Why Does My Boiler Keep Losing Pressure?

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  • Опубликовано: 29 май 2022
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    Is your boiler pressure constantly dropping? Roger knows a thing or two about this problem.
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Комментарии • 396

  • @eddr
    @eddr 4 месяца назад +8

    This has got to be one of the best, most informative, well explained, no nonsense videos I’ve ever watched on RUclips. We’re losing pressure somewhere and this has helped me understand much more than I already did with what could possibly be causing it. Well done sir!

  • @gurglejug627
    @gurglejug627 Год назад +51

    Don't be shy/modest about the presentation - it takes loads of skill to present 36 minutes of video with smooth and clear speech and not have to edit it loads - nicely done. Thanks for lots of good info. Sadly it's true what people say in the comments - a lot of people don't know their job anymore and to be able to work out the problem oneself saves loads of time, money and hassle and it make it easier to identify a trader who does know what they are doing. Nice one.

  • @simonreeves2017
    @simonreeves2017 4 месяца назад +4

    Hi Roger, your video series is excellent. I’m nearly 60, I am so grateful that my Dad is a very practical guy and gave me a great education in my youth. This has empowered me so much in life, from maintaining my own cars, installing kitchens and bathrooms, to plumbing and electrical work. Sadly these are skills that subsequent generations seem to have missed out on, the number of times I have helped friends and family where so called professionals have been utterly useless amazes me.

  • @JohnOByrne-ng4mc
    @JohnOByrne-ng4mc Год назад +15

    I learnt so much from this that I have to say it was a very impressive presentation. One of the best I've seen without all the gadgets & video aids, and I used to deliver them professionally as a teacher, lecturer and commercial trainer!

  • @jimdavis5230
    @jimdavis5230 Год назад +105

    Hi Roger, I like your idea of using perfume to find a water leak. About two years ago I had a tiny leak I couldn't find. Boiler pressure would go down just below the normal 1 bar in about a year. I used a stink bomb and injected it into the water system. No problem finding the leak with that terrible smell. Turned out to be a compression joint on a micro bore pipe to a radiator in my kitchen. Seems to me that a nasty smell is easier to find compared to a nice smell. Also a nasty smell gives you more incentive to find the leak quickly.

    • @LabRat6619
      @LabRat6619 Год назад

      Now no leak, but a smell of sulphur lingers.

    • @jimdavis5230
      @jimdavis5230 Год назад +10

      @@LabRat6619 Hydrogen Sulphide smells like rotten eggs, similar to bad farts. Luckily most farts don't smell that bad most of the time. Should you ever release a nasty smelling fart and someone says " have you farted?" You reply saying "of course I have, do you think I always smell like this ?"

    • @johnf3326
      @johnf3326 Год назад

      @@jimdavis5230 🤣👍

    • @belltopcone
      @belltopcone Год назад +5

      @@jimdavis5230 So we could say a fart is a pressure release valve.

    • @goffthomas2554
      @goffthomas2554 Год назад +1

      I find cats piss quite effective too! 😅😅😅😅😅

  • @chriscollins508
    @chriscollins508 Год назад +3

    Hello Roger. It's really refreshing to listen to someone who knows what they are talking about because they are speaking from experience.
    A great presentation full of useful and interesting advice. Thank you.

  • @mr-jack
    @mr-jack Год назад +27

    Roger, thanks very much for this video, diagnosis is a tricky thing and sharing your years of experience is of great value. I drained my system just over a year ago and after filling it up again the boiler kept tripping out, the pressure kept falling and flooding out of the pressure relief and I had to keep topping it up. I thought it was probably the expansion vessel but, not being a plumber, I wasn't sure. I contacted a few plumbers but none of them were interested in doing an investigation to find out what was wrong. I turned down the temperature on the boiler, which pretty much fixed the overheating, but I have been topping it up every week or so for the past year and a bit. Thanks to your suggestion of pressing the air valve to see if water came out, I was able to confirm that the diaphragm was gone and immediately ordered a replacement expansion tank. It's all fitted now and hopefully my days of weekly topping up are over.
    Once again, Thanks very much!!

  • @remco2777
    @remco2777 Год назад

    I had no clue about all of this, but you've done a great job of explaining all of this!

  • @raymondbaddeley6467
    @raymondbaddeley6467 Год назад +12

    I know hardly anything about heating systems and plumbing ; but I found your presentation to be extremely informative, entertaining and easy to understand. Many thanks!

  • @knockshinnoch1950
    @knockshinnoch1950 Год назад +6

    An EXCELLENT practical clearly explained presentation. A presentation like this takes real skill and expertise!

  • @Mariuszkwiatkowski12
    @Mariuszkwiatkowski12 6 месяцев назад

    Robert. This material is so comprehensive that helped to understand the dependencies and have broader overview. Really I appreciate you sharing your experience. I have drop of the pressure from 1.8 to 1.1 bar every abot six monts. The instalation is about 3 years old. Boiler with external 200l water container for hot water. So I'm going to start with checking this air pressure compensation container.

  • @tetron62
    @tetron62 2 месяца назад

    What an excellent public speaker this guy is. Direct and clear explanations with nothing superfluous. Very rare.

  • @roshnivaldar2746
    @roshnivaldar2746 Год назад

    Great Video , you covered all expects of looing pressure and the extra expansion vessel how it would help. Thank you

  • @chrisliddiard725
    @chrisliddiard725 Год назад

    Wow! so much knowledge in this one video. So much invaluable information. Thank you for sharing!!

  • @nigelcartwright5986
    @nigelcartwright5986 5 месяцев назад

    I had my system changed from an open vented to a sealed system about 5 years ago. Never fully understood how it all worked, but I do now. Thank you very much.

  • @vinceturner3863
    @vinceturner3863 Год назад

    Thanks, very clear explanations of a complex system.

  • @heidispawsandfins
    @heidispawsandfins 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for explaining this - really helpful 😊

  • @adriangoodrich4306
    @adriangoodrich4306 2 месяца назад

    I learned more about how modern boilers work in this video than everything else I have learned over a lot of years! Always love your videos, but this one was outstanding! SO well explained!

  • @laurencetitusoates6328
    @laurencetitusoates6328 Год назад +2

    Really informative video thanks Roger.

  • @brettrigby2226
    @brettrigby2226 Год назад +1

    absolutely loved this video, its so informative. if i was to learn plumbing this is the man i'd want to teach me

  • @linedancer111
    @linedancer111 Год назад

    That was excellent very informative thank you!

  • @polderesurf
    @polderesurf Год назад +1

    Really interesting . Lovely clear explanations . Nice one

  • @gordonmcconachie2492
    @gordonmcconachie2492 5 месяцев назад

    Your words of wisdom have been a lot of food for thought and most useful thank you.

  • @leehardman6858
    @leehardman6858 Год назад

    Extremely helpful well explained.👍

  • @peterburgess980
    @peterburgess980 Год назад

    Very informative Roger, thank you. I have learnt a lot.

  • @Lodreus
    @Lodreus Год назад

    Super helpful video! One to keep for those moments to jog the memory. We've been living at our home for 3 months now and I must have topped up the boiler with water 4 times.

  • @andypsunshineisle5655
    @andypsunshineisle5655 Год назад +3

    Very comprehensive covering a lot of ground. I have a system which builds pressure but i am waiting for my annual Gas safe service to change the expansion vessel which has a wet schrader and the same clunk sound all round as the system pressure runs up from setting initially at 1.3 bar to level off at 2bar cold and runs at 2.6 so no major fluid losses so far . My boiler is 11 years in service now so my main fears will be upset valves after they have been resting for so long.

  • @prnfl
    @prnfl Год назад

    i was able to follow my pressure issue to the overflow pipe and fix it, thanks to YOU

  • @davidroche6973
    @davidroche6973 Год назад

    Great video. Thank you Roger 👍

  • @Scumsuckingpigmonkey
    @Scumsuckingpigmonkey Год назад

    Hi Roger, Very impressed! I'm stretching the old memory cells but we had a customer who had a constant overflow dripping issue only to track down that some bathroom company had fitted a mixer tap in a downstairs bathroom sink tap on a vented system with the cold connected to the mains and the hot, obviously, from the boiler. The tap was faulty and mixed.

  • @Danzwain1
    @Danzwain1 Год назад +2

    Thanks Roger a long video but worth every minute

  • @sebastiaandevries6428
    @sebastiaandevries6428 Год назад +3

    in holland we normally have expension vessels outside the boiler and since the pressure of the cold water is higher then the boilerpressure youre last solution is the other way around with us. for looking at the condensing part of the heat exchanger: we often uses hoses to connect the condensing part so we fill the heater up high and let the hose hang in a cold way above a bucket.

  • @pbysome
    @pbysome 6 месяцев назад

    This is a great video Roger, made for me thank you.

  • @peterbridges6851
    @peterbridges6851 Год назад

    Thanks Roger that was a great lecture.

  • @martindownes1907
    @martindownes1907 Год назад +1

    Very useful Roger! Thanks

  • @pcno2832
    @pcno2832 Год назад

    We had something similar going on in the house in which I grew up. The system was not loosing pressure because it automatically refilled itself, but the relief valve was filling the bucket about every week and the radiators, which had automatic bleeders, were constantly venting a little. The problem was that, since it had a tankless ("combi" in UK terminology) tap water heater, the temperature of the system was set to the top of its range so that there would be enough heat for a decent shower (without that, one would have to turn the shower down to a trickle after a few minutes to keep it warm). With that high temperature, the expansion tank was simply not big enough, so the relief valve was always trickling on and off. A proper fix would probably have been an external tap water heater or storage tank, though a bigger expansion tank would have helped. We just lived with it the way it was.

  • @clivelizwood3916
    @clivelizwood3916 Год назад +7

    Roger, learned a lot more to help my DIY plumbing. As ever, very clear description and summary. I think this is well worth some Night School certificate! Thanks
    .

  • @AdamDitheridge
    @AdamDitheridge Год назад +4

    FYI Our long term 'leak' was due to the expansion vessel gradually losing pressure. We were searching for a physical water leak around the property for months. Pumped it up and has been fine since.

  • @tifrap
    @tifrap Год назад

    excellent work, Thank you.

  • @vegsalad
    @vegsalad Год назад +3

    Hi Roger, I think you just explained why I has a problem in a previous house with a hot water tank with the header always overflowing even though the ball was below water. I changed both ball cocks in the end and it still overflowed. In the end, fiddling with the level the ball valve cut off in highest tank stopped the overflow so left it with that fudge. Luckily the two tanks were close to the same level.
    You Never mentioned condensate freezing in the external pipe blocking it and causing the boiler to shut down. Apparently, that is very common and my gas-safe engineer says he always gets very busy with those callouts the first time we have a big freeze.

  • @ralphclark
    @ralphclark Год назад

    That was a lot more technical than expected. Not a DIY job! It’s great to see this level of non-hand-wavy detail on RUclips.

  • @phoenixgaminglt4749
    @phoenixgaminglt4749 6 месяцев назад +1

    Brilliant, well explained and easy to understand. Im a plumber with 7yrs experience but that was spot on. Exactly how they taught it at college

    • @mbuk-zm3hc
      @mbuk-zm3hc 5 месяцев назад +1

      Did anyone on your course question why the heck this adjustment of pressure is not automatic? Seems odd to me - why can't the system pressure be measured automatically and adjusted automatically? It seems extraordinary that you have to do his manually. Anyway - going to be academic soon - since we're all going electric air-pump, aren't we?!

  • @keithwilkinson8310
    @keithwilkinson8310 5 месяцев назад

    Thanks for an incredibly useful video. I now realise why, as well as keeping within warrenty, a regular service is important and such as good idea.

  • @pivotset2
    @pivotset2 Год назад

    Thanks Roger very educational.

  • @oursayso
    @oursayso 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks Roger. You’re a star. And funnily enough, if I close my eyes and just listen to you, you sound like Anton de Beke!

  • @gordonlofts4674
    @gordonlofts4674 5 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the knowledge, I found that my system had two 2 port valves with a split heating system operating across 2 zones. I was losing boiler pressure and happened to mention it to a next door as we are on a newish build estate he mentioned that he had to have both replaced. I checked the valves and found a wet carpet in the cupboard which I now plan on changing both of them as might as well if the system is drained looks like to have a weep from inside the valve/motor. Fingers crossed..

  • @peterthompson6317
    @peterthompson6317 Год назад +4

    Roger an easy way to check if the coil has gone in a open vented system is to bung your heating expansion tank and then start to run off some water from the heating circuit it will keep running if the coil has split,you will find the domestic tank ball valve starts to drip or run.

  • @oojimmyflip
    @oojimmyflip Год назад +13

    Hi Rodger thanks for all the brilliant videos, I m in a Housing association house and my gas boiler was installed in 2014 which is a Worcester combi ,it has taken 10 so called engineers to diagnose that the heat exchanger is leaking, they now have to supply 2 men to remove the boiler from the wall as they have fitted it to close to the ceiling to remove the heat exchanger and replace it. I used to fit boilers years ago in the 1980s and we used to pay a corgi registered (in those days) chap to come and connect it up and issue a certificate, which is no longer possible, Ive been telling the engineers that its the heat exchanger for years but they are mostly clueless. Id name and shame them but not sure if you allow that sort of thing. fortunately the boiler still runs without pressure but I bet the inhibitor has vapoured away through the chimney as steam years ago. I bet the scale protector has clogged up a lot to. currently if you top it up with the external loop which in a rented property they say is my responsibility, the pressure has dropped again by the next day to 0. The last one diagnosed it fine but he still reffered to the boiler as a valiant boiler, I think they struggle to actually read the name of the boiler on the front panel sometimes.

    • @duncanicook
      @duncanicook Год назад

      I think like many other aluminium heat exchangers that have not had enough inhibitor in the system...over time it will damage the heat exchanger. Have come across this 3 times with Worcesters in the last 8-10 years

    • @singbob
      @singbob 9 месяцев назад +1

      Must be a council/housing association thing to employ these kind of engineers, I mean you want your engineers to be competent and skilled when working with certain supplies/appliances, be it gas or electricity.

    • @railway-share3820
      @railway-share3820 4 месяца назад

      Did the engineers work for a firm beginning with D.

  • @williamsteven429
    @williamsteven429 Год назад

    very helpful, thank you.

  • @0skar9193
    @0skar9193 Год назад

    I live in a fairly large 4 bed rented 1970's house with what looks like original rads. The house used to be on an oil fired heating system with immersion heater and a tank in loft etc. In the last 20 years the house was finally connected to mains gas. As part of this the old oil fired heater was removed and old systems decommissioned but old rads left in place. A nice new combi heater was installed, but because this system runs at a higher pressure there was all sorts of leaked and most of the rads had TRV's fitted. This combi heater broke down 3 years after we moved in. A Baxi has been fitted. I'm having to constantly repressurise the system. I haven't found any pipe leaks (I work in property maintenance so I do know a little bit about what to look for). I have reported this to the letting agent and the plumber came and told me that I should report it to Baxi... I'm the tenant it's not my responsibility. I just wish that more "plumbers" watched your vids Roger, they might actually learn something and do a better job.
    Having watched this vid, when the engineer next comes to do a service I'm going to insist he checks the expansion vessel pressure and the pressure relief valve and for internal boiler leaks.

  • @linux327
    @linux327 3 месяца назад +1

    I had the opposite reason with radiator pressure gradually increasing; when the boiler pump for the hot water had failed and would dump the hot water in the heat exchanger back into the radiator circuit. The expansion tank pressure was correctly set.

  • @ozwellalford5015
    @ozwellalford5015 Год назад

    An Excellent explanation i have learned a lot from this video 💪

  • @davewallace5008
    @davewallace5008 Год назад

    The flow turbine adapter was leaking on mine for years and I never noticed it. It was a drip every now and then, and until I placed a towel directly underneath and left it overnight did I notice a tiny damp patch, almost imperceptible. I ordered a new adapter, removed the old crusty piece of s**t and replaced it. Now the water pressure is relatively constant and with the expansion pressure back to 1 bar it holds nicely. Those baffles were a real pain in the a$$ to get out being that the flue was directly over it!
    Mine is a greenstar 28i junior.

  • @daveofyorkshire301
    @daveofyorkshire301 Год назад +1

    The expansion tank in the boiler was my issue. After replacement my bills dropped and the pressure in the boiler instead of rising considerably - remained stable. I was topping up the closed system every month or so, and there was a considerable amount of steam during boiler operation - which was the tip I had there was an issue 8n the boiler and nit a leak in the system...

  • @eph8334
    @eph8334 Год назад

    Excellent video!
    I check and charge the vessel on every service of boilers 4+ years old

  • @jamesarrowsmith2517
    @jamesarrowsmith2517 Год назад

    Great video easy to understand

  • @bryanbishop975
    @bryanbishop975 5 месяцев назад

    Nice clear explanation cheer's

  • @lazylad8544
    @lazylad8544 4 месяца назад

    Great video on pressure system. 👍👍. I'm always under pressure and leak quite often too. 😉.

  • @hmmslagathor9285
    @hmmslagathor9285 Год назад

    Hi, thank you for this video, during the winter I have to refill my radiators once a week every week. So often my family have a system in place to make it quick. During the summer the boiler packs up about 8 times and a quick refill mends that. I have had British Gas around so many times it’s maddening with thermal cameras etc. I have made a note of all the potential problem areas and I will get a plumber round and we can go through them one by one. It can’t be doing my boiler any good. So thank you for this from the bottom of my heart!!!

    • @SkillBuilder
      @SkillBuilder  Год назад +1

      I use some perfume in the system to detect micro leaks

    • @stuartbrown1426
      @stuartbrown1426 Год назад +1

      How do you get perfume in the system though .

  • @chrissmith2114
    @chrissmith2114 5 месяцев назад

    Our system boiler is in the garage, there is an integral expansion vessel behind the boiler but the schrader valve is way up on the top of the boiler and hard to get to, so I fitted an 18 litre ( way overkill, but we have 14 radiators in the house ) expansion vessel via a tee in the return leg. The pressure gauge is rock solid whether the boiler is hot or cold... I always keep the system well topped up with inhibitor so no chance of corrosion in the expansion vessel. Sometimes the discharge valves can leak water out even though they are not at their discharge pressure.

  • @anonymous.youtuber
    @anonymous.youtuber Год назад

    Magnificent presentation !

  • @philipwicks
    @philipwicks Год назад

    Great explanations.

  • @alanvcraig
    @alanvcraig Год назад

    My Ariston combi, now replaced, lost pressure overnight to zero but luckily continued working. Eventually traced to a leaky schrader valve after many years!

  • @Vialli100.
    @Vialli100. Год назад

    Good to see your well Roger, been years since I've seen you..
    I used to work at Impact Power Tools and Doves in Redhill..
    A great presentation as usual..

    • @SkillBuilder
      @SkillBuilder  Год назад +1

      Hi Ray
      I remember you well with your long blonde hair. Are you still working?

    • @Vialli100.
      @Vialli100. Год назад

      @@SkillBuilder Not working, I moved to Northumberland.
      I am a carer for my mum, so am with her everyday. Although I have my own house 300m away.

  • @Traumahawk007
    @Traumahawk007 Год назад +5

    Brilliant, seen so many alleged heating experts on here that couldn’t explain what you have done in this video.

  • @sandrar9649
    @sandrar9649 Год назад +2

    Hi. Well explained. Had preasure system put in 10 years ago, about to have 4th preasure vessel installed - the rubber diaphragms only last a couple of years - wish we had stuck to old fashioned conventional system as only ever cost regular boiler service.

    • @isabellevince5174
      @isabellevince5174 Год назад

      Have a look at the videos which explain why it's not always a damaged diaphram.
      Condensation can build up in the EV which can be drained down and repressurised.
      Most engineers just want to replace the EV or add an external one.

  • @MrPete1x
    @MrPete1x Год назад

    Excellent video thank you

  • @kulwantmahal4905
    @kulwantmahal4905 Год назад

    Very good Explanation 👍 👏 👌 😀 ☺

  • @madmax2506
    @madmax2506 Год назад

    excellent video. many thanks 👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @rayl9969
    @rayl9969 Год назад

    Hi Roger great video as usual could you do a video on G3 diagram and regs please many thanks

  • @scaryfakevirus
    @scaryfakevirus Год назад

    We had a new Vaillant combi boiler fitted a few years ago which began losing pressure. I couldn't find any leaks at all but eventually had to call an engineer. He came readily armed with a valve so obviously knew the problem beforehand. When I asked why I couldn't find any leaks he said that I wouldn't necessarily notice one because there was a drip tray underneath (very reassuring!) and the heat from the boiler would have evaporated it. Pretty good boiler otherwise but lost pressure yesterday resulting in no heat, so that's why I am watching your video today. Re-pressurised it again and OK at the moment.

    • @SkillBuilder
      @SkillBuilder  Год назад

      Yes that is the auto air valve inside the boiler. They can let out a bit of moisture and it evaporates out through the flue.

  • @ghaderortakand6027
    @ghaderortakand6027 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for a thorough explanation. Really useful! You covered so much.
    The plate heat exchanger can also be perforated, leading to a cross contamination of primary and hot-water fluids. Then, depending on which pressure is lower, either the primary pressure drops (rare) or the system keeps getting topped up (not too uncommon).
    Keep your excellent videos coming.

    • @mb-3faze
      @mb-3faze 5 месяцев назад

      In the olden days (with header tank) the replacement of water in the system was automatic (thanks to gravity). What I don't understand is that it is entirely possible to implement an automatic pressure balance system so that the water pressure in the system is always at the correct pressure. This manual balance system is nuts! -especially in my case where the pressure gauge is on the boiler (which is in a lean-to near the gas supply) but the loop gizmo to balance the pressure is at least 70 steps away, upstairs near the hot water tank.

  • @TWOKDOK1
    @TWOKDOK1 Год назад +1

    Excellent exposition Roger. I wonder how many plumbers know all of the possibilities?

  • @batchrocketproject4720
    @batchrocketproject4720 Год назад +1

    Really nice review, thank you Roger. I'm guessing that a failing or improperly pressurised expansion vessel might lead to a larger difference in dial pressure reading between cold and hot water temp before the system ever goes out of normal green pressure range. For a typical boiler, what should be the difference between cold and hot pressures (how much of the green range would a healthy boiler use)? Also, if that differential is changing, would one pump some air into the expansion tank before the system needed refilling?

  • @colincampbell3679
    @colincampbell3679 Год назад

    My Heating System was changed fully by the landlord. it is now 7 years old, But the system has all the parts you stated as being on them!
    I have the modern combi-boiler with heat exchanger and the red big round expansion tank on the side.
    The thing I hate is the fact that I can't easily see the water pressure gauge due to it being right down the bottom below the boiler about 1.5 foot off the floor in the cupboard and I am now a young man and trying to bend down to that level is hard to do? I also have a system filtering thing on the wall under the red expansion tank.
    Plus I will also need a torch as no lighting in there. I noticed over say a month the pressure is dropping such that i have to keep refilling the boiler water level. which is a pain since I have trouble bending down to watch the gauge level.
    The landlord does send a Gas Safety Engineer out every year to test and check the system. I am bleeding the Radiators on and off sometimes you hear air bubbles running through the rads. I had just now had a bathroom radiators changed to a new one as that was rusted on the bottom right corner.
    I just hoping that the renewing of that small radiator will fix the many years of loosing water pressure? I always makes me laugh that they say it is a "sealed" system. so why do we still have to top up the water then?
    Not a sealed system then. the tech should be by now so well designed as to have a fully true enclosed sealed system where the water can't leak out at all and just cools down as used and is reused.
    I think that the pipes the radiators all that should be Stainless Steel or Aluminium no steel and copper as this would save the rusting of the pipes and radiators solving lots of problems down the years of use! All recyclable so no worries there. I will ask the next Gas Safety Engineer to please check those small areas of the seals you stated in the boiler for leaks or bits under the rubber seals just in case there is some mucking up my pressure and water leaking.

  • @paulsimpson1514
    @paulsimpson1514 Год назад +1

    Excellent video Roger... You're a great teacher and explained that in terms that we 'DIY can't afford gas engineers' can now clearly identify where the leak may reside. Thanks.

    • @paulsimpson1514
      @paulsimpson1514 Год назад

      Yes yes, you recommend that we always use a qualified gas engineer 😅

    • @yoya4766
      @yoya4766 6 месяцев назад

      Most of us diy'ers are probably better than the so called 'qualified' ones. The courses are very bad these days.@@paulsimpson1514

  • @adrian.parker
    @adrian.parker Год назад

    Roger on the Radio... it has a ring to it! Great advice on R2 this week. Guest of the year.

  • @robertclery4484
    @robertclery4484 Год назад

    Great info and the diagrams are very easy to under stand. As I have a leak some where now I know where to start.

  • @ukhan999
    @ukhan999 Год назад +1

    this guy is awesome, thank you. i just fixed my radiator heating issues, the farthest radiator was not heating up and this trick worked amazingly

  • @chrisgoodman7820
    @chrisgoodman7820 Год назад

    Thanks so much.......solution number 1 solved my issue

  • @johnf3326
    @johnf3326 Год назад +2

    And if the pressure keeps going up, its most likely leaky valves in the (permanently connected) filling loop. Happened to me and my son. Son got a free new plate heat exchanger out of it as service contract engineer insisted it was a pinhole in that despite I told him the disconnected loop had a slow drip, which he said wasn't enough to cause the problem, which he eventually replaced the valve and cured the problem!

  • @trevorfitzpatrick5114
    @trevorfitzpatrick5114 Год назад +1

    Had a prsure problem would need toping up once or twice a year and told by service guy it was normal till one year, a different engineer noticed the pressure relief valve had been leaking. Replaced it and never had to top it up unless I check radiator bleed valves once a year.

  • @christophergreenwell4912
    @christophergreenwell4912 Год назад +1

    One item not covered and may result in pressure loss is failure of the schrader valve. I was advised to replace the boiler because of daily pressure loss requiring re pressure every day. I got a new boiler fitted and when the old one was stripped out it was found that all that was needed was a new Shrader valve. Like a car tyre sometimes you need a new valve. £1200 down the tubes for a new Baxi Platinum was the result!

  • @ashbashbaby2
    @ashbashbaby2 Год назад

    Still have a system boiler and cold water/hot water tank. When the water main burst and I was grafted from work I could still get a bath although I had to wait for it to cool and was a bit hot. Plus I have an Immersion so if boiler packs up still have hot water.much to be said for vented system much more reliable

  • @geordiejohn3703
    @geordiejohn3703 Год назад

    That was super helpful and informative thanks very much 👍🏻

  • @kbabujoseph
    @kbabujoseph Год назад

    Many thanks Roger.

  • @ajr3553
    @ajr3553 Год назад

    Just discovered your channel,a little gem, thanks

    • @SkillBuilder
      @SkillBuilder  Год назад +1

      A big gem. We have nearly 800 videos, it will give you something to do on Christmas afternoon now that the Queen's Christmas message has been taken off the schedule due to forseen circumstances.

  • @LiamTobin-mi8tv
    @LiamTobin-mi8tv Год назад

    Great stuff. Roger

  • @davidlongman2341
    @davidlongman2341 Год назад +3

    Our system is plagued with leaks and gradual pressure loss because of water leaking up the operating plungers on thermostatic rad valves. The small operating plungers pass through an O ring, become slightly corroded over time and start to leak through the O ring seal up the piston and out of the head of the valve. Not operating the thermostatic heads does not help because they react to room temperature and move themselves as the seasons change. We get leaks on TRV's that we never move. This is the only repair our system ever needs because it is fairly new but it is a persistant pain in the backside. We are considering going back to a standard servicable on off valve in place of the TRV's when we have them changed in future to save a lot of expense and avoidable botheration. It won't be long before all the rads are sporting a nice new shiny lockshield type turn it on turn it off valve. We have tried the TRV route and found it to be too much of an expensive nuisance to persist with. BUT this is a definate source of leaks on a system fitted with these valves, and they can be sneaky because the leaks start off small and can do damage to skirting flooring and decoration before you catch on to them.

  • @googler38
    @googler38 Год назад

    Really interesting video thanks Roger !

  • @antoniogalluccio4213
    @antoniogalluccio4213 2 дня назад

    Hi roger, I've been a plumber for a while now and new gas safe engineer. Could you do such an informative video to diagnose dhw and ch not working in a combi. Symptoms, strategy to diagnose?

  • @adalatkhan1644
    @adalatkhan1644 Год назад

    Very good explained video

  • @lksf9820
    @lksf9820 6 месяцев назад +1

    Lots of useful tips there, thank you. One thing though and from about 8.20 onwards you talk about pressurising the EV with air, but you don't say how you're measuring it. I believe this should be done with an air pressure gauge on the Schrader valve, but people could get this wrong and try using the system gauge on the boiler.

  • @michaeltb1358
    @michaeltb1358 Год назад

    After I had a new boiler and some new radiators installed I was losing pressure slowly for over a year. Finally I realised that the kitchen radiator was always cold. One of the valves had been left closed and it was almost full of air. After filling that radiator and re-pressurising the system pressure losses quickly stopped. I believe the radiator was acting as an expansion vessel. As water entered and exited the radiator it was absorbing some of the air so water was filling the radiator very slowly. The automatic vent released the air so pressure dropped. Now pressure is completely steady.

  • @42RHD
    @42RHD Год назад

    Thank you. Don't know why I didn't see this one earlier when it came out, would have really helped me with my exams.
    It does explain why my Ariston boiler tried to kill me in 2011 which was when I got interested in plumbing!
    Leaking heat exchanger.
    I told Ariston's service engineers there was water dripping very slowly out of the bottom of the combi and it was losing pressure, but they couldn't find anything.
    The engineer took the face plate off the combustion chamber and lit the boiler.
    A six foot jet of flame shot out and fried the wiring.
    He said it was fine.
    It was a cold February and the boiler was lighting with a huge BANG every time which I now know was forcing gasses out the sides of the faceplate.
    I phoned Ariston and was assured it was perfectly safe or it wouldn't work.
    I was falling asleep on the sofa with a massive headache when it suddenly occurred to me to look up Carbon monoxide poisoning symptoms.
    I was very lucky there.
    I had weeks of oxygen treatment and the boiler was condemned.

    • @42RHD
      @42RHD Год назад

      @@jamesm4172 Thank you!

  • @HA05GER
    @HA05GER 5 месяцев назад

    It's interesting to see how a boiler works. I had pressure loss but nothing obvious as all the boiler drains go straight into the soil stack as my boiler isnt on a outside wall. Had them out to fix as was dropping quick and now onky drops pressure every couple months which i assume by this video is relatively normal.

  • @anthonyminchinton3399
    @anthonyminchinton3399 Год назад +3

    Why did we get rid of cold water tanks etc? In the event of one's water being cut off you had enough water in the cold water tank to flush the loo if caught short.

  • @duncanicook
    @duncanicook Год назад +1

    Hi Roger,
    Thanks for another great video. Another way to check the heat exchanger on a boiler is to disconnect the condensate pipe, put bowl underneath, isolate boiler, pressurise to 2.5 bar leave for a while and then check for water in bowl. Personally I'm not keen on leaving "dead" expansion vessels in a boiler without isolation and fitting an external vessel as over time the vessel will start to leak, so needing another visit to either isolate or replace vessel. Very into fitting slave vessels though, alot of the time needed, but also means boiler will not need topping up between services which is great for people, especially Tenants in rented properties. Going onto heat exchanger failures, we are now testing for concentration of inhibitor (if any) at every service.

    • @SuperJinxter
      @SuperJinxter 5 месяцев назад

      The condensate would be good if it was the main heat-ex but as an experienced engineer, it’s not the first place I would look.

  • @jamiefors5062
    @jamiefors5062 Год назад +2

    Well explained Roger, thank you.....Ive had a new boiler and cylinder fitted about 6 months ago, I now have the problem of the F and E tank filling up and overflowing and yup, you guessed it, plumber seems to have disappeared and not answering any calls or mails

    • @Jules_Pew
      @Jules_Pew Год назад

      Get another plumber who might be able to get the work done under warranty. Happened to me 20 years ago.

  • @frankobrien9124
    @frankobrien9124 Год назад

    wow very informative thank so much .regards (have subscribed )