One of the big benefits of electric boilers is that they do not require annual servicing. There is no legal requirement for a yearly service and safety inspection as there is with gas boilers. Some installation companies do offer servicing packages included as part of the price.
Penrhyndeudraeth
Penrhyndeudraeth is a town and neighborhood in the Welsh area of Gwynedd. The town is close to the mouth of the River Dwyryd on the A487 virtually 3 miles (4.8 km) east of Porthmadog, and had a population of 2,150 at the 2011 census, boosted from 2,031 in 2001. The community includes Minffordd as well as Portmeirion. According to the 2011 Census, Penrhyndeudraeth is the 19th most Welsh-speaking area in Wales, with approximately 76% of the its homeowners aged 3 years or older mentioning that they could talk Welsh. According to the most up to date Estyn inspection record of the town's primary school, Ysgol Cefn Coch, 79% of students come from houses where Welsh is spoken. In a case in June 2011, with brand-new English landlords of the Royal Oak pub in Penrhyndeudraeth, customers left the pub in anger and also were endangered with an airgun after being told to stop ordering their drinks in Welsh. The pub ultimately had a change of management. The Penrhyndeudraeth Children as well as Youth's Chaired Eisteddfod is held every year at the Memorial Hall. The village is house to the Snowdonia National Park Authority head office. There are many language traces of Old Welsh to be found in the name in the Penrhyndeudraeth location, such as "Pont Briwet/ Briwet Bridge (Briwet is cognate with the Breton word "Brued" suggesting bridge). Remains of old huts can be found near Ty 'n y Berllan, which date back to the Bronze Age. Penrhyndeudraeth's Alun 'Sbardun' Huws wrote a track, Strydoedd Aberstalwm (around "roads of long ago"), in tribute to the town. His well-known band Y Tebot Piws additionally recorded their goodbye album at Penrhyndeudraeth Memorial Hall in 2011.