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Paul20403  
#1 Posted : 10 August 2022 11:23:27(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Paul20403

Hi, I have a client that manages lots of small/medium sized properties. Most of these are not staffed by my client (either residential or small commercial with my client acting as property manager). One of the issues they regularly have is legionella water management temperature testing. Sometimes the contractor misses an appointment. Sometimes no-one is available to let them in. Often the temperatures do not give a good indication of normal running temperatures. For example, any cold water temperatures taken this week are likely to be high due to the temperature of water entering the building (my garden office is now at 29.1 C).

I was considering using remote temperature sensors where there is 24/7 monitoring and graphs showing maximum, minimum and average temperatures.

It looks like the technology is ready, but wondered if anyone had experience of these systems and if they really work as you would like? Some even have remote flushing.

Any thoughts please

peter gotch  
#2 Posted : 10 August 2022 12:27:12(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

Hi Paul, this is a question for a water engineer, but just because the temperature in your garden office is 29.1 degrees C doesn't mean that the underground mains supply would be anything like that (even in the South East of England).

Have you asked South East Water what they would expect the mains supply temperature to be after a period of prolonged above average air temperatures and little rainfall?

Will depend on a number of variables inclusive of the material the pipework into a building is made of.

Paul20403  
#3 Posted : 10 August 2022 15:53:44(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Paul20403

Hi Peter,

Thanks for replying. Maybe I wasn't as clear as I should have been. I have been involved in the H&S of property management for many years. At one Housing Association we had 800 blocks of flats and paid contractors do do the monthly temperature checks. At this time of year the temperature of the water entering the property can be over 20c so you are immediately non-compliant and the temperature is only checked once per month (July and August can both be problematic and most businesses feed the water to a tank at the top of the building, for obvious reasons, where it is likely to be even hotter.

The once per month temperature testing can also work the other way. At a housing association, we had a care home where the engineer would turn up at 9.00am, just after all the morning baths and showers and say the hot tank wasn't hot enough. It had always just refilled with cold water so didn't get back to normal for another hour or so.

I was looking for someone with experience of using remote monitoring equipment, where an electronic thermometer is fixed to a pipe or tank and transmits the temperarture every few minutes 24/7 via a 3G wireless base. You then get a much clearer graphic display of how often and for how long you are both compliant and non-compliant. But I have never actually used one of these systems. They would be quite expensive to set up, but then very cheap to run  (compared to an engineer in a van doing a visit each month). So I was looking for any IOSH members that have experience of using these systems. Are there hidden costs? Do they work well? Any good or bad providers?

peter gotch  
#4 Posted : 12 August 2022 14:43:29(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

Hi Paul

Thanks for the added information.

Can't help with details of those who could supply such equipment but I wonder whether the investment could be justified except in situations with a particularly vulnerable population (such as the care homes you mention).

However even in such scenarios you could define the time when monthly checks should be carried out, so that you get a more representative idea of what the cold and hot water temperatures are for most of the day - legionella isn't going to suddenly breed exponentially when a hot tank has just been refilled with cold water and takes an hour to heat up to above 50 degrees C.

Also, I wonder whether businesses should be continuing to rely on raising cold water to elevated storage - that sounds like obsolete systems from days past when mains water supplies were less reliable (though I do realise that a village covered by SE Water is currently doing the news rounds!!)

The basic technology is different in the South East than up here in Glasgow - in the SE lots of abstraction from below ground whereas just about all Glasgow's water flows down from the hills - but the same overall principles apply - i.e. is the mains pressure sufficient to consistently get the water up to higher levels? - if, YES, then you should not need the high level tank storage.

But overall the question is probably one for a ("clean") water (as against "dirty water" - i.e. sewage etc*) engineer to answer.

*I have worked alongside many water engineers - most have tended to get specialised into either "clean" OR "dirty" - though perhaps less so in smaller engineering practices.

chris42  
#5 Posted : 12 August 2022 16:06:32(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
chris42

If you do get a system, you will still need people to go to each site to check calibration of the temperature sensor, perhaps not as frequently, but still needs to be factored in. 

Chris

Paul20403  
#6 Posted : 13 August 2022 20:17:39(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Paul20403

Thanks Peter and Chris for your comments.

A Kurdziel  
#7 Posted : 15 August 2022 12:23:51(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
A Kurdziel

Am I missing something- surely you run the tap or outlet for a period of time( 2 minutes?) and then take the temperature of the water as it comes out. Cold water should be below 20C and hot water above 50C.

Paul20403  
#8 Posted : 15 August 2022 18:15:18(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Paul20403

This is one of those areas of compliance that has allowed a whole industry to grow around it.

my client has around  5 small estate agent shops that each have a toilet with hand basin and point of use heater and a small kitchen area for making drinke etc. with a sink and hot and cold taps.

a few years ago (before I was involved) they had legionella risk assessments and were told that despite not having showers or any aerosol making outlets, they needed to do monthly temperature testing. If you want to do this yourself, you can buy a kit for around £100, but for some reason, the legionella industry has got fixated on accurate thermometers. So you need to pay another £100 to get the thermometer checked in a lab. And recallibrate it every year or so. Personally, I think for low risk sites that this is ridiculous. 

Why would it matter if you were a degree or 2 out?  You are not constantly monitoring, just monthly temperature sampling, so very inaccurate for an overall picture. Maybe if you were right on the cusp - say 19.5 degrees, you could argue for greater accuracy, but a lot of the time, you cannot do much about slightly high summer temperatures anyway.

So, we also manage about 70 buildings for clients. Many are small residential blocks (4 -10 flats over 4-5 floors in London terraces). We need to check sentinal temperatures in these blocks because there is a genuine life risk as low water pressures mean some need communal storage tanks and all are going to have showers in the flats. We pay contractors to go around with their callibrated thermometers and take monthly temperatures.

I am aware that a lot of tech companies offer to fit thermometers to the hot and cold pipes in the sentinal flats and on the inlet/storage tank, with a transmitter, so you get 24/7 real time monitoring of the water temperatures.  This does away with the need to visit and gain access This is also much more useful, because whereas a hot tap might not be hot enough during a snapshot sample, the real-time monitoring will tell you if during the 24 hours, it achieved a high enough temperature for long enough to thermally disinfect the system. If the price was right, I could also use it in the offices.

But I don't know anyone who uses such a system and can advise on plus and minus points.

I was hoping someone would be using this type of kit.

PDarlow  
#9 Posted : 29 August 2023 10:30:06(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
PDarlow

Post #9 reported.

At least they have chosen a slighty newer post to hijack with advertising.

thanks 2 users thanked PDarlow for this useful post.
Roundtuit on 29/08/2023(UTC), peter gotch on 29/08/2023(UTC)
firesafety101  
#10 Posted : 29 August 2023 11:06:28(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
firesafety101

Very interesting to read this topic, makes me wonder about my hot tub.  When filling from empty during summer months the temp. shows as 21C, where in winter it is much lower, about 16C.  I'm in Wirral.

When in the tub and using the jets I can see the "wet mist" appearing above the water surface.  I do use correct chemicals regularly and test the water but just wonder if I should be considering Legionella ?

I'm confident others have a Hot Tub and many holiday lets have them also.

Xavier123  
#11 Posted : 29 August 2023 13:06:09(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Xavier123

Originally Posted by: firesafety101 Go to Quoted Post

...but just wonder if I should be considering Legionella ?

I'm confident others have a Hot Tub and many holiday lets have them also.

If you were a business or worried about your personal risk, then yes. Holiday lets in particular likely missing some tricks on ensuring safety for legionella and/or other water microbes.

https://www.hse.gov.uk/legionnaires/spa-pools.htm

thanks 1 user thanked Xavier123 for this useful post.
HSSnail on 30/08/2023(UTC)
Holliday42333  
#12 Posted : 29 August 2023 13:31:47(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Holliday42333

Originally Posted by: firesafety101 Go to Quoted Post

Very interesting to read this topic, makes me wonder about my hot tub.  When filling from empty during summer months the temp. shows as 21C, where in winter it is much lower, about 16C.  I'm in Wirral.

When in the tub and using the jets I can see the "wet mist" appearing above the water surface.  I do use correct chemicals regularly and test the water but just wonder if I should be considering Legionella ?

I'm confident others have a Hot Tub and many holiday lets have them also.

There is a well known case (in the water industry at least) of a legionella outbreak at a hot tub supplier who had units running in the showroom but didn't do treatments etc as it no one was actually getting in and using them.

On hiliday a few weeks ago the park operators did a temp check every morning

thanks 1 user thanked Holliday42333 for this useful post.
HSSnail on 30/08/2023(UTC)
HSSnail  
#13 Posted : 30 August 2023 06:48:41(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
HSSnail

The one i always remember from my training is the Amsterdam Flower Show.

From Google,

The outbreak originated at the Westfriesian Flora, an annual flower show combined with a consumer products exhibition, held February 19–February 28, 1999. The flower show was visited by 77,061 persons, and Legionnaires’ disease developed in at least 188 (). 

From memory it was a new unit set up in the entrance - never actually used by people so they did not bother treating the water. I think its still the biggest outbreak in Europe - happy to be corrected

Xavier123  
#14 Posted : 30 August 2023 07:54:43(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Xavier123

I believe you're right about size of outbreak.

UK had its own though unfortunately; JTF in Stoke on Trent. Had to drop a few lines down my Google search to find a link that wasn't the Daily Fail ....

https://www.itv.com/news/central/2017-07-03/jtf-store-fined-1-million-for-legionnaires-outbreak-in-hot-tub-that-killed-three-people

thanks 1 user thanked Xavier123 for this useful post.
peter gotch on 30/08/2023(UTC)
HSSnail  
#15 Posted : 30 August 2023 08:10:20(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
HSSnail

Originally Posted by: Xavier123 Go to Quoted Post

I believe you're right about size of outbreak.

UK had its own though unfortunately; JTF in Stoke on Trent. Had to drop a few lines down my Google search to find a link that wasn't the Daily Fail ....

https://www.itv.com/news/central/2017-07-03/jtf-store-fined-1-million-for-legionnaires-outbreak-in-hot-tub-that-killed-three-people

Yep remember it well, along with the Edinburgh outbreak around the same time linked to the cooling towers. Brought about the HSE/LA combined focused project on legionella inspection - and two of the best days training i ever received (Yes i am a brown nose - but may need your help again)

thanks 1 user thanked HSSnail for this useful post.
Xavier123 on 04/09/2023(UTC)
Roundtuit  
#16 Posted : 11 April 2024 08:42:20(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

MrAmerica might like to read the forum rules before placing a blatant advert - REPORTED

thanks 4 users thanked Roundtuit for this useful post.
A Kurdziel on 11/04/2024(UTC), peter gotch on 11/04/2024(UTC), A Kurdziel on 11/04/2024(UTC), peter gotch on 11/04/2024(UTC)
Roundtuit  
#17 Posted : 11 April 2024 08:42:20(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

MrAmerica might like to read the forum rules before placing a blatant advert - REPORTED

thanks 4 users thanked Roundtuit for this useful post.
A Kurdziel on 11/04/2024(UTC), peter gotch on 11/04/2024(UTC), A Kurdziel on 11/04/2024(UTC), peter gotch on 11/04/2024(UTC)
peter gotch  
#18 Posted : 11 April 2024 13:23:39(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

Thanks Roundtuit

Perhaps the next Space Invader on these Forums will be MAGA or even DonaldJTrump?

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