Canski Posted Wednesday at 02:17 Share Posted Wednesday at 02:17 Hi all. On my snagging list is to try to solve my problem of heat pump condense spilling across my footpath. The porcelain path is laid with a fall of 17 mm per m away from the house. The rubber feet of my heat pump rest on this so when the condense comes out it drains across the footpath and not into the gravel drain that I have against the house. I have seen heat pump drip trays advertised but how have other people got round this. It’s certainly more of a discharge than I had predicted. In hindsight I should have formed a recess for the condense to flow towards the house and maybe be diverted into a drain. Too late now without major work. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bonner Posted Wednesday at 08:31 Share Posted Wednesday at 08:31 Mine drops into a small soak away, 4” pipe filled with gravel. Still overflows occasionally so would make it bigger. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Canski Posted Wednesday at 09:46 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 09:46 1 hour ago, Bonner said: Mine drops into a small soak away, 4” pipe filled with gravel. Still overflows occasionally so would make it bigger. Overflows through a pipe from the unit or from general discharge beneath the unit ? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Russdl Posted Wednesday at 09:49 Share Posted Wednesday at 09:49 I’ve not looked at the condensate drain of an ASHP in any detail but can you not cobble something together out of guttering for example to catch the condensate and send it where you want it to go? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Canski Posted Wednesday at 11:34 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 11:34 1 hour ago, Russdl said: I’ve not looked at the condensate drain of an ASHP in any detail but can you not cobble something together out of guttering for example to catch the condensate and send it where you want it to go? I could do if it was just discharging in one place but it’s a random outfall from all around the base of the unit. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Russdl Posted Wednesday at 11:40 Share Posted Wednesday at 11:40 5 minutes ago, Canski said: it’s a random outfall from all around the base of the unit. Is that 'standard'? I had no idea, seems a bit odd. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Canski Posted Wednesday at 11:52 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 11:52 2 minutes ago, Russdl said: Is that 'standard'? I had no idea, seems a bit odd. I’ve no idea. This is a small amount compared to when it’s in full flow. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Conor Posted Wednesday at 12:18 Share Posted Wednesday at 12:18 Tilt it back on it's feet to see if the condensate drips off the back of the unit and in to the gravel? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Canski Posted Wednesday at 12:37 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 12:37 16 minutes ago, Conor said: Tilt it back on it's feet to see if the condensate drips off the back of the unit and in to the gravel? Thanks Conor, I thought of that but the pump is about 300 mm away from the wall and the gravel is only 150 mm wide. I think I'll give it a go anyway to see if the condense falls out of one location then and then I could divert it into the gravel. Before the installation I thought that the condense would flow out of a pipe rather than from the 'tray' beneath it. Silly me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Russdl Posted Wednesday at 12:45 Share Posted Wednesday at 12:45 6 minutes ago, Canski said: I thought that the condense would flow out of a pipe rather than from the 'tray' beneath it. Silly me. Doesn’t sound silly to me. Even if the condensate comes from every element inside the box you’d think it would all be herded together so it would all fall out of one pipe. Well I would anyway. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Conor Posted Wednesday at 13:53 Share Posted Wednesday at 13:53 1 hour ago, Canski said: Thanks Conor, I thought of that but the pump is about 300 mm away from the wall and the gravel is only 150 mm wide. I think I'll give it a go anyway to see if the condense falls out of one location then and then I could divert it into the gravel. Before the installation I thought that the condense would flow out of a pipe rather than from the 'tray' beneath it. Silly me. row of old slates propped up on something to make s slope to the gravel? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Canski Posted Wednesday at 14:01 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 14:01 4 minutes ago, Conor said: row of old slates propped up on something to make s slope to the gravel? Yes maybe. If I can get it draining to one location it will be easy. I wonder if the bolts to the rubber feet can be adjusted to raise the pump at the front end without having to pack the feet. I'll have a look later. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JamesPa Posted Wednesday at 15:24 Share Posted Wednesday at 15:24 1 hour ago, Canski said: Yes maybe. If I can get it draining to one location it will be easy. I wonder if the bolts to the rubber feet can be adjusted to raise the pump at the front end without having to pack the feet. I'll have a look later. Probably best not to do that. Many heat pumps (it is said) want to be exactly horizontal to balance the fan bearings. I certainly wouldn't tilt the pump without asking the manufacturer if its OK. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bonner Posted Wednesday at 16:04 Share Posted Wednesday at 16:04 6 hours ago, Canski said: Overflows through a pipe from the unit or from general discharge beneath the unit ? It drains from an outlet in the centre of the unit, seems to have a tray in the base which collect the condensate and drains to the outlet (Grant Aerona) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Canski Posted Wednesday at 16:30 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 16:30 1 hour ago, JamesPa said: Probably best not to do that. Many heat pumps (it is said) want to be exactly horizontal to balance the fan bearings. I certainly wouldn't tilt the pump without asking the manufacturer if its OK. Yes I thought that but seeing as it was placed straight on the paving that has a fall of 18 mm per m I am aiming to get it somewhere level or a slight fall to the rear Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Canski Posted Wednesday at 16:32 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 16:32 27 minutes ago, Bonner said: t drains from an outlet in the centre of the unit, seems to have a tray in the base which collect the condensate and drains to the outlet (Grant Aerona) Mine is a daikin and it seems it drains randomly from the base. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Canski Posted Wednesday at 16:49 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 16:49 I’ve now got it perfectly level from front to back and left to right. It’s not condensing ATM. I’ll have another look in a bit and see if they have designed a fall in the tray. You would think that they have designed that in wouldn’t you ? 😀 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Russdl Posted Wednesday at 18:10 Share Posted Wednesday at 18:10 Yes. Can’t wait to find out 😃 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ReedRichards Posted Wednesday at 22:24 Share Posted Wednesday at 22:24 When my heat pump was first installed it seemed to drain randomly from the base but then my installer fitted a small drain pipe to the base that runs to a soakaway and that has worked perfectly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
S2D2 Posted Thursday at 11:09 Share Posted Thursday at 11:09 Is that a Daikin Altherma? For some reason they use a series of drainage holes compared to other manufacturers who channel it all to one hole: If its not on a gravel soakaway the only real option is the condensate tray, which looks something like this: 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Canski Posted Thursday at 16:26 Author Share Posted Thursday at 16:26 4 hours ago, S2D2 said: If its not on a gravel soakaway the only real option is the condensate tray, which looks something like this: Many thanks that is what I have been searching for. Where did you find that ? You are correct it is the Altherma model with the sieve as a drip tray. On your photo it looks like the heat pump is raised up by about 100 mm from the rubber blocks. This would incur more work as it is already plumbed in. I think my options are either :- a) wait for the ice rink in winter b) make some sort of gutter that catches the condense from the 8 drain holes and discharges into my gravel strip c) disconnect the pump and dig out and create a gravel soakaway d) disconnect the pump and lower the rubber feet and install a tray. e) start drinking heavily any other tips or ideas welcome. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
S2D2 Posted Thursday at 20:20 Share Posted Thursday at 20:20 3 hours ago, Canski said: Many thanks that is what I have been searching for. Where did you find that ? You are correct it is the Altherma model with the sieve as a drip tray. On your photo it looks like the heat pump is raised up by about 100 mm from the rubber blocks. This would incur more work as it is already plumbed in. I think my options are either :- a) wait for the ice rink in winter b) make some sort of gutter that catches the condense from the 8 drain holes and discharges into my gravel strip c) disconnect the pump and dig out and create a gravel soakaway d) disconnect the pump and lower the rubber feet and install a tray. e) start drinking heavily any other tips or ideas welcome. I spotted it in this video as I'm about to have a Daikin installed myself: You're right that there are extra brackets to sit it in between the feet and the heatpump so it would be a pain if you don't have a flex connection that would accommodate the change. I'd be tempted by the gutter idea, quick and easy and it might just be enough. I really don't understand the design process of the drainage holes, I have a suitable drain nearby for a condensate pipe but there just doesn't appear to be a way to do this with the Daikins, unlike all other manufacturers, even my cheap A2A unit. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bonner Posted Saturday at 19:06 Share Posted Saturday at 19:06 On 14/11/2024 at 16:26, Canski said: b) make some sort of gutter that catches the condense from the 8 drain holes and discharges into my gravel strip Can’t you plug some of the holes so it drains to one point or at least one row of holes? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Canski Posted yesterday at 00:51 Author Share Posted yesterday at 00:51 5 hours ago, Bonner said: Can’t you plug some of the holes so it drains to one point or at least one row of holes? By the time I have plugged then I could have implemented my new invention. The 300 mm off cut from my next rubber roof glued to 11mm OSB offcut propped up with a 25mm tile batten ( offcut) can anyone tell I’m at the end of my build and run out of budget? 😜😜 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MrPotts Posted yesterday at 09:34 Share Posted yesterday at 09:34 Can you call the installers back and get them to install the HP correctly? They shouldn’t have left the condense to drain onto a walkway. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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