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-   -   Two (stupid) radiator questions (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/223236-two-stupid-radiator-questions.html)

Aaron Fude December 1st 07 05:37 AM

Two (stupid) radiator questions
 
Hi,

I have two hydronic radiators in my house that don't seem to have the
ability to be shut off (no knob to twist).

One of them works, but I would actually like to turn it off (the room
is not used).

The other one is off, but I would actually to use it (the room is
used).

Any suggestions on how to approach this problem?

Thanks!

Aaron

marson December 1st 07 12:01 PM

Two (stupid) radiator questions
 
On Nov 30, 11:37 pm, Aaron Fude wrote:
Hi,

I have two hydronic radiators in my house that don't seem to have the
ability to be shut off (no knob to twist).

One of them works, but I would actually like to turn it off (the room
is not used).

The other one is off, but I would actually to use it (the room is
used).

Any suggestions on how to approach this problem?

Thanks!

Aaron


What do you mean by "hydronic radiators?". I am assuming you have old
cast iron radiators, not newer panel radiators or fin tubes. Are you
asking because you want to fix it yourself? Are you a good DIYer? If
this is your first plumbing project, might be easier to just call a
plumber. It's not rocket science, but dealing with getting old
fittings off, refilling and bleeding a heating system, etc are a bit
harder than things like fixing a dripping faucet.

You can probably just add a valve where none exists. The valves have
a union one one side (radiator side) and standard pipe thread on the
other. How the swap out goes depends on what you currently have.
The valve has to be bought at a plumbing supply place--usually these
only sell to licensed plumbers, but there are also outfits on the net
that sell such parts. (Don't waste your time at Home Depot). Check
out http://www.pexsupply.com/CategoryPre...D=626&brandid=.

On the radiator that won't come on, there are several things that
could be wrong. Most likely on an old system is that the valve is
stuck shut. (I had to change every valve when I bought my house).
Could also be full of air. Plan A would be to bleed it. If that
doesn't work, then the valve has to be changed.


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