As ask'd B4 have you check'd the filter in the left hand hydro block, diverter valve & motor ? has this other engineer added this other chemical yet ? I still think this is where the problem could be !
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There aren't any chemicals that I'm aware of that act as an inhibitor and a cleanser. These are two different chemicals. You can't leave cleanser in for five years! You have to use system cleanser( the stuff that breaks down the crud) flush it out and then add inhibitor. So no it doesn't sound right. At the risk of repeating myself get a gas safe engineer on your boiler, it's illegal to do it yourself.Update - in the words of my tenant;
"The previous engineer did all the right things with regards to the power flush and all the other bits but he wouldn't go down the route of replacing the rads just yet, that would be an absolute last resort. He uses a chemical which breaks down the bits in the system and also acts as an inhibitor to stop any corrosion. It doesn't need flushing out the chemical stays in the system for about 5 years. He said if the rads weren't leaking after the power flush then there probably isn't anything wrong with them."
Does this sound about right?
Update - in the words of my tenant;
"The previous engineer did all the right things with regards to the power flush and all the other bits but he wouldn't go down the route of replacing the rads just yet, that would be an absolute last resort. He uses a chemical which breaks down the bits in the system and also acts as an inhibitor to stop any corrosion. It doesn't need flushing out the chemical stays in the system for about 5 years. He said if the rads weren't leaking after the power flush then there probably isn't anything wrong with them."
Does this sound about right?
its sounds to me it defo could be ur divertervalve or maybe even ur pumpI thought it was a problem with the heat exchanger? Is it that the radiators are blocked instead? I'm confused now maybe I missed an important post...
its sounds to me it defo could be ur divertervalve or maybe even ur pump
I have seen rads on a sealed system start to corrode after less than 5 years with no chemical treatment! Thing with a powerflush is they pull all the crap through the boiler and if the hex is of small diameter it gets stuck! IMO manually flushing the rads is far better than any powerflush. All that needs to happen now is the system needs draining and the filter needs cleaning, then it needs filling back up and draining again but leave filling loop open until the water starts to run clear, failing that i'd think about disconnecting the heating pipes to the boiler and getting a wet vac on it to try and pull the crap out. Once it has been cleared i'd recommend manually flushing all the rads then leaving a sludge remover in the system for a few days then flush again and leave filling loop open to remove all the sludge removing chemical then fill back up with some inhibitor. BTW the power flush clearly hasn't worked as the whole point is to have a clean system when completed.
There aren't any chemicals that I'm aware of that act as an inhibitor and a cleanser. These are two different chemicals. You can't leave cleanser in for five years! You have to use system cleanser( the stuff that breaks down the crud) flush it out and then add inhibitor. So no it doesn't sound right. At the risk of repeating myself get a gas safe engineer on your boiler, it's illegal to do it yourself.
As already stated get a gse that knows what they're doing to diagnose it.
Reply to the thread, titled "Problems after power flush" which is posted in UK Plumbers Forums on Plumbers Forums.
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