In the same bathroom, the same strong exhaust water heater, why can the faucet on the washbasin igni

Updated on Bathroom 2024-05-18
1 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    The shower head has a high resistance, so the water flow does not meet the minimum requirements for the water heater to start.

    Try removing the shower head and leaving only the shower pipe to start? If so, add a booster pump or switch to a low-resistance nozzle.

Related questions
1 answers2024-05-18

The shower head is clogged with limescale, take it apart, soak it in descaler and rinse it off.

1 answers2024-05-18

The total power of electrical appliances is not more than 6000W, and 4 square copper wires are enough.

2 answers2024-05-18

If you are decorating, you need to pre-embed hot water pipes, and there are 3 pipes that need to be embedded in the bathroom, one is the pipeline connected to the outlet of the water heater, that is, the total inlet of all hot water, one is used in the shower, one is used in the washbasin, and then a hot water pipe is embedded in the kitchen, which is used when washing vegetables and dishes.

5 answers2024-05-18

Natural gas water heaters cannot be installed in restrooms. Because the gas water heater needs to consume a lot of oxygen during use, and the bathroom is a closed space, if the lack of oxygen in the bathroom is caused, a large amount of carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and other toxic gases will be produced, which is easy to cause hypoxia and fainting accidents during the bathing process.

1 answers2024-05-18

Definitely not: gas combustion requires sufficient oxygen to fully burn to avoid carbon monoxide leakage, and carbon dioxide must be high when taking a bath, and oxygen is not sufficient. >>>More