D
daGigsta
Please excuse my text formatting as I have just copied and pasted below from some notes to myself and it has formatted like this which I can't seem to change or indeed make any formatting adjustments or even start new para's. I have just removed a leaking direct vented cylinder heated from a Johnson & Starley Janus 3 (a dedicated 62.5l/m side boiler fitted to a J&S hot air CH system). I assumed this had to be a direct cylinder as there are no F&E connections to the boiler and it obviously takes its water direct from the cylinder. Having removed the cylinder it wasn’tat all what I expected to see through the boiler side connection points.
Something was in there butdefinitely not a coil, it looked more like another cylinder wall.
The only way to check was to cutthe cylinder open.
What I found was a strange set upof three close piped cylinders, each different, which I have never seen before. I have nowworked out what it does, but am not convinced of its necessity!
The taller front (140mmOD) cylinder is open at each end with a double skin forming a 10mm wide sealed outerjacket which the boiler connections enter, and an expansion pipe flowing directlyfrom this back into the main cylinder.Water feeds into the jacket througha bottom piped connection from the closed (150mm OD) second cylinder which is fed from a top entry connection to the (150mm OD) thirdcylinder at its side, the bottom of which is open to allow water flowfrom the main cylinder.
This weird (to me anyway) andwonderful arrangement clearly allows cold water to syphon through the first twocylinders into the water jacket of the larger cylinder and then through theboiler returning to the jacket as hot water, which then indirectly heats the main cylinder water.
Effectively this is a direct cylindersystem with these three internal cylinders creating a sort of self-primingindirect boiler heating circuit that uses the main cylinder as its F&Etank!!!
I assume this is intended toreduce corrosion/calcification due to fresh oxygenated water continually flowing through theboiler heating circuit by making it a relatively closed circuit after itsinitial priming.
Although this has worked well for20+ years I doubt that it is a standard fitting, so must now decide to go witheither:
a) A direct cylinder, and risk corrosion/calcification of the heating circuit
or
b) An indirect cylinder, and install a small F&E tank justabove the boiler
I would welcome any/all comments/suggestions. My thanks in anticipation, John (blame my Username on the grandchildren)
Something was in there butdefinitely not a coil, it looked more like another cylinder wall.
The only way to check was to cutthe cylinder open.
What I found was a strange set upof three close piped cylinders, each different, which I have never seen before. I have nowworked out what it does, but am not convinced of its necessity!
The taller front (140mmOD) cylinder is open at each end with a double skin forming a 10mm wide sealed outerjacket which the boiler connections enter, and an expansion pipe flowing directlyfrom this back into the main cylinder.Water feeds into the jacket througha bottom piped connection from the closed (150mm OD) second cylinder which is fed from a top entry connection to the (150mm OD) thirdcylinder at its side, the bottom of which is open to allow water flowfrom the main cylinder.
This weird (to me anyway) andwonderful arrangement clearly allows cold water to syphon through the first twocylinders into the water jacket of the larger cylinder and then through theboiler returning to the jacket as hot water, which then indirectly heats the main cylinder water.
Effectively this is a direct cylindersystem with these three internal cylinders creating a sort of self-primingindirect boiler heating circuit that uses the main cylinder as its F&Etank!!!
I assume this is intended toreduce corrosion/calcification due to fresh oxygenated water continually flowing through theboiler heating circuit by making it a relatively closed circuit after itsinitial priming.
Although this has worked well for20+ years I doubt that it is a standard fitting, so must now decide to go witheither:
a) A direct cylinder, and risk corrosion/calcification of the heating circuit
or
b) An indirect cylinder, and install a small F&E tank justabove the boiler
I would welcome any/all comments/suggestions. My thanks in anticipation, John (blame my Username on the grandchildren)