Install the app
How to install the app on iOS

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.

Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

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

Feb 4, 2019
14
4
3
Member Type
DIY or Homeowner
Hi,
I have a Gledhill Boilermate 2000 system installed in my house which seems to have a fault. The local plumber that I have looking at it is wanting to replace the whole system which I am not sure is necessary. He has suggested that I contact Gledhill Technical support but at £1.50 per minute to speak to them I would rather not! I was hoping someone here could could suggest a possible cause of the issues so that I can point him in the right direction.

The heating is working fine, the issue is with the hot water. There are 2 showers and a bath in the property and the hot water from all of them turns cold briefly regularly during use.

With the shower running what is happening is the DHW pump in the Boilermate 2000 is turning off briefly every couple of minutes (or less). With the front panel off of the Boilermate 2000 I can hear the pump turn off, the LED bar 3 on the display turns off briefly (a few seconds) then the pump starts again. That bar on the LED display indicates if the pump is running or not.

Pressing SW2 on the control board so the display show the DHW Outlet temperature, it rises up to between 50-55 degrees, the pump stops, temperature drops and then the pump starts and temperature rises again. Occasionally what happens is the display reads around 52 degrees, the pump stops and the temperature on the display jumps to 85 degrees and then immediately back down to 52 and drops before the pump starts again.

There are occasionally times where it just works normally, when it does then the temperature of the DHW outlet is a steady 54 degrees and the pump keeps running.

Can you offer any suggestions as the where the problem is ie Faulty control board, pump, temperature sensor or heat exchanger?

Thanks in advance!
 
I think the problem was he didn't want me to have the expense of replacing parts randomly without knowing what part was faulty. Apparently it could be a number of things.
 
Better plumber it is!
Honestly mate...Fault finding is my thing! I can tell you I have absolutely no idea about boiler mates, but if I came to look at yours it would be fixed in 2 visits.
It’s knowing what to test, how to test it, reading and understanding the manual and speaking to manufacturer.
Of course once you identify what your fault actually is you need to work out if it’s financially worth while to fix.
Good luck my friend 🙂
 
You need an engineer that has worked on gledhill before mate. Google it. There should be some out there somewhere.
 
  • Like
Reactions: zzzjim
Honestly mate...Fault finding is my thing! I can tell you I have absolutely no idea about boiler mates, but if I came to look at yours it would be fixed in 2 visits.
It’s knowing what to test, how to test it, reading and understanding the manual and speaking to manufacturer.
Of course once you identify what your fault actually is you need to work out if it’s financially worth while to fix.
Good luck my friend 🙂
Just remember to turn off the 2nd live if it has one.😉😉
 
No seriously in this case my guess would be limescale in the DHW heat ex/coil....If that’s the case rip it out and start again would be best 🙂
I spoke to someone who seems to know a lot about this model. His thinking is if the temperature at the heat exchanger is occasionally saying 85 degrees which is not possible if the max temp of the store is 70 then it may be a faulty thermistor on the heat exchanger. It is only 20 quid and easy to replace so will give it a go and then maybe swap the heat exchanger or the main board if it doesn't fix it.
If it is reading 85 degrees then the controller would shut off the pump to let it cool down. Sounds plausible...
 
  • Like
Reactions: dan_the_plumber
I spoke to someone who seems to know a lot about this model. His thinking is if the temperature at the heat exchanger is occasionally saying 85 degrees which is not possible if the max temp of the store is 70 then it may be a faulty thermistor on the heat exchanger. It is only 20 quid and easy to replace so will give it a go and then maybe swap the heat exchanger or the main board if it doesn't fix it.
If it is reading 85 degrees then the controller would shut off the pump to let it cool down. Sounds plausible...
Tell him to change both.

Edit as this should have said both sensors. It sounded like I meant all parts mentioned, but I didn’t.
 
Last edited:

Official Sponsors of Plumbers Talk

Similar plumbing topics

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