hello gentlemen.
Im in the middle of a full house reno. Well a big extension which has basically wrecked every room so may as well be. It seems a good opportunity to re-do all the plumbing and replace the decades of branches, dead legs, all types of fittings etc and go for something straightforward with minimal joins from A to B and manifolds seem to fit the bill. Not a lot online really and almost all searches end up here so i thought id join in. By manifold i mean copper tees with full bore lever valves and double checks.
The situation is "Boiler in loft - Mains downstairs."
I really wanted a central point of isolation for everything, or most things at least so keeping joints to a bare minimum but it has created a few issues. Under the stairs is a bunker that is ideal to house it all but the problem is that the DHW will have to come down from the loft (via the spare room, straight down the outside of the defunct chimney breast) bypassing the bathroom (next room along), straight past the kitchen to the manifold location and then back again to the kitchen and back up again to the bathroom. Common sense suggests this is silly, with a distance around 20/25m in total before hot water gets to the tap which is in reality nearest the boiler. So begs the question do i have a manifold upstairs to split the DWH to the bathroom and kitchen. And if im doing that then i may as well but a manifold in the kitchen as well. And if thats the case then i may as well sack off the manifold in the bunker altogether which was the entire point of it... Before this post gets too long, should i just abandon the whole idea, its been working fine as a branch system for decades...
Attached image, fish is not to scale. Nothing is off the table, the house is in a almost complete reno mode.