The central heating system (Valliant Ecomax 622, 8 large double radiators) had been losing pressure for several months and I'd been topping it up every other day during the cold periods, but it hardly needed it when the heating was off for a while. The radiators had been making 'tinkling' sounds - maybe some debris was floating around the system, and the boiler (in the loft of a bungalow) had been making droning sounds for quite a while, worse when the boiler shut off and the pump kept running.
The system has obviously been leaking somewhere to cause the pressure drop but there's been no sign of it anywhere. The pipework is under concrete so maybe it was leaking without trace. The guy who services the boiler suggested a leak tracing company, etc, etc, but that was a very last resort as it meant digging up the floors.
Everything was working ok, hot radiators and plenty of hot water. Then a few days ago only the radiators at the start of the system were hot whilst those at the extremities were stone cold. After a few hours the ones at the end of system were slightly warm and it all stayed that way even though the boiler was set to 80deg. The room stat was set at 24 but it never reached that temperature so the boiler was running continuously. Feed to the hot water cylinder (tank stat set to 65) was too hot to touch and the water coming out was hot, but nowhere near as hot as the water going in. I suspected the pump may be faulty and gravity alone was allowing some rads to get hot but not others, so I called in an engineer.
He too diagnosed a pump problem and fitted a new one. That made the situation even worse as there was hardly any heat arriving at the nearest radiators or the hot water cylinder. He partially drained the system, thinking it may be an airlock, but still no good. So he re-fitted the original pump and the system was restored to how it was before he changed the pump.
He now suggests the heat exchanger in the boiler may be blocked and a new boiler is the answer.
Could a blocked heat exchanger reduce the flow enough to stop the radiators at the end of the line from warming up? It sort of makes sense that the heat exchanger has expired given the leak and the 'tinkling' sounds, doesn't it? I'm hesitant to spend new boiler money if that isn't the cause.
The system has obviously been leaking somewhere to cause the pressure drop but there's been no sign of it anywhere. The pipework is under concrete so maybe it was leaking without trace. The guy who services the boiler suggested a leak tracing company, etc, etc, but that was a very last resort as it meant digging up the floors.
Everything was working ok, hot radiators and plenty of hot water. Then a few days ago only the radiators at the start of the system were hot whilst those at the extremities were stone cold. After a few hours the ones at the end of system were slightly warm and it all stayed that way even though the boiler was set to 80deg. The room stat was set at 24 but it never reached that temperature so the boiler was running continuously. Feed to the hot water cylinder (tank stat set to 65) was too hot to touch and the water coming out was hot, but nowhere near as hot as the water going in. I suspected the pump may be faulty and gravity alone was allowing some rads to get hot but not others, so I called in an engineer.
He too diagnosed a pump problem and fitted a new one. That made the situation even worse as there was hardly any heat arriving at the nearest radiators or the hot water cylinder. He partially drained the system, thinking it may be an airlock, but still no good. So he re-fitted the original pump and the system was restored to how it was before he changed the pump.
He now suggests the heat exchanger in the boiler may be blocked and a new boiler is the answer.
Could a blocked heat exchanger reduce the flow enough to stop the radiators at the end of the line from warming up? It sort of makes sense that the heat exchanger has expired given the leak and the 'tinkling' sounds, doesn't it? I'm hesitant to spend new boiler money if that isn't the cause.