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ronnie paton

  • Posts: 3245
Re: thinking of buying a second hand thermo
« Reply #20 on: December 23, 2009, 09:05:15 pm »
matt  feel my time is better spent doing other stuff im no good at making or putting things to gether and if i did do it trust me it would go rong so i would rather pay th money.........................ish iwas more like some of the diy guys.

matt

Re: thinking of buying a second hand thermo
« Reply #21 on: December 23, 2009, 10:43:30 pm »
matt  feel my time is better spent doing other stuff im no good at making or putting things to gether and if i did do it trust me it would go rong so i would rather pay th money.........................ish iwas more like some of the diy guys.

i was only having a joke ronnie

if you read my 2 replies in this thread, i thought they were humorous

i knew if i mentioned the L5 people would jump up and down and say " its a toy " etc etc etc , it really is sometimes like shooting fish in a barrel


ronnie paton

  • Posts: 3245
Re: thinking of buying a second hand thermo
« Reply #22 on: December 23, 2009, 11:15:33 pm »
matt you got me wrong im seriuos i wish i could do more DIY, if i could i would save £££££

wightsurf

  • Posts: 1774
Re: thinking of buying a second hand thermo
« Reply #23 on: December 24, 2009, 02:10:05 pm »
If your nice and warm you work better , thats how i see it = £££
L5   ;D
Second winter going fine  ;D
And a big bag of salt  ;)

Sean Dyer

  • Posts: 2947
Re: thinking of buying a second hand thermo
« Reply #24 on: December 24, 2009, 02:29:14 pm »
matt you got me wrong im seriuos i wish i could do more DIY, if i could i would save £££££

Im the same i have no problem with things being diy'd so as long as they are a good standard but i too am useless like that otherwise i probably wouldnt be cleaning windows, id be a engineer or something, but i cant seem to get my head round that kind of thing, theory im fine but practically drilling and stuff im useless

windowswashed

  • Posts: 2626
Re: thinking of buying a second hand thermo
« Reply #25 on: December 24, 2009, 02:52:50 pm »
If you have a hot water heater at least you can keep your water from freezing on site or miles from home. Still need to insulate the pump and hoses from tank up to your hotbox though.

I use hot wfp system but can't work owing to trecherous black ice on the roads everywhere. Had to call it a day end of play Tuesday as roads too bad to go anywhere despite working below zero in rural areas.

Hot box is worth the money if you have a full round and like to be reliable in extreme cold weather.

wizard

Re: thinking of buying a second hand thermo
« Reply #26 on: December 26, 2009, 04:58:08 am »
I think it was Jeff who asked it he could warm the water in the tank with l5, to me this was a smart move as one could insulate tank and run l5 and pump bypass back wile you fill in the morning and maybe a little longer.Even if this improved just a few degrees if would help.

pingu

Re: thinking of buying a second hand thermo
« Reply #27 on: December 26, 2009, 09:47:38 am »
I have no experiance of hot but it's the water freezing on the ground that bothers me the most...and when temps go seriously sub zero what would then be the benifit?

As for 1st cleans, personally I clean each new house twice anyhow so would hot change this requirement.

Like most I am very intrested in Hot but I have doubts about how it would benift me.

I am lucky to have a very large garage which I can run electric to heaters in the van and to my ro system...so it's the day to day use of hot than intrests me the most.

Cheers
Dave.