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Default Worchester Greenstar 24i Junior

My youngest daughter lives in a rented house & about 6 months ago the
landlord replaced the old boiler with the above.

She was away on hols at the time and I'm now beginning to suspect the
landlord fitted it himself. He is a bit of a cowboy - for example, fitting
laminate flooring upstairs over the existing carpets - and generally a
useless git, so I tend to sort small stuff out for her..

Anywho, the house has been cold in the recent weather so I went round & bled
the rads - all of which badly needed doing. One rad in particular (prolly
the last one on the circuit) took nearly 10 mins to bleed.

As a result, I've overcooked topping up the system and the gauge on the
boiler now reads around 2.5 bar.

The boiler is mounted above a kitchen worktop and it now transpires that it
'overflows' regularly to the point that she keeps a bowl below it to capture
the water.

I can't see a separate pressure vessel anywhere, nor can I see a separate
pressure relief valve.

Would these be built into the boiler itself? I don't know this make or
model at all. Its clearly a combi so I can't think of any other source for
the water.

Any idea on the correct setting for the PRV?

Second point, if this hasn't been installed by a CORGI guy then I clearly
need to contact the landlord on her behalf & get it sorted. Would CORGI
tell me?


--
Dave - The Medway Handyman
www.medwayhandyman.co.uk



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Default Worchester Greenstar 24i Junior


"The Medway Handyman" wrote in message
om...
My youngest daughter lives in a rented house & about 6 months ago the
landlord replaced the old boiler with the above.

She was away on hols at the time and I'm now beginning to suspect the
landlord fitted it himself. He is a bit of a cowboy - for example,

fitting
laminate flooring upstairs over the existing carpets - and generally a
useless git, so I tend to sort small stuff out for her..

Anywho, the house has been cold in the recent weather so I went round &

bled
the rads - all of which badly needed doing. One rad in particular (prolly
the last one on the circuit) took nearly 10 mins to bleed.

As a result, I've overcooked topping up the system and the gauge on the
boiler now reads around 2.5 bar.

The boiler is mounted above a kitchen worktop and it now transpires that

it
'overflows' regularly to the point that she keeps a bowl below it to

capture
the water.

I can't see a separate pressure vessel anywhere, nor can I see a separate
pressure relief valve.

Would these be built into the boiler itself? I don't know this make or
model at all. Its clearly a combi so I can't think of any other source

for
the water.

Any idea on the correct setting for the PRV?

Second point, if this hasn't been installed by a CORGI guy then I clearly
need to contact the landlord on her behalf & get it sorted. Would CORGI
tell me?


--
Dave - The Medway Handyman
www.medwayhandyman.co.uk


Download the manuals from
http://www.worcester-bosch.co.uk/ins...boilers-and-sy
stems/greenstar-28i-junior/literature

The PRV is set at 3 bar is not adjustable and it will direct hot water and
steam from a boiler that is over pressured (3bar) out of the house through
a copper pipe and this pipe should be positioned to prevent the disharge
from hitting people.

Saunier Duval are the only boilers that have a release valve that discharges
into the house (called low pressure release valves and they are totally
different to PRVs)

Adam


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Default Worchester Greenstar 24i Junior

On Wed, 31 Dec 2008 00:10:52 +0000, The Medway Handyman wrote:

My youngest daughter lives in a rented house & about 6 months ago the
landlord replaced the old boiler with the above.

She was away on hols at the time and I'm now beginning to suspect the
landlord fitted it himself. He is a bit of a cowboy - for example, fitting
laminate flooring upstairs over the existing carpets - and generally a
useless git, so I tend to sort small stuff out for her..

Anywho, the house has been cold in the recent weather so I went round & bled
the rads - all of which badly needed doing. One rad in particular (prolly
the last one on the circuit) took nearly 10 mins to bleed.

As a result, I've overcooked topping up the system and the gauge on the
boiler now reads around 2.5 bar.

The boiler is mounted above a kitchen worktop and it now transpires that it
'overflows' regularly to the point that she keeps a bowl below it to capture
the water.


Condensate? Translucent plastic trap at the left hand side under
the boiler. Should be connected to waste system. If not could be
'overflow' she's referrring to, in which case clearly cowboy - CORGI might
well be interested as clearly unregistered installer.


I can't see a separate pressure vessel anywhere, nor can I see a separate
pressure relief valve.


The pressure vessel is a fat pancake mounted on the back frame of the
boiler (which is hung on the wall first) so it's between the guts of the
boiler and the wall. There's a braided flexible hose from the expansion
vessel which plugs into part of the boiler's internal pipework. A total
bloody cowboy might even forget to connect this.

The PRD comes out under the bottom right hand side of the boiler, behind
(closer to wall) than the Big-5 (Flow, DHW out, gas, CW in, Return) pipes.
Brass compression fitting but you can't do a compression nut & olive[1] up
on it because it twists and there's practically no way of holding the
boiler-side part steady while you do up the pipe-side part. I generally
fit a Speedfit plastic 1/2" tap connector to it as you can do those hand
tight. If you look up inside the boiler you'll see a translucent nylon
sort of cup arrangement with a downward-facing lug where the threaded part
of the PRD coupling just mentioned, which is mounted on the back frame,
connects to the actual PRD valve which is on the main part of the boiler
which is hung onto the backframe after that's up. A real cowboy would not
only *not* connect a PRD pipe, but wouldn't even push the frame-mounted
cup up to engage with the PRD valve proper. In fact they'd probably mount
the boiler so the two don't even line up.


Would these be built into the boiler itself? I don't know this make or
model at all. Its clearly a combi so I can't think of any other source for
the water.

Any idea on the correct setting for the PRV?


System pressure, as for any system boiler, 1 bar + depending on height of
installation above boiler (e.g. if boiler's at bottom of house with some
rads 30' above it then you could go up to 2bar).

Second point, if this hasn't been installed by a CORGI guy then I clearly
need to contact the landlord on her behalf & get it sorted. Would CORGI
tell me?


It should have been notified. CORGI might be able to tell you if it
*had* been notified through them. Building Control might also be able to
tell you, and might be more interested if it hadn't.


[1] the sort you get from PMs not greengrocers ;-)


--
John Stumbles -- http://yaph.co.uk

Extreme moderate
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Default Worchester Greenstar 24i Junior

In message , The Medway
Handyman writes
My youngest daughter lives in a rented house & about 6 months ago the
landlord replaced the old boiler with the above.

She was away on hols at the time and I'm now beginning to suspect the
landlord fitted it himself. He is a bit of a cowboy - for example, fitting
laminate flooring upstairs over the existing carpets - and generally a
useless git, so I tend to sort small stuff out for her..

Anywho, the house has been cold in the recent weather so I went round & bled
the rads - all of which badly needed doing. One rad in particular (prolly
the last one on the circuit) took nearly 10 mins to bleed.

As a result, I've overcooked topping up the system and the gauge on the
boiler now reads around 2.5 bar.

The boiler is mounted above a kitchen worktop and it now transpires that it
'overflows' regularly to the point that she keeps a bowl below it to capture
the water.

I can't see a separate pressure vessel anywhere, nor can I see a separate
pressure relief valve.

Would these be built into the boiler itself? I don't know this make or
model at all. Its clearly a combi so I can't think of any other source for
the water.

Any idea on the correct setting for the PRV?

Second point, if this hasn't been installed by a CORGI guy then I clearly
need to contact the landlord on her behalf & get it sorted. Would CORGI
tell me?


It has to have an annual safety check together with a certificate

Its the law

He has to be able to produce one when asked

This is more important than whether its been fitted by a CORGI, although
whether fitting a boiler in a rented premises (i.e. not your own
personal) comes under CORGI rules, I don't know

The pressure vessel sits behind the boiler itself - it's part of the
backplate IIRC

The pressure relief outlet will be wherever it's plumbed to be STS - the
pressure relief valve will vbe the front end of it

I can check and see where it comes out of the boiler, but if it really
is more a question of where the pipe ends up




--
geoff


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Default Worchester Greenstar 24i Junior

YAPH wrote:
On Wed, 31 Dec 2008 00:10:52 +0000, The Medway Handyman wrote:

My youngest daughter lives in a rented house & about 6 months ago the
landlord replaced the old boiler with the above.

She was away on hols at the time and I'm now beginning to suspect the
landlord fitted it himself. He is a bit of a cowboy - for example, fitting
laminate flooring upstairs over the existing carpets - and generally a
useless git, so I tend to sort small stuff out for her..

Anywho, the house has been cold in the recent weather so I went round & bled
the rads - all of which badly needed doing. One rad in particular (prolly
the last one on the circuit) took nearly 10 mins to bleed.

As a result, I've overcooked topping up the system and the gauge on the
boiler now reads around 2.5 bar.

The boiler is mounted above a kitchen worktop and it now transpires that it
'overflows' regularly to the point that she keeps a bowl below it to capture
the water.


Condensate? Translucent plastic trap at the left hand side under
the boiler. Should be connected to waste system. If not could be
'overflow' she's referrring to, in which case clearly cowboy - CORGI might
well be interested as clearly unregistered installer.


Moreover, on this boiler the condensate trap works on a syphon basis,
ie, the condensate doesn't just dribble out, it fills the trap and then
empties itself in one go (about half a cup full?) (intended to avoid
pipes freezing up due to trickling). The 'overflowing' sounds like it's
happening occasionally - does that reflect what's going on; ie a missing
or leaking drainpipe from the trap?

There's a white plastic plate across the base of the boiler which
unclips and slides forward which ISTR needs removing to eyeball the
drain pipework.

David
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