Matthew wrote:
Hi,
We have recently moved to a larger house with what has turned out to
be
an unusual heating system. We have just had all the rads replaced
with
Stellrads and a new Grundfoss SS pump fitted. It turns out that
downstairs is a single pipe system in the solid floor but upstairs is
modern two. The upstairs rads are fine but downstairs still are not
very efficient. I have tried balancing the system by stopping down
all
the upstairs rads so that they are only open half a turn and this has
helped downstairs. I dont really want to get involved with putting a
dual pipe system in downstairs however I do have an idea to improve
things further, what if I insert a stop down valve in the main pipe
feed to the upstairs system therefore forcing more water downstairs?
Practical? Difficult?
BTW Is it common practice to run a Grundfoss SS on the highest speed
setting 3?
Thanks for any advice,
Matthew
If you can pump signficantly faster than usual thru the single pipe
section, it should work fine.
If your existing pump cant get the last rad on the single line hot,
maybe a 2nd pump in the single pipe circuit only.
It isnt ideal, but it can work well enough.
NT
|