Guest viewing is limited

Welcome to the forum. Although you can post in any forum, the USA forum is here in case of local regs or laws

View the thread, titled "boiler losing pressure" which is posted in Boiler Advice Forum on UK Plumbers Forums.

Status
Not open for further replies.
D

Darchy11

Hiya
We live in a new build, 3 year old house and have an ideal logic boiler, obviously 3 years old too.

over the last 5 weeks it has lost pressure 12 times and have had to re pressurise the system ourselves.

the first time sse came to inspect they re pressurised the system and checked radiators, the second time they changed a small valve and changed the water ( right hand side of boiler) after losing pressure another 5 times in 2 weeks (still 12 times in 5 weeks) they came to inspect again today.

there is no water escaping outside ( we put a bag over the outside valve and its collected nothing )

they said today that its a leak and they need to come back friday to put some sealant in the system that usually works.

the problem is so speradic, sometimes it will go in the morning, then the afternoon then overnight and sometimes it will be ok for 1 day and other times 3 days.

our main problem is the 'you have a leak' statement. there is absolutely no water or damp anywhere in the house, absolutely nowhere.
so if it is a leak, and it has been leaking for at least 5 weeks and lost enough water to re pressurize 12 times, where is all the water and secondly if it isnt a leak what could it be? looking for some help to throw back at the sse guy on friday ad i am not a plumber!!
 
Depending on the size of your system the leak (or drop in pressure) will in the real world only be a very small amount of water, maybe as little as a cup full which may or may not show.
I would advise against the leak seal additive as this can cause problems with some parts of the system. The better answer would be to check as many joints as possible, hard as it seems better to lift floors and roll back carpets then add carp to "patch" a problem.
 
If you've got a bag over the prv (overflow) it's definatly a leak. It could be internal on the boiler, leaking out through the condensate drain.
 
Hiya
We live in a new build, 3 year old house and have an ideal logic boiler, obviously 3 years old too.

over the last 5 weeks it has lost pressure 12 times and have had to re pressurise the system ourselves.

the first time sse came to inspect they re pressurised the system and checked radiators, the second time they changed a small valve and changed the water ( right hand side of boiler) after losing pressure another 5 times in 2 weeks (still 12 times in 5 weeks) they came to inspect again today.

there is no water escaping outside ( we put a bag over the outside valve and its collected nothing )

they said today that its a leak and they need to come back friday to put some sealant in the system that usually works.

the problem is so speradic, sometimes it will go in the morning, then the afternoon then overnight and sometimes it will be ok for 1 day and other times 3 days.

our main problem is the 'you have a leak' statement. there is absolutely no water or damp anywhere in the house, absolutely nowhere.
so if it is a leak, and it has been leaking for at least 5 weeks and lost enough water to re pressurize 12 times, where is all the water and secondly if it isnt a leak what could it be? looking for some help to throw back at the sse guy on friday ad i am not a plumber!!

what ever happens,do not let them put leak sealer in the system,which BTW is what there looking at doing,this is not recommended at all ,especially if you have a combi
 
Leak sealer can block the water ways within the boiler so best avoided, in some instances the boiler can leak internally but that's something for your GSR engineer to check.

It it could be something as simple as a rad valve leaking, it's generally not a lot of water.
 
Have they isolated the boiler to see if the pressure drop is on the boiler or system? Have heard of a few failed heat exchangers on logics recently.

if on pipe work under your floor it may not show if they have insulated between floors. Some new builds they put a layer of fibreglass between the joists and this would soak up a lot of water before it would show through the plasterboard ceiling below.

I agree leak sealer is not what you want to be using. Find the leak.
 
Last edited:
As above ^^^^^


I recently had ideal out to my daughters logic, turned out it was the heat exchanger, just within warrenty
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Official Sponsors of Plumbers Talk

Reply to the thread, titled "boiler losing pressure" which is posted in Boiler Advice Forum on Plumbers Forums.

We recommend City Plumbing Supplies, BES, and Plumbing Superstore for all plumbing supplies.

Weekly or Monthly Email Digest

Back
Top