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solid fuel Rayburns
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<blockquote data-quote="neilo" data-source="post: 7937477" data-attributes="member: 348"><p>That’s because they’re inefficient and shite, apart from on the day you manage to get them working properly, and not leaking fumes out into the house.</p><p></p><p>My parents had one back home, and I guess they still do as it’s buried under the concrete yard with a load of other scrap. Mother couldn’t wait to get rid of it, replaced by an oil boiler and an electric cooker.</p><p></p><p>Why would you get an inefficient oil fired Rayburn when you can buy a condensing boiler and a damned good cooker for a fraction of the cost? If you want to be a slave to logs & ash, then there are plenty of leaky old Rayburns knocking about cheap, having been removed by folk that have had enough. I’m told that the estate here have a shed crammed full of them, removed from tenanted properties, not that they’ve ever turned up with the promised replacement for ours of course (thankfully).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="neilo, post: 7937477, member: 348"] That’s because they’re inefficient and shite, apart from on the day you manage to get them working properly, and not leaking fumes out into the house. My parents had one back home, and I guess they still do as it’s buried under the concrete yard with a load of other scrap. Mother couldn’t wait to get rid of it, replaced by an oil boiler and an electric cooker. Why would you get an inefficient oil fired Rayburn when you can buy a condensing boiler and a damned good cooker for a fraction of the cost? If you want to be a slave to logs & ash, then there are plenty of leaky old Rayburns knocking about cheap, having been removed by folk that have had enough. I’m told that the estate here have a shed crammed full of them, removed from tenanted properties, not that they’ve ever turned up with the promised replacement for ours of course (thankfully). [/QUOTE]
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solid fuel Rayburns
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