Richard10002
Well-Known Member
My narrowboat has a Rinnai 58e gas water heater fitted in an open space, but under a worktop in the galley. In reality, it is the only place it could be fitted, without the danger of us banging our heads on it, or having an excessively long additional gas pipe.
It only feeds the shower. The Hot water to the galley and bathroom sink are fed from a Truma combination heater and water heater, which only holds 12l, so not enough for a shower.
The interior of the space, above, to the sides, and to the rear of the heater, is coveted in an aluminium heat reflective sheet.... Like those designed to go under motorbike seats to protect your bum from the exhaust heat - they can cope with around 1200C as far as I can tell.
The thing works fine, the aluminium gets hot, but nothing has caught fire yet. I've got two CO monitors, and neither has gone off to date.
However, I think it should have a flue, and need a bit of help in going about it:
I've bought a draught diverter, which will leave about 1.1m from the top of the diverter to the steel roof.
The various flue kits seem to be interchangeable between the Rinnai 58e, the Morco 61B/E, and various other heaters, so here's the Morco selection of stuff:
http://www.morcoproducts.co.uk/stock-5-19/Water_Heaters/D61B.html
It looks like I could buy a complete flue conversion kit, plus an additional flue terminal pipe, and I would have enough to make it work:
http://www.morcoproducts.co.uk/component-576/Complete_Flue_Conversion_Kit_D61BE.html
http://www.morcoproducts.co.uk/component-573/Flue_Terminal_Pipe_600mm_x_90mm.html
However - this leaves me with 2 concerns:
1) can you join the flue pipes internal to the boat, and how do you do this? A chap at Midland Chandlers suggested that you couldn't join them, but I'm not convinced he was particularly interested in helping me to find a solution. If you can't join them, can I buy a 1.1m length of 90mm flue, and what should it be to carry away the gas combustion gasses?
2) if the flue pipe is internal, and it would be rising next to the gas cooker, would it need to be twin skinned, e,g.
http://www.woodburningstovesandflues.co.uk/twin-wall-flue-pipe-dinak-dw-4inch
(although the example above doesn't accommodate a 90mm pipe which is the diameter of the above flues).
Or could I wrap it in the sort of stuff that is around the exhaust.
I hope this makes sense, and that someone can help.
Many Thanks,
Richard
It only feeds the shower. The Hot water to the galley and bathroom sink are fed from a Truma combination heater and water heater, which only holds 12l, so not enough for a shower.
The interior of the space, above, to the sides, and to the rear of the heater, is coveted in an aluminium heat reflective sheet.... Like those designed to go under motorbike seats to protect your bum from the exhaust heat - they can cope with around 1200C as far as I can tell.
The thing works fine, the aluminium gets hot, but nothing has caught fire yet. I've got two CO monitors, and neither has gone off to date.
However, I think it should have a flue, and need a bit of help in going about it:
I've bought a draught diverter, which will leave about 1.1m from the top of the diverter to the steel roof.
The various flue kits seem to be interchangeable between the Rinnai 58e, the Morco 61B/E, and various other heaters, so here's the Morco selection of stuff:
http://www.morcoproducts.co.uk/stock-5-19/Water_Heaters/D61B.html
It looks like I could buy a complete flue conversion kit, plus an additional flue terminal pipe, and I would have enough to make it work:
http://www.morcoproducts.co.uk/component-576/Complete_Flue_Conversion_Kit_D61BE.html
http://www.morcoproducts.co.uk/component-573/Flue_Terminal_Pipe_600mm_x_90mm.html
However - this leaves me with 2 concerns:
1) can you join the flue pipes internal to the boat, and how do you do this? A chap at Midland Chandlers suggested that you couldn't join them, but I'm not convinced he was particularly interested in helping me to find a solution. If you can't join them, can I buy a 1.1m length of 90mm flue, and what should it be to carry away the gas combustion gasses?
2) if the flue pipe is internal, and it would be rising next to the gas cooker, would it need to be twin skinned, e,g.
http://www.woodburningstovesandflues.co.uk/twin-wall-flue-pipe-dinak-dw-4inch
(although the example above doesn't accommodate a 90mm pipe which is the diameter of the above flues).
Or could I wrap it in the sort of stuff that is around the exhaust.
I hope this makes sense, and that someone can help.
Many Thanks,
Richard