Jump to content

Recommended Posts

In this weather you can easily find the cold water inlet (which is the one you want) by testing all the pipes with the back of your hand - run the hot water and make sure the heating is on.


The only cold pipes should be the gas and cold water inlet. The cold water one will be very cold. Often it has a connecting pipe to another pipe.


If you have to do it more than once or twice a year there is probably a leak somewhere.

Rah,


I had a (very nice) plumber walk me through on the phone, so I assume all boilers are much of a muchness. On mine, there was a flexi-hose that had an inline valve, that went from the boiler though to a big normal brass tap (the cold water inlet). So, I had to turn the brass tap on, then use the inline one to re-pressurise the system. After that, I turned the big brass one off.


You need to do it when the boiler is running.


I find I have to do it every time I bleed the radiators.

google the make / model of your boiler and get the manual.

then look at the section for adjusting pressure - it's as per described above by various posters.

no more dofficult than bleeding radiators if it's a modern-type boiler.

I wouldn't just experiment with different valves (because one of them may cut-off your gas and then you'll be having to re-ignite it) !

Thanks for the advice. It's always been pretty straight forward with other boilers I've owned, but this one has loads of different taps and pipes. I googled the manual and under the section on adjusting the pressure, it just says 'consult your installer'. I'll get it running and check which pipe is cold.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • The country didn't "hate Corbyn". Labour under Corbyn got more votes than Labour under Starmer, if memory serves, and it was only due to our weird electoral system that they didn't win the previous election. Any hatred of Corbyn was whipped up by the right wing press. The Labour Party has completely lost its way. It doesn't seem to know what it stands for any more, and its members have deserted it in droves. Including me. Anyway, this is probably for the lounge, not being directly relevant to the subject of the thread.
    • Agree but Labour made a far worse start and the wheels seem to be falling off spectacularly quickly. Whatever the reason for Reeves' tears it made the markets very jittery and now there is real doubt about how much longer she will last but Starmer cannot afford to lose her - I think they are both toast and the likes of Rayner and Streeting will be licking their chops. A bit like what is happening with Cllr McAsh locally the internal politics of the Labour party always are the real driver of policy, direction and execution and for a government with such a huge majority to be struggling so much so early is really worrying. We should all be very scared because this is paving the way for Reform and a leadership challenge or swing to the farther-left within Labour would be an unmitigated disaster - we had another term of Boris because the country hated Corbyn and his far-left ideology and the far-left Labour may see a leadership challenge as their only feasible way to take the reigns - a bit like Cllr McAsh and his Momentum buddies.
    • He has been around for a few months now and looks so sad and unhappy   ,he is coming into the gardens at the top end of  Upland and  Dunstans Roads .Just wondered if he is owned as he is not neutered and keeps getting into fights with cats .
    • Starting with Brexit, all the way through to drunken lock down parties, and then finishing on Liz Truss' 'mini budget', I would say it was fairly disastrous from start to finish.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...