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Legionella temp testing for under counter heaters
Rank: New forum user
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I am in the process of initiating water temp testing at our farm facility. All of our heaters are undercounter water heaters that are cold fed. I know they have a small interanl tank approx 10 litres, but should we be testing hot and cold temps or just cold due to the cold water feed nature of the equipment. The max hot water range for the equipment is 54 degrees
Advice would be gratefully recieved
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Rank: New forum user
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Yes hot and cold, you have to ensure that the water coming out at the outlet is out of the range that Legionella prefers. Under 20 and over 50 centigrade.
I believe if water is stored within a device (calorifier) then it must be stored at above 60 degress as well.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Morning!
First of all...legionella risk assessments can look simple (and often are!) but can sometimes be complex because of other factors. We're looking at one part at the end of a larger system here only.
However, with that caveat firmly in mind, the purpose of doing testing is to check that risk conditions for legionella growth don't exist - so in this case aiming to keep water below 20C or above 50C. If the unit is, by design, warming and then holding the water then failures might foreseeably lead to temps in the 'danger' zone within the storage area. If there are outlets off this heater and associated pipework then what you're monitoring is whether there is any failure at this point in the system. So cold temps to check both this range of pipework and associated feed...and hot to check that the heater is heating sufficiently. Given the volume of the unit I wouldn't be too worried about reaching 60. Small units can be 'fun' to do temp checks on as sometimes running them for a minute at the wrong time can drain the last dregs of hot water out and give you a potential false non-compliant result. ;)
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Rank: Super forum user
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At my office building we have the same scenario and test both hot and cold. To be honest for the time it takes you might as well do both if you are doing one.
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Legionella temp testing for under counter heaters
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