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dripdripdrip
Hi, I'm not sure if this should be in plumbing or heating section, so apologies if I have posted in wrong forum
I have 2 cold water storage tanks in loft, & the smaller one, which I understand to be the water supply for a vented heating system, is constantly dripping via the overflow outside the house.
I have had a plumber out, who charged me £75 to replace the ball valve, but within hours, the overflow was dripping again. He eventually came back out, replaced the faulty ball valve for another new one (apparently) & left. Within hours the drip was back. I rang him back up, & he now reckons its a heating engineer I need, & it may be the thermostat set too high?
I have also had my uncle out twice, & a family friend, who whilst not plumbers, understand the basics, who both lowered the water level, bent the arm of ball valve, slightly adjusted the angle of the overflow pipe, and temporarily fixed the dripping. Again, within hours, the drip is back & the water level has risen again.
After the plumber told me it could be the thermostat set too high, I lowered the dial on boiler right down, hey presto, the drip stopped (again, but then provided no hot water!) but within hours was back to its usual self. The ONLY time the overflow does not drip is while the heating is on, or the hot water is being heated.
Can anyone offer any more advice? This is really developing into Japanese water torture, as it has now gone on for weeks, & I'm also concerned about causing damp to the exterior of our home :bigcry:
Many thanks in anticipation
Joanne
I have 2 cold water storage tanks in loft, & the smaller one, which I understand to be the water supply for a vented heating system, is constantly dripping via the overflow outside the house.
I have had a plumber out, who charged me £75 to replace the ball valve, but within hours, the overflow was dripping again. He eventually came back out, replaced the faulty ball valve for another new one (apparently) & left. Within hours the drip was back. I rang him back up, & he now reckons its a heating engineer I need, & it may be the thermostat set too high?
I have also had my uncle out twice, & a family friend, who whilst not plumbers, understand the basics, who both lowered the water level, bent the arm of ball valve, slightly adjusted the angle of the overflow pipe, and temporarily fixed the dripping. Again, within hours, the drip is back & the water level has risen again.
After the plumber told me it could be the thermostat set too high, I lowered the dial on boiler right down, hey presto, the drip stopped (again, but then provided no hot water!) but within hours was back to its usual self. The ONLY time the overflow does not drip is while the heating is on, or the hot water is being heated.
Can anyone offer any more advice? This is really developing into Japanese water torture, as it has now gone on for weeks, & I'm also concerned about causing damp to the exterior of our home :bigcry:
Many thanks in anticipation
Joanne