Am currently in a bit of a dispute with manufacturers over said item. It was fitted 8 years ago and has a 10-year warranty. Recently noticed that the top of this "sealed unit" had developed a wide opening and there was a slight leak as a consequence.
Now I was led to believe that these types of cylinder can be lethal if too much pressure builds up, and that as a result they have a number of inbuilt safety features to prevent any dangerous build-up of pressure. However, my contention is that these features have patently failed to work in my case.
The manufacturer have tried playing the old "Ah but you don't have paperwork proving you have had it serviced every year since it was fitted, so we are not liable".
As it happens it has been serviced, although not every year. It was brand new FFS!!! However, I do not remember any pressure stress testing during the servicing, so my point is that it would not have spotted this weakness in any event. Furthermore, I doubt that stance would hold up in court if a few of these were to explode and cause injury or death. "Not our problem the house collapsed when the tank exploded like a cluster bomb M'lud. The service window was 3 weeks out of date!!"
Anyone got any experience of similar? And before anyone asks, this has nothing much to do with bleeding the chuffing radiators.
Now I was led to believe that these types of cylinder can be lethal if too much pressure builds up, and that as a result they have a number of inbuilt safety features to prevent any dangerous build-up of pressure. However, my contention is that these features have patently failed to work in my case.
The manufacturer have tried playing the old "Ah but you don't have paperwork proving you have had it serviced every year since it was fitted, so we are not liable".
As it happens it has been serviced, although not every year. It was brand new FFS!!! However, I do not remember any pressure stress testing during the servicing, so my point is that it would not have spotted this weakness in any event. Furthermore, I doubt that stance would hold up in court if a few of these were to explode and cause injury or death. "Not our problem the house collapsed when the tank exploded like a cluster bomb M'lud. The service window was 3 weeks out of date!!"
Anyone got any experience of similar? And before anyone asks, this has nothing much to do with bleeding the chuffing radiators.
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