![]() |
Draining Towel Rail
!Daft question alert!
As I was installing my new towel rail a question dawned on me.... how do you drain it down after it is full? It is connected to the C/H system via two vertically mounted straight through valves, so the usual 'break the union with a tray underneath' method is out of the window. The only two options I've though of a (1) Drain the system down until the rad is empty (lots of hassle) (2) Unscrew the bleed valve assembly from the top and then use a hose to siphon out most of the water, before unscrewing one union with a BIG sponge handy (feels like a bodge.... with the bonus of getting a mouthful of fernox!). What's the conventional wisdom on doing this, as these two methods seem a little haphazard to say the least! Cheers, James |
Draining Towel Rail
James Amor wrote:
As I was installing my new towel rail a question dawned on me.... how do you drain it down after it is full? It is connected to the C/H system via two vertically mounted straight through valves, so the usual 'break the union with a tray underneath' method is out of the window. The only two options I've though of a (1) Drain the system down until the rad is empty (lots of hassle) (2) Unscrew the bleed valve assembly from the top and then use a hose to siphon out most of the water, before unscrewing one union with a BIG sponge handy (feels like a bodge.... with the bonus of getting a mouthful of fernox!). (3) put the tray underneath, crack the joint and try to position the tray to catch the jet of water; wrapping a cloth around the joint/pipe leading down into the tray as a conduit for the water - messy. (4) just DON'T. David |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:45 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter