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Posted By Tony Hamill
Small kitchen in office area has a kettle that is in constant use.
The concern is that in small area an accident could happen.
How can I persuade office manager that a fixed hot water dispenser would be safer?
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Posted By Merv Newman
I'm not sure if you can, but I know who man who might - Culligan water dispensers are having a remarkable market penetration - their sales staff must be good, and they do offer models with hot water taps, suitable for making tea. Quietly ask them to send a salesman to your boss. (there is a safety feature on the hot water tap)
Merv
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Posted By Mark Large
Tip the kettle on him when he goes for his cuppa?
Repeat till he gets the message.
Important Note: Don't boil the kettle first!!!
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Posted By Stuart Nagle
Tony.
It is common practice in offices these days to have a water boiler (usually wall mounted) available for staff to make hot drinks.
These are usually plumbed-in, refilling from the cold (drinking water) mains and fitted with a suitable fused electrical connection.
They boil water to a suitably hot setting and maintain it at this temperature. Water is dispensed via a 'push/pull' lever.
With the exception of splashing if cups are not held up to the dispesing nozzle, I think this is much safer than a kettle....
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Posted By Nigel Hammond
We had a fixed hot water dispenser at my last job. You couldn't make a decent cup of tea because the water was not boiling. It was set lower for safety reasons - so staff went back to kettles!
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Posted By Stuart Nagle
Shame.... ours work a treat!!
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Posted By Graham Bullough
There are a number of arguments you could use to support having a water boiler rather than a kettle: If the boiler is hard wired in to the electrical supply, you can dispense with the regular PEAT tests which would be needed for a kettle. With a properly installed boiler there's less chance of users getting electric shocks or scalds than they would with a kettle. If it's wall mounted a boiler can be neater and free up worktop space, especially in small kitchenette areas.
However, as time/money saving factors tend to hold more sway than health and safety factors with employers, a significant factor in favour of a boiler is that you get your boiling water immediately so staff are not hanging around filling up kettles and waiting for them to boil. Also, I am told that it's cheaper for a boiler to keep water at or very near boiling point than to keep using a kettle to heat up cold water - although surely this depends on the average daily number of hot drinks required.
I imagine other readers of this thread are intrigued like me as to the alleged "safety reasons" mentioned in an earlier response for turning down the thermostat of a boiler. Whether water is at boiling point or a few degrees less, it still has the ability to scald – whether it comes from a boiler or a kettle.
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