| ▲ | supersparrow 16 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
A boiler should actually be lasting more like 20 years. I recently replaced my 20 year old one purely because if anything went wrong, it’d become an expensive/long job to fix as parts were hard to find, otherwise it was still running perfectly at its manufacture specified efficiency. Running them for 20 years isn’t uncommon. I had a quote for a heat pump - £20k, plus the cost to replace 13 radiators, plus cost to replace pipework to support heat pump rads. Pretty sure the government ‘incentive’ was £3k at the time. Doesn’t come remotely close! | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | pjc50 15 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I managed £15k minus £7k of Scottish government incentives, and I managed to avoid replacing all my radiators by .. getting a "hybrid" system which also includes a boiler for HW :/ Far from ideal solution, but it is mostly green, somewhat offset by the solar panels, and actually more comfortable than the old system because of the more even heating. Set to 20C and forget about it for the season. I'm hoping that it will last until the actual gas phaseout when a solution compatible with 8mm piping will exist. This is why they need to be mandated on new houses, because it's so much better than trying to retrofit it. | |||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | hexbin010 15 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Was your old boiler a non-combi? Modern condensing combis I think are designed to be more complex and not last as long. I'm not sure all the complexity and fancy modulation etc is really worth it myself. I'd rather have a boiler that lasts 20 years and that any half-competent gas engineer can fix with a spanner and some spare parts. £20k, jesus! | |||||||||||||||||
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