carlos21 Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago I have just redone our heating system from open vented to sealed system, everything apart from the radiators was replumbed ( due to renovation). it is an old oil boiler( not combi) I have filled the system to 1bar when cold, but when the system is hot and running the pressure doesn't rise much, is this a problem?? everything seems to be working ok, ie hot water tank is hot , all the rads heat up ok. my thoughts is the expansion vessel is to big (18L) as I didn't really calculate it, I just erred on the big side. is the lack of pressure a problem or would the system function much better with a higher pressure? any thoughts welcome, thanks carl
JohnMo Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 36 minutes ago, carlos21 said: have filled the system to 1bar when cold, but when the system is hot and running the pressure doesn't rise much, is this a problem?? It shouldn't rise too much, if it does that's an issue. Your system will have an expansion vessel this has a rubber bladder in it to absorb the extra water volume. Extra pressure doesn't aid anything, 1 bar is fine. You pressurise to help remove air from the system, any air vents or bottle traps should be opened to release any air a week or so after the start of the system, then closed again.
Nickfromwales Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 38 minutes ago, carlos21 said: I have just redone our heating system from open vented to sealed system, everything apart from the radiators was replumbed ( due to renovation). it is an old oil boiler( not combi) I have filled the system to 1bar when cold, but when the system is hot and running the pressure doesn't rise much, is this a problem?? everything seems to be working ok, ie hot water tank is hot , all the rads heat up ok. my thoughts is the expansion vessel is to big (18L) as I didn't really calculate it, I just erred on the big side. is the lack of pressure a problem or would the system function much better with a higher pressure? any thoughts welcome, thanks carl 18L is a big expansion vessel, so that's just absorbing the expansion and not letting it reflect much in the reading on the pressure gauge. It's all gold mate, as you've done the right thing by over-sizing vs under-sizing, and this will mean you need to top up the pressure as often. My 2 cents is that you can never have too much expansion. Do you know you have to treat the system with inhibitor after these works, to prevent corrosion? Also, do you know you will have to check the system pressure every 3-6 months, or possibly more frequently, as part of switching out from auto-fill from the tanks to regular maintenance of a sealed and pressurised system?
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