Spinny Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago Not been able to get all 4 downstairs Rads running at full temperature. I have 4 new rads that were installed downstairs as part of our new heating system using plastic press fit pipework (copper upright stems). Two modern panel type radiators - one medium - one small, and then two old fashioned style column radiators - one 4 column medium size, one 3 column medium size. Builders plumber came 3 times to rebalance them and couldn't get tham all fully up to temp, eventually resorting to going behind my back to turn the boiler temp up to 65C and then claiming he had fixed it (not). Have had suggestions it is likely a pipework/flow problem and column rads take more flow to drive them. Replacing all the pipework not an attractive option as much of it is now under glued down boarding. I do have two lengths of empty conduit going back under the floor to the boiler location that were put in in case of future desire to extend the underfloor heating. So if an additional pipe loop was created via this conduit to take a column rad off the current loop, and put it on a second loop of its own - is this going to provide a solution to the problem ?
John Carroll Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago (edited) Some column rads must have the flow at one particular end because they may have a flow diverter, they may have a arrow somewhere, if not you could try one of these, of suitable length, it force the water up through one column, it will then flow down equally through the remaining 2 or 3 columns. Are they (column) hot along the bottom and cool along the top??. Edited 8 hours ago by John Carroll
marshian Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 1 hour ago, John Carroll said: Some column rads must have the flow at one particular end because they may have a flow diverter, they may have a arrow somewhere, if not you could try one of these, of suitable length, it force the water up through one column, it will then flow down equally through the remaining 2 or 3 columns. Are they (column) hot along the bottom and cool along the top??. Just a word of warning on the diverters above - if you are running TRV's on the majority of the rads when TRV's shut down it is possible to invert the diverters above - no need to ask me how I know this!!!
SimonD Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 1 hour ago, marshian said: Just a word of warning on the diverters above - if you are running TRV's on the majority of the rads when TRV's shut down it is possible to invert the diverters above - no need to ask me how I know this!!! PITRVs are your friend here. I don't know why more people don't use them, but both Screwfix and Toolstation now stock and sell the Danfoss ones - great for gas systems but less so for really low temp heat pump systems with very large radiators 5 hours ago, Spinny said: Have had suggestions it is likely a pipework/flow problem and column rads take more flow to drive them. . Flow rate is more linked to the difference in temperature between flow and return. As highlighted above, the problem is that many column rads don't have baffles so you get flow straight through the radiator if the valves are both at the bottom of the rad. This then provides a bypass through the system. I still get customers who ignore me when I tell them to make sure they're baffled when they order them. Better then to connect them up top-bottom-opposite-ends, but sometimes not pretty. The thing to do is get some cheap clip on pipe thermostats to measure the actual flow/return temps, but first you could test by shutting down your trvs upstairs to see if the temps of these new rads is better. That'll tell us a bit more.
John Carroll Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago (edited) Measuring flow/return temps is generally OK also for calculating rad outputs as long as the plumbing is done correctly, I assisted someone with a HIU system who not only was being overcharged by ~ 30% but was also not getting the required rad output, the heating engineer who came to investigate it insisted that the BTOE system was fine and would work just like TBOE and of course he used the flow+return measurements to "prove" it, to disprove it I piped one of my own rads, below, using both methods, they then plumbed up the system correctly. Edited 3 hours ago by John Carroll
SimonD Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 4 minutes ago, John Carroll said: BTOE system Isn't that a bit like plumbing in a heat exchanger the wrong way round?
John Carroll Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago I must confess that I thought at first that it might work, if one thinks that a BOE works so well even though one might think that in a pumped system that the hot water might just go straight out the opposite bottom end.
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