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.
Y Felinheli
Y Felinheli, previously recognized in English as Port Dinorwic, is a town, area and also electoral ward close to the Menai Strait in between Bangor and Caernarfon in Gwynedd, north-west Wales. The population of the town was 2,284 at the 2011 Census. Y Felinheli has its origins in two communities, Tafarngrisiau near St Mary's Church and Aberpwll to the north-east where there was a mill on the Afon Heulyn. The mill was rebuilt closer to the sea in 1633 and also offered its name to the negotiation. The location was largely agricultural till the area was transformed by slate quarrying in the 19th century. A brand-new dock was built in 1828 when lime was drawn out at Brynadda and slate as well as lime were packed as well as culm (coal dust or anthracite slack) was generated to discharge the lime kilns. The proprietors of the Vaynol Estate, the Assheton Smiths, possessed the majority of the land in Y Felinheli and also established the Dinorwic Quarry in the late 18th century, They also constructed the harbour to export slate transported to the quay by the Dinorwic Railway, a narrow scale railway that was consequently changed by the Padarn Railway. Industrial growth provided Y Felinheli (Felin-hely, 1838) the alternate name Port Dinorwig or Port Dinorwic.