Search the forum,

Discuss Hydrogen in one radiator in the Oil and Solid Fuel Forum area at PlumbersForums.net

Messages
5
Closed heating system, approx 14 years old with oil fired boiler, feeding around 18 radiators over 2 floors. One small radiator nearest the boiler and downstairs repeatedly fills up with hydrogen over a period of about 4 weeks. Hydrogen is suspected as it can be ignited and there is no smell. System was flushed and treated with inhibitor last year, and no leak is apparent (including inside the boiler as the engineer has tested it). Litmus paper indicates the water is on the acidic side - there are some minor signs of corrosion around some of the radiator connections but nothing extensive. The bad radiator can feel perfectly fine for a week or two and some time during operation there is a sound of air gurgling through the system - but always ends up in this same radiator. Is it just corrosion across all the radiators, but always ending up in this one radiator? One engineer reversed the pump direction when it was flushed, as the feed was flowing the wrong way, yet the problem is always in the same radiator.
 
The pH should typically be in the range 6.5–8.5. If it's more acidic than 6.5 you'll get corrosion and hydrogen evolution.

It's quite normal for air/hydrogen to accumulate preferentially in one radiator. It often seems to migrate to a point with relatively low pressure and/or high temperature, e.g. a tall towel rail in an upstairs bathroom.

 
Will adding more corrosion inhibitor reduce the acidity? Why would it be so acidic when it was flushed clean and inhibitor was added last year?
What's the pH of the local water supply?

What chemicals did you use to flush it? Did you follow the manufacturer's instructions to the letter?

After cleaning, did you flush with clean water at least twice and monitor progress by checking the pH at each stage?

Did you add the correct amount of inhibitor?

Corrosion inhibitors do usually reduce the pH but they aren't a substitute for neutraliser if that's what's needed.

Another approach is to test a sample of the system water. Use a kit from the same manufacturer as the inhibitor you've been using. The test comes back from the lab with an analysis of what's wrong and recommendations to fix. They cost £30 – £60 from a plumbers merchant depending on how sophisticated the analysis is. Not free, and shouldn't be needed if you follow the instructions on the cleaner and inhibitor correctly. But blindly pouring loads of inhibitor into a system that may or may not need it isn't cheap either.
 
Last edited:
Local water is close to pH 7. A professional did the flush and did spend all day and used Norstrom chemicals and did flush with water (nor sure if pH was monitored) and added inhibitor at the end.

Thanks for the advice: I've ordered a water test kit.
 

Reply to Hydrogen in one radiator in the Oil and Solid Fuel Forum area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

Every two weeks or so I have to go and top up the system because the hot taps are running cold. Boiler display is flashing 0.6 bar and I fill up to 1.3. I've had an engineer look inside the boiler and he can't see anything wrong. I've checked the pipes all over the house and cannot see any...
Replies
1
Views
132
Hi, Can anyone advise as to why the cold water to my bathroom keeps airlocking? This originally happened about 12 months ago and has happened 3-4 times since. It’s an upstairs bathroom, fed from a tank in the attic. The tank is about 8 Meters away and feeds a bath, sink and toilet. The tank...
Replies
9
Views
323
We run a community village hall and have a large kitchen provided for the use of hirers. This includes a Lincat SLR9 gas cooker which I believe is a 23.8Kw appliance with all six burners and oven on max. This was installed some 10 years ago and has passed all subsequent Gas Safety inspections as...
Replies
5
Views
443
Creating content since 2001. Untold Media.

Newest Plumbing Threads

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