cranefly wrote: » I hope someone here can give me an approx cost for converting a dual fuel leisure range cooker from nat gas to lpg or bottled gas by a registered gas installer, it has to be a rgi guy for the warranty to be effective, the cooker has five gas rings on the hob and an electric hot plate and two electric ovens, it seems no one in cork anyway, will sell any of these cookers already converted for bottle gas which i find hard to believe, not everyone has nat gas, i would say the majority are still on bottled gas, but all the retailers from harvey norman, currys, did, toss bryan in fermoy, all of them say if you buy a cooker from us you have to do this yourself at extra cost. and get in touch with another company about the lpg conversion kit which to give leisure their due, did say they would send the kit in the post free of charge as soon as we get the cooker. so guys this is just to find out how much extra i will have to fork out on top of the expense of the cooker.
Irish Steve wrote: » Might be worth giving McManus distributors http://mcmanusdist.ie/ in Dublin a call, as they are LPG specialists, and may well supply with jets fitted, which will save some pain. No connection other than as a satisfied customer over a number of years.
shane0007 wrote: » It would still have to be connected by an RGI! So even if you have an existing bayonet connection, cookers do not come with the hoses connected or supplied with them. This must be done by an RGI with a Cert 3 issued.
cranefly wrote: » thanks for the info lads, as there already is a gas connection to the cooker from the bottled gas and all i am doing is swapping one cooker for another, whipping off one hose and connecting it back again wow, if i have to pay someone with all the right certs and paperwork, then guys i do not know what is happening to this country, but if that is the law, that is what i will have to do. And before someone starts ranting and raving about the dangers off gas and its installation and how i as an ordinary joe soap has not got a clue about these things, i would like to know where common sense has gone in this country. There must have been alot of gas explosions in ireland from cookers in the last 30 years for all this regulation to come into effect, how did the poor plumbers get on back then who had no certs from this crowd or that crowd to tell them what to do. OK so if that is law i will pay someone to take the gas hose out of one cooker and attatch it to another, as there has been a gas cooker in the same place for 20 years or so i believe ventilation and all other requirements are ok. But just to be up with all these new requirements i might as well get someone qualified with all the right certs to give the kitchen the once over about position of said cooker, ventilation, extractor fan, maybe that is a lawfull requirement, and i will be sure to pay him his fee as he heads out the door saying everthing is fine, jesus, sorry about the rant fellas, always get good advice from you guys.
cranefly wrote: » as there has been a gas cooker in the same place for 20 years or so i believe ventilation and all other requirements are ok. .
gary71 wrote: » Same old, same old, blah blah.
shane0007 wrote: » Need a hug? Someone say hug ?
gary71 wrote: » but you two carry on.