If it's a trapped tundish and it terminates into a soil pipe, flushing the toilet could be pulling air in through the tundish as the water goes past.
Also, what Shaun said.
You are an absolute star! It was Brett-Martin and using the measurements I took was able to find one at a local merchant. I had to buy the whole assembly and just use the internals but that has saved a nightmare of a job. The parts fitted perfectly.
Thanks, Basher.
I appreciate your efforts. That's a good place to start. I'm trying to avoid driving around to all the merchants and looking at everything. I'll find out who does Brett stuff and start there. Might as well start somewhere. Amazing the bother that some clueless person can cause by not immediately...
Hi Guys,
I have a customer who has had building work done and the pot (if that's what it's called) has gone missing. I believe the builders blocked the drain with debris, removed the insert/pot/grill and the clowns didn't put it straight back and it got dumped with all the other waste on site...
The thermostat for the hot water cylinder should be set at around 60 - 65 C for water hygiene reasons (Legionella) which is hot enough to scald. So it depends on what your definition of boiling hot is? If the water is coming through at around 60 ish degrees C, the solution is to use mixer taps...
It can be a symptom of a failing fill valve but seeing as you have the issue from two appliances it's probably not that. High water velocity can also cause it. Turning your stopcock down a little might stop the bang, just reducing the flow rate a little. Could also be caused by high pressure...
Hi guys. I'm trying to identify a toilet model before ordering a seat for a customer. I went to what used to be a Roca stockist (they no longer are) and one of the guys there reckoned it might be "The Gap". I went to the new stockist and the guy there disagreed it was "The Gap" and that he'd...
No, I'm sure he hasn't. I'm going to go take a look in the next couple of days now. I'll check the valves both sides. Good call on the exchanger. That's gas engineer territory though, right? Got to open the case for that.
Thanks.
Hi Folks,
Where is the place to order a Vaillant filling loop, please? I looked around on the net but can't seem to find it as a kit. I'm not doing the job but he wants to know what to buy and replace it himself and asked me where to get one. I said I'd have a mooch. He sent this picture. I...
That is so what I'm looking for. I looked them up and see a 480 litre one. Probably about the right size?
I got thrown by the talk of digging up the road and all the other stuff I got bombarded with unexpectedly.
The cylinders are fed in a plant room. I don't need to worry about the main. The...
Hi Everyone,
For those who like a long read but I could rally do with some advice.
Might be a bit long this. For background. A gardener/landscaping friend of mine is going to install an irrigation system in a customer's garden. He asked me to pop around and measure the pressures and flowrates...
Your wood burner will be an uncontrolled heat source. You will need an open vented system on the wood burner side and a way to control the flow and exchange of heated water. This is done with an open vented store of hot water to be used as a heat exchanger. You can't do this without an...
My pleasure. It's particularly worth noting that testing with air at just 0.5 bar will show pretty much any problem you are looking for. e.g. an open end, a compression fitting not properly tightened, a badly soldered joint, or a badly sealed threaded fitting so no real need to go any higher...
Here is a good overview of the subject with some links to regulations about halfway through, both for UK and US. Worth noting they are saying 0.5 bar max pressure with air here too.
https://constructandcommission.com/pneumatic-pressure-testing/
When I was an apprentice at college, they were air testing a 100mm cement lined steel water main type pipe that was bolted together with compressed o-rings holding everything together. I did not like this at all and despite my protests they went ahead and did it anyway. People standing around...
That's sensible. I do the same. I wouldn't worry too much about the water stored in the cylinder. I have never seen a catastrophic failure of a cylinder as they tend to fail with a very small leak which eventually shows itself. Same with pipework that isn't under mains pressure whilst the...
Worst property damage I ever saw was caused by a central heating circulating pump installed on a secondary return circuit instead of using a bronze pump. The owners went away for a fortnight and at some point the front fell off the pump, the mains was left on and it poured enormous amounts of...