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- 13 Sep 2007
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Our house was converted from an old barn in 1986. The builder installed microbore central heating with the ground floor pipes buried in the slab. Unsurprisingly, we have just suffered a pretty major leak which drops the pressure from 2 bar to zero in 15 minutes. The walls in the area are showing clear signs of rising damp (floors are tiled, so not obvious).
My insurance company will pay for a Trace and Access company to find the leak, but I'm not sure that's worth it - even the excess. If they do find the source, and I get it repaired, with all the upheaval and mess that that entails, it seems quite likely that another leak will occur in the coming months and years. So I am tempted just to isolate all the ground floor microbore and leave things undisturbed.
But this leaves me with the problem of ground floor heating.
One option would be to re-pipe the radiators above-ground. If I did this I would probably use 15mm as the furthest radiators were never very effective anyway. So, first question - what does one do about doorways and passages? I can't believe it's economical or efficient to run the pipes up into the ceiling then down again. Dig out a channel beneath the door/passage and box the pipes in? Something else I am missing?
Or, do I remove the wet system downstairs altogether and look to install some form of electric heating? I believe storage radiator technology has improved dramatically in recent years, and there now seem to be various types of ceramic radiators etc. Or is this still going to be wildly more expensive to run than the gas-powered system I have at the moment?
Any thoughts and suggestions gratefully received!
My insurance company will pay for a Trace and Access company to find the leak, but I'm not sure that's worth it - even the excess. If they do find the source, and I get it repaired, with all the upheaval and mess that that entails, it seems quite likely that another leak will occur in the coming months and years. So I am tempted just to isolate all the ground floor microbore and leave things undisturbed.
But this leaves me with the problem of ground floor heating.
One option would be to re-pipe the radiators above-ground. If I did this I would probably use 15mm as the furthest radiators were never very effective anyway. So, first question - what does one do about doorways and passages? I can't believe it's economical or efficient to run the pipes up into the ceiling then down again. Dig out a channel beneath the door/passage and box the pipes in? Something else I am missing?
Or, do I remove the wet system downstairs altogether and look to install some form of electric heating? I believe storage radiator technology has improved dramatically in recent years, and there now seem to be various types of ceramic radiators etc. Or is this still going to be wildly more expensive to run than the gas-powered system I have at the moment?
Any thoughts and suggestions gratefully received!