Search the forum,

Discuss 2 port valves __________ in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Messages
61
Are 2 port valves necessary on the
15454653639711748620316.jpg
flow of heating if a underfloor heating manifold is used such as this one in the picture? As far as i was aware the manifold acted as a valve.
Thanks
 
The manifold controls the temperature of the water & the rooms but what it can't normally do is provide an "interlock" with the boiler which is required by Part L of the Building Regulations.
Effectively what this means is that when the last power head on the manifold closes there must be a mechanism that turns the boiler off to stop it from wastefully cycling.
 
It also normally provides independent time control for the U/F against other heat emitters or areas which is also a requirement.
 
Ok i thought the actuators provided effective open close mechanisms for the zones, are you saying that the for the SL for the boiler should be wired in series via the 2 port valve?
 
Ok i thought the actuators provided effective open close mechanisms for the zones, are you saying that the for the SL for the boiler should be wired in series via the 2 port valve?
SWL through the end switch of the zone valve is the norm.
It is down to you to prove / provide that the "interlock" is in place if not.
 
Ok think I'm with you, bear with my I'll just a humble spark, so valve wired to far left interlock terminal and then switch wire off to boiler.
15454727486191005077118.jpg
 
The manifold controls the temperature of the water & the rooms but what it can't normally do is provide an "interlock" with the boiler which is required by Part L of the Building Regulations.
Effectively what this means is that when the last power head on the manifold closes there must be a mechanism that turns the
How can that manifold not provide interlock? Interlock is easily provided by the room thermostats that will be used for each zone. Zone valves are used to separate systems when required. If you have a fully pumped/system boiler then yes a zone valve is required to separate the heating and hot water circuits but if you don't require your ufh to be separated from your radiator circuit then a zone valve isn't required.
 
I already have a valve on the hot water for the cylinder but do I need another one for the heating? Or will the manifold suffice?
 
Best to else you could get warming of the ufh when the hot water is on
 
You need another zone valve fitted with a electric boiler you want as much control as possible I just did one with 3 circuits HW - HTG ZONE 1 - HTG ZONE 2 with a electric boiler not finished yet but you get the idea

20181108_161026.jpg
 
Last edited:
You need another zone valve fitted with a electric boiler you want as much control as possible I just did one with 3 circuits HW - HTG ZONE 1 - HTG ZONE 2 with a electric boiler not finished yet but you get the idea

View attachment 36026
I understand that heating and hot water should be on different zones and to split heating up, the issue was that I thought the UF heating manifolds zone actuators would provide this, and to just have one 2 port valve for the hot water, however i managed to incorparte the heating 2 port valve into the set up, (originally I was going to just leave it manually open) the wiring centre for the manifold had a switched 230v output which I used to drive the valve motor, wired the valve output in parallel with the HW valve output and boiler volt free contacts.
Long story short it works, and that's me done for Xmas. Nice pipework btw, (much better than how the plumber left my job.
 

Reply to 2 port valves __________ in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Creating content since 2001. Untold Media.

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock