Getting the water through is not the problem ,7 metres of 15mm pipe holds about a litre of water and by the sounds of your pressure you will be getting a litre every 5 seconds or so , if you turn on the taps full pelt and you are getting more water than the boiler capacity the water passing through the boiler will take a while before it is hot , my old granny had a Greenstar combi boiler 6 feet from the kitchen sink and water pressure that could cut through stone , if she turned the tap on full it took ages before the water went hot but if she let the water dribble out the tap just enough to turn the boiler on then it only took a few seconds to heat and once it was hot you could turn the tap on more..
That prompted me to do a quick calculation - I make it closer to 1.25 litres for that notional 7 metres of pipe. I just adjourned to the kitchen and did the washing up. measuring the hot water flow rate while I was at it. At the much reduced flow that I now have, it took 1 m 25 s to get 13 litres of water into the sink. That suggests that it would take about 8 seconds for the water from the boiler to reach the tap if my pipes
are about 7 metres long. (They probably
are something like that length.) That is my way of saying that it seems that you are right!
So, preheat would make sure that there is hot water waiting to be delivered to the bathroom about 3 seconds later or to the kitchen about 8 seconds later. That doesn't take into account the fact that the pipes between the boiler and the taps will be cold unless the tap had been run not long ago, so the first lot of hot water would have to warm the pipes on the way. That suggests that for busy households it would be worthwhile lagging the hot water pipes to keep them warm longer between uses. In my case as a sad singleton, it might
not be because it could be hours between me using hot water one time and the next. I'm not ripping the floors up to do it, but if the bathroom floor is taken up to install the towel rail/radiator then I will lag the pipes (and secure them better) before the floor is put back down.
It wouldn't. The CH circuit is completely separate from the hot water one and the mains cold feed. The only time the CH circuit is connected to mains pressure water is when the CH is initially pressurised. That's just a temporary commissioning operation.
That is what I thought, and why I have been so baffled.
Perhaps there is fault with the valve in the boiler which sometimes stops it closing reliably?
The problem hasn't manifested itself so far today, having tweaked the stop-cock again last night. No doubt it will happen about 10 seconds after I make this post!
