A
alan_james
Hi, I searched the forum and couldn't find this issue discussed before, sorry if it was.
I got a new (Sime) gas boiler (with expansion vessel/auto-fill) water central heating system plumbed in 7 years ago to an old 3 storey Georgian terraced house I renovated. It's a mixture of some 100 year old cast-iron rads from a salvage yard and regular steel new ones, 14 in total, done with qualpex pipes and copper running into the rads, boiler etc.
The system worked fine, despite me not trusting the plumbers (they were comedy of errors at times, I had to tighten lots of joints to stop leaks they left behind, etc.). Also against their better judgement I found the old rads worked great, get very hot and stay hot long after the heat is off.
Anyway, long story short, some of the rads are getting blocked with sludge or rust or whatever. As far as I know there was nothing added to the water to prevent this. On some of the top floor (new, steel) rads, if i need to bleed them for air any water that leaks is black. I can dislodge the blockage by ramping the heat up and turning off all rads except the blocked one, the heat/pressure seems to move the sludge, but eventually it happens again.
So, does the system need to be physically "blown out" to clear all this, or can water additives do it? I can do some small plumbing work myself (I moved & re-piped a couple of rads etc.), but not pressure-blowing the whole system or whatever. Are there choices between cheap DIY and professional expensive options? Money is tight these days! ;-)
What do you think?
Thanks,
Alan
I got a new (Sime) gas boiler (with expansion vessel/auto-fill) water central heating system plumbed in 7 years ago to an old 3 storey Georgian terraced house I renovated. It's a mixture of some 100 year old cast-iron rads from a salvage yard and regular steel new ones, 14 in total, done with qualpex pipes and copper running into the rads, boiler etc.
The system worked fine, despite me not trusting the plumbers (they were comedy of errors at times, I had to tighten lots of joints to stop leaks they left behind, etc.). Also against their better judgement I found the old rads worked great, get very hot and stay hot long after the heat is off.
Anyway, long story short, some of the rads are getting blocked with sludge or rust or whatever. As far as I know there was nothing added to the water to prevent this. On some of the top floor (new, steel) rads, if i need to bleed them for air any water that leaks is black. I can dislodge the blockage by ramping the heat up and turning off all rads except the blocked one, the heat/pressure seems to move the sludge, but eventually it happens again.
So, does the system need to be physically "blown out" to clear all this, or can water additives do it? I can do some small plumbing work myself (I moved & re-piped a couple of rads etc.), but not pressure-blowing the whole system or whatever. Are there choices between cheap DIY and professional expensive options? Money is tight these days! ;-)
What do you think?
Thanks,
Alan