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Discuss Hot water venting into header tank, this issue not covered on previous posts in the Plumbing Forum | Plumbing Advice area at PlumbersForums.net

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Hi all, I'm new to this forum, I apologise if I miss any protocols

My issue on the face of it has been covered many times, but specifically in this instance it makes no sense and I have not yet found a reasonable answer, if you can help it would be very much appreciated.

I have an open vented CH/HW system. For some time there has been a reasonable trickle of hot water being emptied into the header tank via the vent. The pipework is installed correctly, the vent and the cold feed are less than 150mm apart, and in the right sequence from the boiler outlet.

What makes no sense to me as that this ONLY happens when the HW is demanded of the boiler and the Y valve is set to provide both CH and HW. if there is NO demand for HW then the vent remains dry (CH on full tilt)

Given that when there is a demand for both HW and CH the water has more pipework to flow around and therefore the pressure should be reduced, therefore making the overflow LESS likely, So why is this happening?

I have carried out many power flushes, treatments of all kinds - today I have bled the system right down after 2 days of sentinel 800 and still the problem persists.

It happens on pump speed of 2 or 3, and my vent pipe is the correct height above the header tank.

Thanks.
 
It being close coupled should mean the vent and feed should be sludge-less lol . Blocked feed and vents usually cause your symptoms. Did the system fill quickly when you refilled ?
 
I think they are sludgeless, no attraction when I put a magnet anywhere near the junctions or on the pipes. Yes it re-filled fairly quickly - My house is a but of a nightmare hybrid between 15mm and microbore which does affect filling times, but I really don't think there is a blockage on either pipe. Took half an hour to fill and bleed the whole house? (9 rads).

Just doesn't make sense to me that turning the HW on can have a negative affect, when it should reduce system pressure. Pump runs at the same speed regardless, is the boiler clever enough to wack a load of extra heat into the system when there is additional demand from the HW? enough overcompensation to send water up the vent? I doubt that too as I don't see a temp spike on the boiler output readings.
 
You might have sludge/blockage of a type that is not magnetite and hence won't be detectable with a magnet.

If not, it's a long shot, but are you sure you have pump pumping in the correct direction? People do sometimes fit them incorrectly.

If that's not the answer, perhaps a sketch of you pipework would help us figure out what's going on.
 
Pump is definitely in the right direction. You are right there may be other sludge in the cold feed, but it does drain down fairly well, so it's not blocked.

Here is a pic of the area leading to the pump, the vent is the 22mm pipe with a 90 deg in it, just above that in 15mm pipe is the cold feed, both of these join the 22mm feed into the bottom of the pump. The pipe in the foreground is the return from the hot water cylinder.
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More testing this morning:

Turn on the HW on it's own, immediate dribble through vent into header tank.

Turn on CH as well, dribble gets no worse but is still there

Turn off HW, leaving CH on, no dribble at all - immediately disappears.

So if the cold feed was blocked in any way surely I would have the same issue with either of the CH or HW on?

Suggests to me that there is blockage or restriction in the pipes inside the hot water tank?? (my hot water does not take long to get warm so it's not very occluded)

Could there be an issue with the y valve? only partially opening when the HW is switched on?
 

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Its a strange one.
I take it from post #1 that there is no problem on pump speed 1?, if that is a UPS 2 pump with proportional pressure (PP) control then fixed speed 1 is 4M, 2 is 5M and 3 is 6M, one would think that speed 1 should be sufficient, also is the cylinder return combined with other returns ?, it may be acting as a unrestricted by pass, if that red gate valve isn't a balancing valve on the cylinder return then you might consider fitting one and see if that has any effect. You could also try the pump on PP3 setting but if a fixed speed1 setting of 4M isn,t sufficient then IMO PP3 will be too weak also at < 3M.
 
It is the same on pump speed 1, but I don't use that setting as the boiler doesn't like it so much, it keeps going into anticycle mode as the flow isn't quick enough (I blame the old microbore)

Yes the cylinder return goes straight down past that red valve you can see in the picture and joins into the 22mm CH return to the boiler.

I have never adjusted the red gate valve, I suspect that was fitted as an isolation rather than a balancing valve, It is just set to full open currently.

So two things I am considering now - is it possible to just flush the coil in the cylinder in isolation somehow? in case this is gunked up internally and causing the restriction? (when I turn the HW on it takes a few seconds for the return pipe at the bottom of the cylinder to get hot, not sure what would feel normal in a clean system). Secondly - I am thinking my 3 way valve may not be perfect, I can't latch it into manual open mode - the lever seems floppy and not connected to anything, also as I switch CH-HW etc. the range of motion of the valve looks limited to me. I might replace this, allowing me to see what the pipework looks like inside that junction and ruling this out as a restriction when HW is selected - what do you think? if you agree - what is your opinion of Neomitis 3 way valves i.l.o. the honeywell I have? they are about a third of the price and apparently are like for like in terms of dimensions, I have no experience of them at all though...

Thanks all for your help so far.
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contrary to the above - I have just retested on pump speed 1 and all is fine (having messed around with the boiler settings a bit) no water coming out of the vent in any scenario. Change pump speed to 2 and the water comes out of the vent instantly, back to pump speed 1 all is ok.

Problem is pump speed 1 means it takes an age for the rads to heat around the house.... - so I think my two previous questions still stand...
 
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Can't comment on the 3 way valve as I have no experience of them.
I would firstly ensure that the CH&HW are both circulating then just shut that balancing valve fully (takes 4 to 5 full turns) and see if that dribbling has stopped, if it has then re open the balancing valve say 1 full turn, if still no dribbling shut off the CH and observe it again. I just think that the cylinder coil is acting as a 3/4 ins full by pass which is also causing the cycling, at any rate if it does stop the dribbling it will have proved something for nothing. Normally, a 1/2 to 3/4 of a full turn from closed should give quite acceptable cylinder heat up.
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It is the same on pump speed 1, but I don't use that setting as the boiler doesn't like it so much, it keeps going into anticycle mode as the flow isn't quick enough (I blame the old microbore)

Yes the cylinder return goes straight down past that red valve you can see in the picture and joins into the 22mm CH return to the boiler.

I have never adjusted the red gate valve, I suspect that was fitted as an isolation rather than a balancing valve, It is just set to full open currently.

So two things I am considering now - is it possible to just flush the coil in the cylinder in isolation somehow? in case this is gunked up internally and causing the restriction? (when I turn the HW on it takes a few seconds for the return pipe at the bottom of the cylinder to get hot, not sure what would feel normal in a clean system). Secondly - I am thinking my 3 way valve may not be perfect, I can't latch it into manual open mode - the lever seems floppy and not connected to anything, also as I switch CH-HW etc. the range of motion of the valve looks limited to me. I might replace this, allowing me to see what the pipework looks like inside that junction and ruling this out as a restriction when HW is selected - what do you think? if you agree - what is your opinion of Neomitis 3 way valves i.l.o. the honeywell I have? they are about a third of the price and apparently are like for like in terms of dimensions, I have no experience of them at all though...

Thanks all for your help so far.
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contrary to the above - I have just retested on pump speed 1 and all is fine (having messed around with the boiler settings a bit) no water coming out of the vent in any scenario. Change pump speed to 2 and the water comes out of the vent instantly, back to pump speed 1 all is ok.

Problem is pump speed 1 means it takes an age for the rads to heat around the house.. - so I think my two previous questions still stand...

IMO because as stated above you are re circulating too much water through the "by pass" so leave it on speed 1 and throttle in the balance valve to ~ 1/2 to 3/4 open and that will increase the circulating flow through the rads and still give sufficient flow through the cylinder coil without any pump over.

You can also try it then on speed2.
 
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I would agree with @John.g too, my first thought on reading the thread was that it's going around the cylinder coil too quickly. If there isn't one, you need to fit a gate valve to the cylinder flow or return to balance down the cylinder coil. This should solve your issue. I would then set the pump on speed 2.
 
Thanks guys.

Yes there is an immersion fitted, but it's never used.

JohnG and EvilDr, ok I could try that, you think the water is travelling too fast through the coil whereas I was thinking it was flowing too slow! I could try to use the red gate valve as a balancer and restrict the flow with that one, if that fails I will drain down and fit a different valve there.

Thanks.
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Just tried setting pump speed to 2, and adjusting the red gate valve further and further closed in increments, I'm afraid the water never stops coming out of the vent unless the gate valve is closed fully, which of course knackers the boiler.... back to pump speed 1 and all is ok again, so it doesn't seem that throttling the cylinder coil makes any difference.
 
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Pump is definitely in the right direction. You are right there may be other sludge in the cold feed, but it does drain down fairly well, so it's not blocked.

Here is a pic of the area leading to the pump, the vent is the 22mm pipe with a 90 deg in it, just above that in 15mm pipe is the cold feed, both of these join the 22mm feed into the bottom of the pump. The pipe in the foreground is the return from the hot water cylinder.
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More testing this morning:

Turn on the HW on it's own, immediate dribble through vent into header tank.

Turn on CH as well, dribble gets no worse but is still there

Turn off HW, leaving CH on, no dribble at all - immediately disappears.

So if the cold feed was blocked in any way surely I would have the same issue with either of the CH or HW on?

Suggests to me that there is blockage or restriction in the pipes inside the hot water tank?? (my hot water does not take long to get warm so it's not very occluded)

Could there be an issue with the y valve? only partially opening when the HW is switched on?

You must currently have a positive pressure on the vent and negative on the cold feed and a similar (slightly less) resistance to that of the DHW circuit, if that makes sense?

I would alter the pipework to suit the following diagram. This is how we always piped open vented systems. You should have a neutral point in the system where the cold feed enters. If the vent connection is within the right distance and the height of the F&E tank and the vent are good, then there must be a reason why there is a pressure difference between those two points which is enough to cause circulation.

If you don't cure it by doing this, then there is obviously another cause but in my opinion you are better to rule out the possibility of it being something as simple as pipework configuration.

Note: Cold feed is inverted.


1573138892736.png
 
You must currently have a positive pressure on the vent and negative on the cold feed and a similar (slightly less) resistance to that of the DHW circuit, if that makes sense?

I would alter the pipework to suit the following diagram. This is how we always piped open vented systems. You should have a neutral point in the system where the cold feed enters. If the vent connection is within the right distance and the height of the F&E tank and the vent are good, then there must be a reason why there is a pressure difference between those two points which is enough to cause circulation.

If you don't cure it by doing this, then there is obviously another cause but in my opinion you are better to rule out the possibility of it being something as simple as pipework configuration.

Note: Cold feed is inverted.


View attachment 41360
If you was going to start messing with pipework though I'd just change it to a combined Feed and Vent. That'll sort the issue.
 
Thanks guys.

Yes there is an immersion fitted, but it's never used.

JohnG and EvilDr, ok I could try that, you think the water is travelling too fast through the coil whereas I was thinking it was flowing too slow! I could try to use the red gate valve as a balancer and restrict the flow with that one, if that fails I will drain down and fit a different valve there.

Thanks.
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Just tried setting pump speed to 2, and adjusting the red gate valve further and further closed in increments, I'm afraid the water never stops coming out of the vent unless the gate valve is closed fully, which of course knackers the boiler.. back to pump speed 1 and all is ok again, so it doesn't seem that throttling the cylinder coil makes any difference.
so where is the immersion and cylinder on the diagram just curious
centralheatking
 
You must currently have a positive pressure on the vent and negative on the cold feed and a similar (slightly less) resistance to that of the DHW circuit, if that makes sense?

I would alter the pipework to suit the following diagram. This is how we always piped open vented systems. You should have a neutral point in the system where the cold feed enters. If the vent connection is within the right distance and the height of the F&E tank and the vent are good, then there must be a reason why there is a pressure difference between those two points which is enough to cause circulation.

If you don't cure it by doing this, then there is obviously another cause but in my opinion you are better to rule out the possibility of it being something as simple as pipework configuration.

Note: Cold feed is inverted.


View attachment 41360

OK - thanks, the only difference between this diagram and my installation is the inversion of the cold feed. Both my cold feed and vent attach to vertical pipe through standard 90 deg elbows, neither have a negative loop in them. Does the cold feed inversion make that much difference?
 
If you was going to start messing with pipework though I'd just change it to a combined Feed and Vent. That'll sort the issue.

You could try that. It's not something I have ever done or thought a good idea but that's my personal view on it. I know people who do that and it works for them.

You could also change it to a sealed system provided the Boiler and system components are up to it.

It could be one of many things. De-zincification in the bottom connection of the brass tee where the cold feed enters could create a restriction enough to cause this issue. You need to start somewhere.

Maybe pull that section of pipework to bits and look inside, there could well be a restriction between the vent and cold feed connections.
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OK - thanks, the only difference between this diagram and my installation is the inversion of the cold feed. Both my cold feed and vent attach to vertical pipe through standard 90 deg elbows, neither have a negative loop in them. Does the cold feed inversion make that much difference?
I have known that to make a difference yes. I can't explain why but I can't say I have given it a great deal of thought.
Have you looked in the tee? and between the vent and feed connections?
 
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so where is the immersion and cylinder on the diagram just curious
centralheatking

See pics attached. Immersion is in the top of the cylinder.
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You could try that. It's not something I have ever done or thought a good idea but that's my personal view on it. I know people who do that and it works for them.

You could also change it to a sealed system provided the Boiler and system components are up to it.

It could be one of many things. De-zincification in the bottom connection of the brass tee where the cold feed enters could create a restriction enough to cause this issue. You need to start somewhere.

Maybe pull that section of pipework to bits and look inside, there could well be a restriction between the vent and cold feed connections.
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I have known that to make a difference yes. I can't explain why but I can't say I have given it a great deal of thought.
Have you looked in the tee? and between the vent and feed connections?

Not yet, was trying to sort without draining the system down for a third time this week, but I will get round to that, I could put an inversion in there at the same time.
 

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Thanks guys.

Yes there is an immersion fitted, but it's never used.

JohnG and EvilDr, ok I could try that, you think the water is travelling too fast through the coil whereas I was thinking it was flowing too slow! I could try to use the red gate valve as a balancer and restrict the flow with that one, if that fails I will drain down and fit a different valve there.

Thanks.
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Just tried setting pump speed to 2, and adjusting the red gate valve further and further closed in increments, I'm afraid the water never stops coming out of the vent unless the gate valve is closed fully, which of course knackers the boiler.. back to pump speed 1 and all is ok again, so it doesn't seem that throttling the cylinder coil makes any difference.
Why does shutting the balancing valve knacker the boiler if both CH&HW are selected?? as you said earlier that when CH only was selected on speed2 then everything was OK with no pump over or boiler problems as shutting off the balancing valve with both CH&HW selected is the same as having CH only selected?, excepting some problem with the 3 way valve?.

Are the rads heating up ok on speed1 IF CH only selected? and is the boiler "normal"?. If so then have you tried it on speed1 with the cylinder coil throttled in to ~ a 1/2 turn opened with both CH&HW on, if still ok then see if no pump over on speed1 with HW only selected.
 
Why does shutting the balancing valve knacker the boiler if both CH&HW are selected?? as you said earlier that when CH only was selected on speed2 then everything was OK with no pump over or boiler problems as shutting off the balancing valve with both CH&HW selected is the same as having CH only selected?, excepting some problem with the 3 way valve?.

Are the rads heating up ok on speed1 IF CH only selected? and is the boiler "normal"?. If so then have you tried it on speed1 with the cylinder coil throttled in to ~ a 1/2 turn opened with both CH&HW on, if still ok then see if no pump over on speed1 with HW only selected.

As the issue only happens when the HW is on (seems to be completely independent of CH on or off) I was seeing how closed the valve needed to be to stop the overflow with HW on only. You are correct if CH was on the boiler would be fine - but during my test I was restricting flow to the boiler.

Yes that is what I have tried now. Pump speed 1, cylinder coil throttled to one turn open. Boiler is OK, Rads are ok, no overflow through the vent. I need to try again in the morning from scratch as the house is already warm and we have a tank full of hot water, so I can't tell just yet if the heat up rate of the rads is acceptable or not! My wife will inform me of that first thing in the morning.... I'll report back soon.

Many thanks for all of this.
 
How is your system performing since change?.

Still not great really, pump speed 1 means the boiler is cutting out regularly due to temp difference between in and out, also the rads on cold days don't seem to get up to temperature quickly or stay there. I have also had a few instances once everything has gone off of a water surge up the vent into the header tank and out through the overflow into the garden.

So I have run a Sentinel x800 through the system over the weekend and today I am going to disassemble what I can around the vent and cold feed area, replace the 3 port valve (I bought a non honeywell version so we will see how that goes) and see if I can see anything new.

Will report back later today.
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New 3 way valve fitted. Most of the pipe work boiler side of the pump was blocked by about 50% including the tee for the vent, the blockage didn't go much further south than this and was also clear either side of the Y valve. Pump inlet and outlet around 30% also blocked with black residue.

Took it all apart (compression fittings only) cleaned out the pump and pipework as best as I could and refitted. After several hours of bleeding the system is 'relatively' happy, in that there is no longer any water coming out of the vent, regardless of CH/HW selection or pump speed.

There are still problems however, one of my rads (bathroom) I cannot get hot for love nor money, throttling back all other rads just creates too much of a restriction somewhere and the boiler has a hissy fit and shuts down in seconds. All other rads are getting hot fine. So there must still be an airlock somewhere, or another restriction/blockage in the CH pipework restricting flow. Or my boiler settings are just plain wrong for my house.......

Same happens if I select pump speed 1 and all rads are throttled normally, boiler heats up too quick and shuts down.

One step forwards - 2 steps back!
 
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You may find that the pump ports & pump impeller are now full of crap as well, if you shut off the pump isolation valves you should be able to remove the pump head to clean out the impeller and while the head is removed you should backflush the pump ports by alternatively opening/shutting the isolation valves although you did say above that you cleaned it out as best you could.
I hope not, but there is now a possibility that the boiler HX is partially blocked as well, when you do sort it out you might consider fitting a magnetic filter before the boiler inlet, if one not already fitted.
 
You may find that the pump ports & pump impeller are now full of crap as well, if you shut off the pump isolation valves you should be able to remove the pump head to clean out the impeller and while the head is removed you should backflush the pump ports by alternatively opening/shutting the isolation valves although you did say above that you cleaned it out as best you could.
I hope not, but there is now a possibility that the boiler HX is partially blocked as well, when you do sort it out you might consider fitting a magnetic filter before the boiler inlet, if one not already fitted.
yes - the pump ports I have cleaned as best as I can. the pump impeller was new only a year ago along with a power flush. Can I do something about the boiler HX? (I have a Vaillant ecoTEC plus now) I do have a magnaclean unit fitted, I have cleaned this out a few times over the past 2 weeks and from there being a fair amount on there to begin with it's been relatively clean since then. I think I am suffering ultimately with a cascade and ***ulative affect of bad jobs - I have a mishmash of 15mm and microbore installed already when I bought the house 15 years ago (the bathroom rad is on the latter) and when I first moved in the plumbers who fitted the new boiler in the garage (back boiler in the living room exploded 2 weeks in to my new residence) re-jigged the system and managed to get a couple of pipes mixed up - nonthewiser 4 years later this came home to roost with a completely blocked system which knackered the Worcester Bosch boiler completely. A lot of the microbore is under concrete flooring so I can do little about that, but I guess in the spring I can try to replace some of it. Failing that I am out of ideas.
 
If the magnetic filter was installed before or during the new boiler install then one might think that the Hx is OK.
You say that the pump impeller was renewed a year ago, was a whole new pump installed or just the pump head/impeller? if you found a reasonable build up in the pump ports then I would still remove the head and inspect/clean the impeller, its not a big job if the isol valves are holding.
 
If the magnetic filter was installed before or during the new boiler install then one might think that the Hx is OK.
You say that the pump impeller was renewed a year ago, was a whole new pump installed or just the pump head/impeller? if you found a reasonable build up in the pump ports then I would still remove the head and inspect/clean the impeller, its not a big job if the isol valves are holding.
yeah the magnaclean was fitted before my last boiler - fingers crossed that has done the job. As of now the system is sat happily on pump speed 2, 70 deg rad temp and everything hot aside from the bathroom rad. So I think the HX is ok.

Yes just the head was changed last year - I may have a go at that then tomorrow, when I removed the head it wasn't instantly clear to me how I got to the impeller - i'll have to have a look. My isolation valves are old - I may have to drain down again......
 
Your photo shows gate (wheel) valves so should be OK for isolation as you can tighten down on the glands if they (glands) leak but if the system is operating OK now on speed 2? or are you still getting problems with boiler tripping on o/heat on start up from cold. Don't know how your boiler operates but some now measure the delta T across the heat exchanger and if its greater > 30C will trip the boiler irrespective of the flow temperature.
If you have a ABV fitted ensure its index setting is correct.
 
Your photo shows gate (wheel) valves so should be OK for isolation as you can tighten down on the glands if they (glands) leak but if the system is operating OK now on speed 2? or are you still getting problems with boiler tripping on o/heat on start up from cold. Don't know how your boiler operates but some now measure the delta T across the heat exchanger and if its greater > 30C will trip the boiler irrespective of the flow temperature.
If you have a ABV fitted ensure its index setting is correct.
System operating ok on pump speed 2 aside from the one cold rad.... I'll see what it does in the morning from cold - but right now it's at steady state. I'm pretty sure I don't have an ABV fitted......

Yes that's what happens - the current temp rises too quickly in relation to the circulating water, I would say it is set to around 30 deg looking at when it trips out yes.

Some pics attached of the state of the blockage and the pump housing.
 

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I would definitely be of the opinion that if the pump head/impeller was installed during this build up that the impeller eye/vanes could be some what occluded, I include a picture of my 18 year old Salmson pump head which was still running perfectly after 18 years and is still in spotless condition used in a vented system (with the odd drop of inhibitor thrown in) so when/if you remove the pump head you should be able to see the impeller and make sure and clean out any deposits between the vanes and also the impeller eye.
Don,t know what your boiler output is but assuming a maximum deltaT of 25C then 15kw needs a circ flow of 8.6 LPM, 20kw 11.5 LPM, 25 kw 14.3 LPM and 30 kw 17.2 LPM, all at full firing.
If you have a UPS2 6M (60) pump running on speed2 which makes it a 5M pump and if you look at the pump curves or confirm that it is a ups 2 then if CH only on from cold that it might be a bit of a struggle to circulate enough water to keep the temp at 25C with anything bigger than a 20kw boiler but if you can also (first thing in the mornings) have both CH & HW on together until the boiler cuts out normally at its setpoint temperature (say 30 minutes or so) then one would expect plenty of circulation.
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A view of the impeller eye (not a great photo)
 

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