Hi,
I have an ideal logic plus combi boiler that has been working fine for all of winter. With the recent storms when the wind speed starts getting up the boiler keeps cutting out with a "Flame loss" error. It'll reignite first time no problem and then continue until a large wind gust then it'll cut out again.
If I watch the flue outside whilst this is happening in cold weather so you can see the gasses I notice the following:
Normal: Flue gasses expelled away from flue and upwards
Second or two before flame loss error: Flue glasses are blown back and down towards the bottom part of the flue
Here's a picture of the flue I've got an what seems to be happening in windy weather (excuse the bad drawing!)
I'm not an expert but it looks like it's getting the flue gasses sucked back into the air inlet? Would this cause the boiler to cut out? If I get an engineer out is there some part he can fit over the flue to fix the problem (assuming it is the problem) or will he just say it's bad positioning of the flue and tough?
Thanks,
Tom
I have an ideal logic plus combi boiler that has been working fine for all of winter. With the recent storms when the wind speed starts getting up the boiler keeps cutting out with a "Flame loss" error. It'll reignite first time no problem and then continue until a large wind gust then it'll cut out again.
If I watch the flue outside whilst this is happening in cold weather so you can see the gasses I notice the following:
Normal: Flue gasses expelled away from flue and upwards
Second or two before flame loss error: Flue glasses are blown back and down towards the bottom part of the flue
Here's a picture of the flue I've got an what seems to be happening in windy weather (excuse the bad drawing!)
I'm not an expert but it looks like it's getting the flue gasses sucked back into the air inlet? Would this cause the boiler to cut out? If I get an engineer out is there some part he can fit over the flue to fix the problem (assuming it is the problem) or will he just say it's bad positioning of the flue and tough?
Thanks,
Tom