Geekzone: technology news, blogs, forums
Guest
Welcome Guest.
You haven't logged in yet. If you don't have an account you can register now.
barty005

2 posts

Wannabe Geek


#242613 5-Nov-2018 19:52
Send private message

Ok so our wetback is leaking and given its in auckland our fire is not on all day during winter no never really helps with water heating when needed. Any way give the cylinder and wet back are 30 years old we are lookint to switch to instant hoe water ( gas ) so thoughts where remove the old cylinder etc after gas install is done. this will leave the wetback system my thoughts where its eay enough to remove the guts of it and weld over the inlet and out let holes anyone see anything wrong with doing this ??

 

 


Create new topic

This is a filtered page: currently showing replies marked as answers. Click here to see full discussion.

Aredwood
3885 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 1749


  #2120528 5-Nov-2018 20:26

Definitely never seal off any wetback pipes. That definitely can cause an explosion (yes that has happened in NZ).

The actual wetback itself needs to be removed from the fireplace.





Create new topic


Geekzone Live »

Try automatic live updates from Geekzone directly in your browser, without refreshing the page, with Geekzone Live now.



Are you subscribed to our RSS feed? You can download the latest headlines and summaries from our stories directly to your computer or smartphone by using a feed reader.