ZeFrenchman
- 8
- 8
Et salut à toi ;)artis said:@ZeFrenchman or should I greet you by "Salut!"?
What you say is interesting. Where I live we use a lot of electric "boilers", almost every other home has one, as the only other option to heat water is from the heating furnace that heats the house to pass through circulation through an accumulation boiler, which is also another popular way, the third is to use natural gas.
Honestly I have never heard of a single outbreak in the past couple of decades , well I have heard about them but in fact not in association with the boilers, rather in places where water has been stagnant for a long time, like cases where owners go for a long trip or the flat/house isn't inhabited for some time.
Could it be that it is more prevalent for standing water?
I myself have a electric boiler which works exactly like you described, vertical pressure vessel, heating element resistive and placed at the bottom.
One other important thing is to clean them regularly. I clean myself either once a year or twice , lately the water quality has become better so once is enough.
I am not sure with this one so correct me but I would think the filtration of the city water supply before it is even pumped into pipelines for distribution to houses is also important, in Europe we in general tend to have strict controls over that to prevent microorganisms from building up in the pipes.
But as I said I have mostly only heard about the disease with respect to long standing water , wherever water is used regularly I have never seen a problem with it.
But it seems your logic is correct, a heating supply that heats the water and surrounding container evenly to high temp is better than one which only partially heats to high temp while leaving other parts to lower temps where bacteria can thrive, combine that with a local badly filtered supply coming from a lake or ground/river and you potentially have problems
Yes, geography matters a great deal when it comes to the Legionella conversation, since areas see both various water heating technologies and exposure to the bacteria. But last we checked, not a single water utility (in North America anyway) filtered or otherwise treated water against Legionella pneumophila, a bacteria found in many water ways around the world. Frankly, I'm not certain they could even if they wanted to...
Standing water does increase biofilm, thus risk, but isn't a requirement to bacteria growth in water heaters, mostly because of the advantage provided by the mild water temperature. France has seen its fair share of challenges with this in the early 00's if memory serves.
The challenge in under-reporting and the associated issues in sampling (See Dr Janet Stout on that topic, great work) is exactly that: under reporting. Whenever an outbreak appears, it drives ressources and energy to finding the source, often times an HVAC cooling tower or some public water feature. But when people, usually a single person, shows up at the hospital with Legionaires and often enough dies from it, no one ever investiguates.
And unfortunately, once corrected for under reporting, the stats can be a lot grimmer: Dr.Michel Plante (Hydro Quebec, Canada) reported recently that he figured 7 people died yearly from Legionaires contracted from their EWH (which makes up the majority of WH in that area). Some argue that his studies take a few shortcuts, but the fact remains that somewhere between "no problem" and "we'll all die from a hot shower" lies a poorly documented and understudied problem.
Last edited by a moderator: