alfaTom Posted November 28, 2024 Share Posted November 28, 2024 Our build is coming along nicely and I'm getting to the stage where I lie awake for hours thinking about pipes. I've read plenty of topics on here about radial manifolds to reduce amount of water that needs drawing off for hot supply, plus also hot return circuits. I kinda want both, purely because I want the water to be hot quickly and I don't want to put in one solution and find it's not enough later. My problem is I don't think I could get an HRC on each radial leg without going totally overboard, so I'm thinking about satellite manifolds instead. I can put them in fairly easy-access locations in bathrooms so joints/leaks are less of a concern, plus I can run the HRC off the end of the satellite manifold back to the UVC. Is a satellite setup with HRC a wise idea? I can't see why having one manifold fed by a 22mm supply vs a few manifolds off a 22mm supply would be any different but I am not a plumber, just a hep20 enthusiast😂 A UVC will supply DHW, and the mains is being replaced from 15mm copper to 32mm MDPE, which means I don't know the mains pressure yet. I do know the HPPE was replaced in recent history so I am hoping the communication pipe is at least 25mm. (Keeping 32mm as cost difference is tiny and would rather not dig it up again later if water pressure drops in the area over time...) Picture for attention: I'm aware I'm missing lots of parts but as a "map" of what we're after hopefully it helps. The run to the family bath section will probably be 7-8 metres, but a big steel to support the opening stops me running all the individual pipes through and I'm looking for a "less is more" approach. The run to the master ensuite may be closer to 12-14 metres so would benefit from an HRC I think. Kitchen and the W/C is about 2 metres from UVC, and the utility about 4 metres. Layout of house (X is hot water point downstairs, triangle is hot water point upstairs) Thoughts? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Temp Posted November 28, 2024 Share Posted November 28, 2024 I haven't looked at your plans in detail but we used two remote manifolds. We wanted very high flow rate showers and ran 28mm from our thermal store to a home made manifold near each of the main bathrooms. Then 22mm from there to the showers. Regarding return loop pipes.. think about hot taps where you want hot water to appear quickly and run the return from as close to those as possible. We have a basin in a WC and the return pipe connects about 8ft away from the tap. Even that's too far away from the tap. You've washed your hands before the hot comes out. The return on the kitchen tap is right under the sink at that's much better. Some people put PIR sensors in remote WC so the loop pump starts when they enter rather than running all the time. You can also put timers on them so they don't run at night if you want Builders don't insulate hot pipes and the return nearly well enough or even at all in some places. Consider taller stand offs to space pipes away from walls/floors a bit further than normal so you can get more insulation around them? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JohnMo Posted November 28, 2024 Share Posted November 28, 2024 We have a long thin house and from UVC to shower is about 15m. It's run to an intermediate manifold about 7.5m each way (UVC - manifold - shower) running the shower tonight with HWC pump off (for 12 hrs) it took just over the time to take my clothes off to be hot. 15mm pipe everywhere. Sorry you have had way too much time thinking. Simplify, one hot manifold, one cold, you only need one feed to each room then branch from there. Keep 22mm well away from hot water supplies other you will get bored waiting for hot water. We have HWC it goes to the furthest room and through the manifold back to the cylinder. Run it on timer and thermostat. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted November 29, 2024 Share Posted November 29, 2024 The Rehau ‘smart’ manifold system standard install is to fit the manifolds in the room where you need the water but that’s a lot of manifolds and all the required fittings plus you need make them accessible. Our plant room is in the middle of the house with relatively short runs to the bathrooms kitchen and utility room so we have two of their 9 outlet manifolds (4 hot 5 cold in each) Very compact so take up little space. Like @JohnMo our showers are hot by the time you’re ready to get into them. 15mm pipe. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
alfaTom Posted November 29, 2024 Author Share Posted November 29, 2024 Some good replies here - thanks everyone! Sounds like a satellite/remote/sub manifold will work for my situation, just need to KISS. On 28/11/2024 at 21:09, JohnMo said: Sorry you have had way too much time thinking. Simplify, one hot manifold, one cold, you only need one feed to each room then branch from there. A classic buildhub problem being left with too much time. This sounds similar in principle to what I'd be doing though I think. Two manifolds to "branch" in the further rooms and everything else off one local one. My main concern had been trying to keep everything radial. I think 22mm to feed remote manifolds with the HRC on the manifold via PIR or timer so the larger volume of hot water in the 22mm pipe gets circulated to mitigate that issue. I already have PIRs in place to activate the LED "pee" lights so you don't get blinded at night time so that could work... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andehh Posted November 30, 2024 Share Posted November 30, 2024 Fine to do that with the cold. Don't do it with the hot circulation route. You need the circulation route within a couple of feet from the tap. Our main bathrooms are within 2ft and it works perfectly... Our kitchen is a out 10ft and the hot water arrives by the time you've finished washing your hands. Still a great decision though, as without it we'd be 30m + away. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JohnMo Posted November 30, 2024 Share Posted November 30, 2024 10 hours ago, alfaTom said: Two manifolds to "branch" in the further rooms and everything else off one local one Not really what I was saying. By branch I mean simply tee off to the user in the wet room. So central manifold, one leg goes to bathroom, within bathroom, that single pipe tees off to shower, bath, sink etc. dump the idea of lots of local manifolds. You are making issues by complex design, then making a hot water circulation system way to complex to compensate. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted November 30, 2024 Share Posted November 30, 2024 2 hours ago, Andehh said: Fine to do that with the cold. Don't do it with the hot circulation route. You need the circulation route within a couple of feet from the tap. Our main bathrooms are within 2ft and it works perfectly... Our kitchen is a out 10ft and the hot water arrives by the time you've finished washing your hands. Still a great decision though, as without it we'd be 30m + away. One of the things we learned during COVID on hand cleanliness (pathogens anyway rather than anything else) it’s the soap and length of time you clean (at least 20s) that cleans your hands not the temperature of the water. Consequently I’ve never bothered waiting for hot water since knowing that anywhere I go. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MikeGrahamT21 Posted November 30, 2024 Share Posted November 30, 2024 1 hour ago, Kelvin said: One of the things we learned during COVID on hand cleanliness (pathogens anyway rather than anything else) it’s the soap and length of time you clean (at least 20s) that cleans your hands not the temperature of the water. Consequently I’ve never bothered waiting for hot water since knowing that anywhere I go. temperature does have importance, during my many years of caring for my late wife and doing IV treatments at home, we were told to only ever wash hands in cold water, since warm water opens your pores which can allow any nasties to hide away, since then I’ve always washed hands with cold water Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gone West Posted November 30, 2024 Share Posted November 30, 2024 5 hours ago, MikeGrahamT21 said: temperature does have importance, during my many years of caring for my late wife and doing IV treatments at home, we were told to only ever wash hands in cold water, since warm water opens your pores which can allow any nasties to hide away, since then I’ve always washed hands with cold water Back in the seventies I was told a similar thing by a chemist at work. Don't wash your hands with Swarfega, use washing up liquid and cold water so the skin pores don't open. He said Swarfega was carcinogenic in those days. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
alfaTom Posted Thursday at 20:08 Author Share Posted Thursday at 20:08 So since starting this thread back in November I've only just really looked at the plumbing again since our grant has been approved for ASHP/UVC. Reading back on everything I can see there are really only two things I care about: Near-instant hot water when opening taps High-flow of water On my quest for high flow, I opted for 22mm pipe, and then, to compensate for cold slugs and meet the hot water needs, I went for an HRC. It's possible I'm overcomplicating things here and might need to do some tests before I make a decision. Our old 15mm copper pipe is now gone, and I have a 32mm MDPE line in its place waiting to be connected. (Terrific job to do last weekend given the cold weather by the way) I realised I have no idea what my pressure or flow rate will be in the house. I'm so used to cheap, rubbish combi boilers or the aging gravity-fed system that was present beforehand that I might be trying to fix a non-existent problem. So, the next steps are to get the pressure tested when the new pipe is connected, and then I can do a flow test off the garden tap to give me somewhere to start. Soon as I know those details I should be able to use the pipe diameter and distance to work out time to deliver for hot water and plan from there. Thanks all for your help so far, will update once I find out the pressure & flow and replan my piping! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nickfromwales Posted yesterday at 00:25 Share Posted yesterday at 00:25 4 hours ago, alfaTom said: On my quest for high flow, I opted for 22mm pipe Elaborate as to where and how many runs of it please. 4 hours ago, alfaTom said: to compensate for cold slugs and meet the hot water needs, I went for an HRC. Pipe size and from / where to again, please? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
alfaTom Posted 22 hours ago Author Share Posted 22 hours ago 7 hours ago, Nickfromwales said: Elaborate as to where and how many runs of it please. Pipe size and from / where to again, please? Sorry - I meant I had opted for that in my designs. It's not in place yet, so my designs are still tbc. It was going to be 22mm from plant room to manifold in bathroom, with 10mm HRC on PIR. Once I get actual pressure/flow rates I'll then know what I actually need (and what is acceptable for the Mrs) and if I was just horribly overcomplicating everything like @JohnMo said to fix an issue that didn't exist. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JohnMo Posted 22 hours ago Share Posted 22 hours ago 12 minutes ago, alfaTom said: was going to be 22mm from plant room to manifold in bathroom I really wouldn't go more than 15mm, you just don't need any bigger. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andehh Posted 22 hours ago Share Posted 22 hours ago Insulate the pipes thoroughly! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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