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View the thread, titled "bathroom towel rail said to be on the hot water circuit" which is posted in Bathroom Advice on UK Plumbers Forums.

E

eddiebrown424

Hi All,

Attended a job today and was informed that the bathroom rail was on the hot water circuit. it is a large communal boiler in a block of flats with no valves or stopcocks in the flat. I tried draining but obviously couldnt without stopping the system filling. There is a pump in the kitchen and both bathroom but no other isolation and I cant even freeze the pipe.

Any ideas

eddie
 
You need to familiarise yourself with the system and what's doing what.
All the flats must be the same, hot water circuit for towel rails. I would try to sort the problem not change over to heating circuit
 
two additional rads have been added (to the heating system) and i work for a company that has instructed me to add the t/rail to the heating circuit. I have been told I cant have access to the boiler room and cant find any risers or valves in the flat to isolate much as I agree with your advice I'm in a bit of a quandry. Should I just not touch it? It may have been something as simple as an air lock in the rad.

thanks again
 
If it is a brass, copper or SS rail it could even be on the hot water supply pipe work. try running a hot tap and see if the rad gets hot.

Are there cylinders in the flats or is the hot water communal?
 
Hi

communal hot water rad does warm up (only two bars, hence airlock suggestion) when the hot water is run.

808 i'd love to be able to isolate it thats the prob:rolleyes2:

how does it work if its of the hot water supply PS it looks like a standard towel rail
 
No different to having a longer run of pipe. Means that it will take longer for the hot water to reach the taps and waste energy but when this sort of thing was done energy wastage wasn't an issue.

To confirm that it it (or isn't) on the hot water supply pipe try turning off the hot feed to the taps. If the taps have stopped running and you still get water out of the air vent on the rad then it isn't on the hot water pipweork and further investigation will be required.
 
Quick sketch to illustrate system I'm referring to.


HW rail by Mike Jackson1, on Flickr

in nearly 40 years of plumbing ive never seen a towel rail connected in that fashion as it wouldnt work towel rails that are on trully hot water circuits are when there is a secondary return to the cylinder this allows the rad to stay hot regardless of a tap being run
most domestic towel rails that people say are on the hot water are actually plumbed in to the primaries to the cylinder
on a communial system they could be piped many ways depending how the syten is run you need to speak to someone who knows the sytem if its not obvious from the lay out in the flat
 
The picture shows hot water out of cylinder though rad to taps ,, is that correct

Yes. Not a particularly good idea as far as I'm concerned but when energy was cheap and hot water plentiful it was done. The towel rail was normally copper or sometimes brass so there wouldn't be any corrosion issues. I've not come across one for years but there are bound to be some out there still. Last one I came across was in Brighton and the towel rail in the Bathroom had rotted out because someone had refurbed the bathroom and fitted a nice new steel towel warmer. Had to fit a new rail and pipe it back to the heating system.
 
that has never been common practice as it wouldnt work

Perhaps I've just been unlucky enough to come across a few systems that have had them in and chatted to some old boys that told me they used to do it a lot. I'm sure I've seen diagrams of it in Treloar as well but I can't find my copy of Treloar.

It works but not very well. But isn't the complaint in this case that the towel rail doesn't work very well anyway. I've also seen in done using a secondary return back to the cylinder which works a lot better but is still very wasteful of hot water.
 
Perhaps I've just been unlucky enough to come across a few systems that have had them in and chatted to some old boys that told me they used to do it a lot. I'm sure I've seen diagrams of it in Treloar as well but I can't find my copy of Treloar.

It works but not very well. But isn't the complaint in this case that the towel rail doesn't work very well anyway. I've also seen in done using a secondary return back to the cylinder which works a lot better but is still very wasteful of hot water.
how could it work it would only get hot if you ran a bath the rest of the week it would be stone cold( in days of old we only bathed once a week ) and youd have to draw of all that cold water to run a tap
i suspect the op hasnt bleed the rad probably cant see the bleed screw hidden in the end
 

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