M
mamaleelee
We had a brand new central heating system installed with a combi boiler (worcester bosch) installed just over a year ago.
It was working perfectly.
And then we had some building work done which involved moving one of the radiators to a different wall.
After the radiator was moved, I visited the house (building work still happening) and the central heating was turned on ... while I was there, the boiler made some violent noises for about 5 minutes or so (so loud you couldn't even talk over it).
Then a few weeks ago I tried turning on the central heat (to acclimatise new wood flooring before fitting), and nothing was happening. The Bosch engineer came out, and said the boiler was working perfectly normally, but the thermostat box was dead (power was going to it, but it was showing nothing on the LCD display).
So he took the boiler off the thermostat and fitted a timer to the boiler so that we could run the central heat.
I noticed then that the pressure was at 1 bar, and it seemed to me that it used to be higher than that, so I asked the engineer if the pressure was okay. He said it was fine.
Well, we moved back into our house a few days ago, and hubby noticed that the pressure was on 0 bar! And now all of the radiators are full of air and when I try bleeding the ones upstairs (which were almost completely full of air; only the bottom inch or so was heating up), they bleed till about 4 inches from the top and then stop.
I'm feeling a bit panicked as we have been through a lot of pain to have brand new wood flooring and a new kitchen installed on the main floor, which is where the radiator was moved ... and I'm thinking that when the builder moved the radiator and plumbed it into its new spot on the other side of the room, he may have left a leak ...
I really don't want anyone to go through our brand new floor ...
Any advice?
Is it possible that when the engineer was out, something he did while testing the boiler could have caused what's happening now? Why might the pressure have dropped from 1 bar to 0, since the engineer left?
Thanks in advance for any good advice.
It was working perfectly.
And then we had some building work done which involved moving one of the radiators to a different wall.
After the radiator was moved, I visited the house (building work still happening) and the central heating was turned on ... while I was there, the boiler made some violent noises for about 5 minutes or so (so loud you couldn't even talk over it).
Then a few weeks ago I tried turning on the central heat (to acclimatise new wood flooring before fitting), and nothing was happening. The Bosch engineer came out, and said the boiler was working perfectly normally, but the thermostat box was dead (power was going to it, but it was showing nothing on the LCD display).
So he took the boiler off the thermostat and fitted a timer to the boiler so that we could run the central heat.
I noticed then that the pressure was at 1 bar, and it seemed to me that it used to be higher than that, so I asked the engineer if the pressure was okay. He said it was fine.
Well, we moved back into our house a few days ago, and hubby noticed that the pressure was on 0 bar! And now all of the radiators are full of air and when I try bleeding the ones upstairs (which were almost completely full of air; only the bottom inch or so was heating up), they bleed till about 4 inches from the top and then stop.
I'm feeling a bit panicked as we have been through a lot of pain to have brand new wood flooring and a new kitchen installed on the main floor, which is where the radiator was moved ... and I'm thinking that when the builder moved the radiator and plumbed it into its new spot on the other side of the room, he may have left a leak ...
I really don't want anyone to go through our brand new floor ...
Any advice?
Is it possible that when the engineer was out, something he did while testing the boiler could have caused what's happening now? Why might the pressure have dropped from 1 bar to 0, since the engineer left?
Thanks in advance for any good advice.