Interested In Advertising? | Contact Us Here
Warning!

 

Welcome to Clean It Up; the UK`s largest cleaning forum with over 34,000 members

 

Please login or register to post and reply to topics.      

 

Forgot your password? Click here

Spruce

  • Posts: 8465
Rinnai Flue
« on: December 05, 2013, 03:53:52 pm »
Have any of you any experience with fitting one of these through the roof of your van for your gas water heater please?

Do they work well? How high above the roof should they be and do they stop water getting in and soaking the heater etc?

Thanks
Success is 1% inspiration, 98% perspiration and 2% attention to detail!

The older I get, the better I was ;)

Spruce

  • Posts: 8465
Re: Rinnai Flue
« Reply #1 on: December 08, 2013, 09:41:26 am »
I didn't do well with this post did I?

This is the flue I was asking about

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Universal-Rinnai-58e-Gas-Water-Heater-Flue-Kit-/141070796102?pt=UK_Campervan_Caravan_Accessories&hash=item20d8798546#ht_273wt_1161

I'm sure some of you have fitted it.
Success is 1% inspiration, 98% perspiration and 2% attention to detail!

The older I get, the better I was ;)

ben M

  • Posts: 4720
Re: Rinnai Flue
« Reply #2 on: December 08, 2013, 01:33:29 pm »
Mr Spruce, if you don't mind leaving your back door open, you can use a silicone hose:

http://www.autosiliconehoses.com/silicone-hose-shop/air-ductings/blue-silicone-2-ply-air-ducting.html

Works very well:



Regards

Ben

Spruce

  • Posts: 8465
Re: Rinnai Flue
« Reply #3 on: December 08, 2013, 03:13:28 pm »
Mr Spruce, if you don't mind leaving your back door open, you can use a silicone hose:

http://www.autosiliconehoses.com/silicone-hose-shop/air-ductings/blue-silicone-2-ply-air-ducting.html

Works very well:



Regards

Ben

Hi Ben

Thanks for the photos. This is always an option, but we also have to consider that if anything is pinched from an unlocked van, insurance doesn't cover any of it. Open doors are a temptation in some of the areas we work in not that we have had any issues so far.

When I was in the motor trade, there we reports of the rear doors being ripped off a couple of vans by gusts of wind. The manufacturers, Fiat, were 'forced' to reinforce the structure around the hinges to stop this happening and then redesign that rear section in later models so it wouldn't happen again.

I guess every time the wind rattles an open door when I'm putting stuff away I have visions of my doors blowing away. Many years ago we were following a van that my Dad had bought back from the PWD auctions in Africa. The bonnet came loose and flew up into the air like a bird. Even today, our friend, who was driving the van back in 1967, has the incident indelibly edged on his brain.

This isn't for me, it for a fellow window cleaner friend of mine. Like me he sometimes has his dog in the van, so needs to have a proper vent IMHO.
Success is 1% inspiration, 98% perspiration and 2% attention to detail!

The older I get, the better I was ;)

steven ainger

  • Posts: 1953
Re: Rinnai Flue
« Reply #4 on: December 08, 2013, 03:41:14 pm »
i have a mushroom vent for my Fogwash, cheap and easy













Spruce

  • Posts: 8465
Re: Rinnai Flue
« Reply #5 on: December 08, 2013, 05:33:28 pm »
i have a mushroom vent for my Fogwash, cheap and easy















Hi Steven

Thanks.

I've seen your pictures before of your roof vent. (GQC) Tim has/had a problem with his Fogwash not exhausting and the suspect was his roof vent. He was going to look into it further on another post so I was a little concerned about recommending one TBH.

Yours does appear to stand more proud of the roof than a picture of his does though.

Success is 1% inspiration, 98% perspiration and 2% attention to detail!

The older I get, the better I was ;)

steven ainger

  • Posts: 1953
Re: Rinnai Flue
« Reply #6 on: December 08, 2013, 05:45:23 pm »
Its been on there around 2 1/2 years now Spruce with no problems at all