Beezerk
Money List Winner
Not the mother in law, an old electric immersion heater 😁
So anyway, I'm after a bit of plumbing advice.
Our house is a bit iggledy piggledy (was an old police station made into 2 houses), I've been boarding the loft for storage and the last large section has a large copper immersion heater right in the middle so needs to go. Btw the heater isn't used anymore as we have a combi boiler in the kitchen.
My initial plan was to disconnect the heater, remove from loft and scrap/weigh in the copper.
I managed to board 1/3 of this loft section which gave me access to get a good look at the heater, there's 2 plastic overflow pipes at the top but worryingly there's 4 copper pipes (about 1 1/2" diameter) at the lower end of the tank.
I don't want a flood or to mess up our current system so I left it at that, can't really find much info on the internet either.
Is it worth getting a plumber in to check it out/remove or are there any tests I can carry out to ensure it's safe to disconnect?
Here's hoping there's a plumber on here 😉
So anyway, I'm after a bit of plumbing advice.
Our house is a bit iggledy piggledy (was an old police station made into 2 houses), I've been boarding the loft for storage and the last large section has a large copper immersion heater right in the middle so needs to go. Btw the heater isn't used anymore as we have a combi boiler in the kitchen.
My initial plan was to disconnect the heater, remove from loft and scrap/weigh in the copper.
I managed to board 1/3 of this loft section which gave me access to get a good look at the heater, there's 2 plastic overflow pipes at the top but worryingly there's 4 copper pipes (about 1 1/2" diameter) at the lower end of the tank.
I don't want a flood or to mess up our current system so I left it at that, can't really find much info on the internet either.
Is it worth getting a plumber in to check it out/remove or are there any tests I can carry out to ensure it's safe to disconnect?
Here's hoping there's a plumber on here 😉