1) If a radiator no longer gets hot at all (whole rad, valves and pipework all remain cold) can it still be a faulty valve rather than a blockage? Say for reasons (including but not limited to) like the rad had been added to the original system and the feed and return pipes go off at quite a tangent? Or if they travel away from the main circuit for quite a distance - maybe to an extension or annex? In these circumstances, if the TRV fails, is it possible that hot water may not circulate as far as faulty TRV and therefore all pipework remains cold? Or would you be thinking blockage or air lock. Rad is bled.
2) If the pin on a TRV can be pushed down and pushes itself back up quite freely can it still be faulty and not allowing rad the get hot?
3) If you remove the head from a functioning TRV does it become a valve that is just fully open?
4) If a rad doesn't get very hot, it's valves are a wheelhead and a lockshield, the customer mentions the rad had been removed for work by decorators and replaced and she thinks it might have been after that that it stopped working, both valves are turned to where they at least feel fully open and when the heating is on the pipework and valve get hot as far as the lockshield, the rad gets lukewarm all over but the wheelhead valve and attatched pipework remains cold would you be relatively confident that changing the wheelhead valve would sort it or would you suspect there may be a blockage (presuming there was no drain down and so unlikely non-multi-directional valve replaced on return by accident - can wheelehead valves be directional?..)?
5) If you think there might be a blockage, would you go straight to a full drain-down or would you try and run a valve into a bucket via a hose for a bit?
6) If both valves on a rad, tried individually, allow water to pass through, can there still be a reduction in flow - caused by blockage or air - significant enough that you may not perceive it but can prevent rad from getting hot? Or if they allow water through at a decent rate does that eliminate the possibility of a blockage or air?
2) If the pin on a TRV can be pushed down and pushes itself back up quite freely can it still be faulty and not allowing rad the get hot?
3) If you remove the head from a functioning TRV does it become a valve that is just fully open?
4) If a rad doesn't get very hot, it's valves are a wheelhead and a lockshield, the customer mentions the rad had been removed for work by decorators and replaced and she thinks it might have been after that that it stopped working, both valves are turned to where they at least feel fully open and when the heating is on the pipework and valve get hot as far as the lockshield, the rad gets lukewarm all over but the wheelhead valve and attatched pipework remains cold would you be relatively confident that changing the wheelhead valve would sort it or would you suspect there may be a blockage (presuming there was no drain down and so unlikely non-multi-directional valve replaced on return by accident - can wheelehead valves be directional?..)?
5) If you think there might be a blockage, would you go straight to a full drain-down or would you try and run a valve into a bucket via a hose for a bit?
6) If both valves on a rad, tried individually, allow water to pass through, can there still be a reduction in flow - caused by blockage or air - significant enough that you may not perceive it but can prevent rad from getting hot? Or if they allow water through at a decent rate does that eliminate the possibility of a blockage or air?
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