to go wrong, its almost maintenance free. Cost us £1300 supply and fit. Luckily the soil stack (vertical waste pipe concealed behind plasterboard) was near the cylinder so the discharge pipe from the cylinder could be cut into the stack easily. We could identify where the soil stack was by following where the kitchen sink waste pipe ended up going but we could have easily cut into the kitchen sink waste pipe itself had we not been able to locate the main waste stack.
If you do end up going unvented, you will enjoy higher water pressures too. But do not go for an Ariston cylinder, they only use copper heating elements with no option to upgrade whereas every other manufacturer uses incoloy alloy as standard with an option to upgrade to titanium that won't corrode in aggressive water areas like London.
In the end we replaced it with an unvented stainless steel hot water cylinder which does away with all the components I mentioned above. It is simplicity itself - fewer bits means less to go wrong, its almost maintenance free. Cost us £1300 supply and fit. Luckily the soil stack (vertical waste pipe concealed behind plasterboard) was near the cylinder so the discharge pipe from the cylinder could be cut into the stack easily. We could identify where the soil stack was by following where the kitchen sink waste pipe ended up going but we could have easily cut into the kitchen sink waste pipe itself had we not been able to locate the main waste stack.
If you do end up going unvented, you will enjoy higher water pressures too. But do not go for an Ariston cylinder, they only use copper heating elements with no option to upgrade whereas every other manufacturer uses incoloy alloy as standard with an option to upgrade to titanium that won't corrode in aggressive water areas like London.
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