M
monkeyalan
Hi guys,
First post.
I have a Worcester greenstar junior 26cdi - something like that. Anyway, a few times in this winter and last it has packed up - heating engineer came out, said it was the condensate pipe freezing, unthawed it - dried out the dampness that got inside from where the water had backed up, fired it up - all worked fine. Rinse and repeat a few times here and there.
After it happened again and i was confident I could do the same thing - the next time it happened (Start of December) - i turned off the power to the thing, took the front off, disconnected the condensate pipe from under the boiler and stuck a 2 litre jug under it - dried out the damp bits inside the boiler again, fired it up - it worked!
So now, I have the condensate draining into a jug, which I have to empty every day, obviously. Problem solved.
But no - I keep getting a tiny bit of water inside the boiler housing - there is a very slight "groove" that runs from the circular black plastic/rubber housing (Please dont laugh too much at the terminology I use 😉) over towards where this little electrical connection is, which I think connects the gas valve? - anyway, water gets onto that little channel/groove and eventually, the boiler safety kicks in and stops it firing.
So, I dry this out, turn it all back on and it fires again.
Back in August - the same heating engineer came out and said that because of the "sideways" driving rain, moisture had got in through the flue, into the boiler, causing the damp.
The question I have is - is this same thing happening? At night, I flick the temperature right down so that it's off for 3 or 4 hours, before coming back on in the early hours - could ice/frost form inside the flue? My kitchen is also quite cold over night - so could condensation be occuring for that reason? These problems have ONLY occurred due to weird and wonderful whether - be it rain or most common - sub-zero conditions.
Any ideas welcome - obviously now it's NOT the frozen pipe causing the problem, but there is some dampness getting into the system and it appears to be collecting at the bottom of the circular black plastic thing, which appears to come straight down from where the flue is joined to the wall.
Initially, everything was fine - but the last 2 days i've had to dry this dampness twice - it is literally just 1/4 of a teaspoon of water, hardly any, but it only takes a drop.....
One more thing - the boiler was serviced less than 4 weeks ago - everything fine and working well.
Cheers
First post.
I have a Worcester greenstar junior 26cdi - something like that. Anyway, a few times in this winter and last it has packed up - heating engineer came out, said it was the condensate pipe freezing, unthawed it - dried out the dampness that got inside from where the water had backed up, fired it up - all worked fine. Rinse and repeat a few times here and there.
After it happened again and i was confident I could do the same thing - the next time it happened (Start of December) - i turned off the power to the thing, took the front off, disconnected the condensate pipe from under the boiler and stuck a 2 litre jug under it - dried out the damp bits inside the boiler again, fired it up - it worked!
So now, I have the condensate draining into a jug, which I have to empty every day, obviously. Problem solved.
But no - I keep getting a tiny bit of water inside the boiler housing - there is a very slight "groove" that runs from the circular black plastic/rubber housing (Please dont laugh too much at the terminology I use 😉) over towards where this little electrical connection is, which I think connects the gas valve? - anyway, water gets onto that little channel/groove and eventually, the boiler safety kicks in and stops it firing.
So, I dry this out, turn it all back on and it fires again.
Back in August - the same heating engineer came out and said that because of the "sideways" driving rain, moisture had got in through the flue, into the boiler, causing the damp.
The question I have is - is this same thing happening? At night, I flick the temperature right down so that it's off for 3 or 4 hours, before coming back on in the early hours - could ice/frost form inside the flue? My kitchen is also quite cold over night - so could condensation be occuring for that reason? These problems have ONLY occurred due to weird and wonderful whether - be it rain or most common - sub-zero conditions.
Any ideas welcome - obviously now it's NOT the frozen pipe causing the problem, but there is some dampness getting into the system and it appears to be collecting at the bottom of the circular black plastic thing, which appears to come straight down from where the flue is joined to the wall.
Initially, everything was fine - but the last 2 days i've had to dry this dampness twice - it is literally just 1/4 of a teaspoon of water, hardly any, but it only takes a drop.....
One more thing - the boiler was serviced less than 4 weeks ago - everything fine and working well.
Cheers
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