L
LesE
Recently bought a house which may well have a central heating system cobbled together from two earlier systems. I know that the system originally had a back boiler off the living room fire which was removed and a new oil fired boiler was fitted in a different location at a later date. All of the downstairs rads work fine but there is little heat upstairs. I have tried bleeding all the upstairs rads to no avail.
The boiler is on the ground floor with a pump close by that is fitted on the inlet to the boiler i.e. on the side that draws the cool water from the system back into the boiler.The hot water from the boiler goes straight up to the first floor where it branches off to the hot water cylinder and then goes immediately down through the central wall to underneath the ground floor where it feeds the downstairs rads. Mid way along the pipes under the ground floor a branch comes off and goes back upstairs to feed the upstairs rads where the pipework ends up within a couple of feet of (but not joined to) the initial feed from the boiler! It seems to me that there is perhaps not enough pressure to force the hot water back upstairs as well as feeding the downstairs rads.
There is a second pump under the ground floor on the hot (out) pipe where it comes down from the first floor before it feeds any of the rads but it is not working. There is an electric connection to this pump but it is not live (the feed may well have been accidentally disconnected when the kitchen was rewired). Testing the pump with a separate feed, however, indicates that the pump itself is dead. Now I am not sure if this pump is intended to be part of the current system or whether it is a remnant of an earlier system that has been deliberately disconnected. My first question is - if I replace this pump and wire it up to the CH controller so that it operates alongside the present working pump, is that likely to provide enough boost in flow to feed the upstairs rads?
If the above is not an answer (or sensible) would it be possible to put a tee junction on the 22mm pipes to/from the boiler to the pipes on the upstairs rads (which as I have said are within a couple of feet) and then close off the feed to upstairs that runs from under the ground floor? My concern with this is that I might end up reversing the situation i.e. having full heat upstairs and little heat downstairs.
Any advice?
The boiler is on the ground floor with a pump close by that is fitted on the inlet to the boiler i.e. on the side that draws the cool water from the system back into the boiler.The hot water from the boiler goes straight up to the first floor where it branches off to the hot water cylinder and then goes immediately down through the central wall to underneath the ground floor where it feeds the downstairs rads. Mid way along the pipes under the ground floor a branch comes off and goes back upstairs to feed the upstairs rads where the pipework ends up within a couple of feet of (but not joined to) the initial feed from the boiler! It seems to me that there is perhaps not enough pressure to force the hot water back upstairs as well as feeding the downstairs rads.
There is a second pump under the ground floor on the hot (out) pipe where it comes down from the first floor before it feeds any of the rads but it is not working. There is an electric connection to this pump but it is not live (the feed may well have been accidentally disconnected when the kitchen was rewired). Testing the pump with a separate feed, however, indicates that the pump itself is dead. Now I am not sure if this pump is intended to be part of the current system or whether it is a remnant of an earlier system that has been deliberately disconnected. My first question is - if I replace this pump and wire it up to the CH controller so that it operates alongside the present working pump, is that likely to provide enough boost in flow to feed the upstairs rads?
If the above is not an answer (or sensible) would it be possible to put a tee junction on the 22mm pipes to/from the boiler to the pipes on the upstairs rads (which as I have said are within a couple of feet) and then close off the feed to upstairs that runs from under the ground floor? My concern with this is that I might end up reversing the situation i.e. having full heat upstairs and little heat downstairs.
Any advice?