Hi,
We have a problem at home with water coming from overflow pipe from the cold water tank in the loft. Now i know the most common fault is the valve but its not this as its been replaced and i've seen it for myself that the valve is shut but water still overflowing out. I have done some research myself, coming from a non plumbing background and i wondered if i could have some opinions if i list the facts of what i know so far.....
-We have had a new mixer shower fitted 3 years ago and the problem has started since this
- The cold feed is mains and hot is gravity fed
- It doesn't happen in the winter when we have all radiators on. In warmer months we turn rads upstairs off, this is when the problem starts. (very old system and when hot water is on, the rads upstairs heat up)
- The mixer shower makes a constant humming noise when not in use.
- Overflow leaks all times of the day and all night until water starts getting used in the morning.
- Water in cold water tank in loft is luke warm
From my own research it seems that hot water is being returned from the mixer shower due to pressure imbalance and then sent up to cold water tank? I have read that there is a valve that can be fitted to prevent this from happening? A non return valve? What i don't understand is that if the valve doesn't let the water return, then will it have a detrimental effect elsewhere in the system as the problem of pressure imbalance will still exist but yet the valve will not allow the water to return to the tank? I have also read that a pump may help as by equaling the hot water pressure with the cold will solve the problem?
what i want to avoid is two things. Firstly the pressure from shower is minimal. We don't want to loose any pressure. Secondly, we don't want a sticky plaster fix. We have done this with things in the past and learnt our lesson that we have then had to spend further money in the future, costing more overall rather than an initial outlay at the very start.
Would really appreciate your opinions and advise. Naturally we will be getting a plumber to do the job but i want to go into this with some knowledge rather than having someone come round and telling me the only choice is a whole new system. If this is genuinely the case then so be it but i want to be sure. Thank you in advance.
We have a problem at home with water coming from overflow pipe from the cold water tank in the loft. Now i know the most common fault is the valve but its not this as its been replaced and i've seen it for myself that the valve is shut but water still overflowing out. I have done some research myself, coming from a non plumbing background and i wondered if i could have some opinions if i list the facts of what i know so far.....
-We have had a new mixer shower fitted 3 years ago and the problem has started since this
- The cold feed is mains and hot is gravity fed
- It doesn't happen in the winter when we have all radiators on. In warmer months we turn rads upstairs off, this is when the problem starts. (very old system and when hot water is on, the rads upstairs heat up)
- The mixer shower makes a constant humming noise when not in use.
- Overflow leaks all times of the day and all night until water starts getting used in the morning.
- Water in cold water tank in loft is luke warm
From my own research it seems that hot water is being returned from the mixer shower due to pressure imbalance and then sent up to cold water tank? I have read that there is a valve that can be fitted to prevent this from happening? A non return valve? What i don't understand is that if the valve doesn't let the water return, then will it have a detrimental effect elsewhere in the system as the problem of pressure imbalance will still exist but yet the valve will not allow the water to return to the tank? I have also read that a pump may help as by equaling the hot water pressure with the cold will solve the problem?
what i want to avoid is two things. Firstly the pressure from shower is minimal. We don't want to loose any pressure. Secondly, we don't want a sticky plaster fix. We have done this with things in the past and learnt our lesson that we have then had to spend further money in the future, costing more overall rather than an initial outlay at the very start.
Would really appreciate your opinions and advise. Naturally we will be getting a plumber to do the job but i want to go into this with some knowledge rather than having someone come round and telling me the only choice is a whole new system. If this is genuinely the case then so be it but i want to be sure. Thank you in advance.