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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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When you re-pressurise an expansion vessel in a boiler are you
supposed to leave the drain cock open once you have got the pressure to 0 bar ? |
#2
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VAG_dude wrote in news:bd4932e4-0e04-473a-a550-
: When you re-pressurise an expansion vessel in a boiler are you supposed to leave the drain cock open once you have got the pressure to 0 bar ? It does not matter if the drain cock is open or closed when pressurising the expansion vessel as long as there is zero pressure in the system whilst this operation is carried out. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#3
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On Fri, 20 Aug 2010 09:34:52 -0700 (PDT), VAG_dude wrote:
When you re-pressurise an expansion vessel in a boiler are you supposed to leave the drain cock open once you have got the pressure to 0 bar ? By inference, on my Vaillant, with it open; i.e. it doesn't say close it. "Release the pressure from the boiler as described in Section 7.1.4" "Check that the internal pressure is... If the pressure is lower than this the vessel should be repressurised ..." Refit the valve cap" "Repressurise boiler and heating system if necessary" So, no explicit instruction to close the drain point. I did mine a couple of days ago and it was 12psi with the drain open so no action necessary, but it'd be interesting to see if it did make a difference. I suppose that it depends on how much of the volume outside the inflated part is occupied by air/water. Had to search for a gauge - the one that I use nowadays starts at 50psi! -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
#4
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On 20 Aug, 19:33, Heliotrope Smith wrote:
VAG_dude wrote in news:bd4932e4-0e04-473a-a550- : When you re-pressurise an expansion vessel in a boiler are you supposed to leave the drain cock open once you have got the pressure to 0 bar ? It does not matter if the drain cock is open or closed when pressurising * the expansion vessel as long as there is zero pressure in the system whilst this operation is carried out. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- Cheers, turns out I had read a rather confusing guide! |
#5
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On 20 Aug, 19:43, PeterC wrote:
On Fri, 20 Aug 2010 09:34:52 -0700 (PDT), VAG_dude wrote: When you re-pressurise an expansion vessel in a boiler are you supposed to leave the drain cock open once you have got the pressure to 0 bar ? By inference, on my Vaillant, with it open; i.e. it doesn't say close it. "Release the pressure from the boiler as described in Section 7.1.4" "Check that the internal pressure is... If the pressure is lower than this the vessel should be repressurised ..." Refit the valve cap" "Repressurise boiler and heating system if necessary" So, no explicit instruction to close the drain point. I did mine a couple of days ago and it was 12psi with the drain open so no action necessary, but it'd be interesting to see if it did make a difference. I suppose that it depends on how much of the volume outside the inflated part is occupied by air/water. Had to search for a gauge - the one that I use nowadays starts at 50psi! -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway This boiler is a Vaillant Turbomax and I have just re-pressurised the EV and now it appears the diverter valve is not working as it should occasionally getting stuck in mid-position! Is this to be expected for a boiler that is 9 years old? |
#6
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![]() "VAG_dude" wrote in message ... On 20 Aug, 19:33, Heliotrope Smith wrote: VAG_dude wrote in news:bd4932e4-0e04-473a-a550- : When you re-pressurise an expansion vessel in a boiler are you supposed to leave the drain cock open once you have got the pressure to 0 bar ? It does not matter if the drain cock is open or closed when pressurising the expansion vessel as long as there is zero pressure in the system whilst this operation is carried out. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- Cheers, turns out I had read a rather confusing guide! Sorry but it does matter. When you pressurise the expansion cylinder you want to leave it empty of water, if you pressurise it while full of water there will be no room for expansion afterwards. That is if the system is full of water but at zero pressure the expansion vessel may still be full of water (there is nowhere for it to go), when you start to pump in air the pressure will go up but still leave no space for expansion. You do need to ensure there is somewhere for the water that may be in the expansion vessel to go and that is the drain. |
#7
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On Fri, 20 Aug 2010 11:53:10 -0700 (PDT), VAG_dude wrote:
On 20 Aug, 19:43, PeterC wrote: On Fri, 20 Aug 2010 09:34:52 -0700 (PDT), VAG_dude wrote: When you re-pressurise an expansion vessel in a boiler are you supposed to leave the drain cock open once you have got the pressure to 0 bar ? By inference, on my Vaillant, with it open; i.e. it doesn't say close it. "Release the pressure from the boiler as described in Section 7.1.4" "Check that the internal pressure is... If the pressure is lower than this the vessel should be repressurised ..." Refit the valve cap" "Repressurise boiler and heating system if necessary" So, no explicit instruction to close the drain point. I did mine a couple of days ago and it was 12psi with the drain open so no action necessary, but it'd be interesting to see if it did make a difference. I suppose that it depends on how much of the volume outside the inflated part is occupied by air/water. Had to search for a gauge - the one that I use nowadays starts at 50psi! -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway This boiler is a Vaillant Turbomax and I have just re-pressurised the EV and now it appears the diverter valve is not working as it should occasionally getting stuck in mid-position! Is this to be expected for a boiler that is 9 years old? Sorry, don't know. Mine is 10 - 11 yo and, touch wood... -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
#8
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On Fri, 20 Aug 2010 20:32:11 +0100, dennis@home wrote:
"VAG_dude" wrote in message ... On 20 Aug, 19:33, Heliotrope Smith wrote: VAG_dude wrote in news:bd4932e4-0e04-473a-a550- : When you re-pressurise an expansion vessel in a boiler are you supposed to leave the drain cock open once you have got the pressure to 0 bar ? It does not matter if the drain cock is open or closed when pressurising the expansion vessel as long as there is zero pressure in the system whilst this operation is carried out. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- Cheers, turns out I had read a rather confusing guide! Sorry but it does matter. When you pressurise the expansion cylinder you want to leave it empty of water, if you pressurise it while full of water there will be no room for expansion afterwards. That is if the system is full of water but at zero pressure the expansion vessel may still be full of water (there is nowhere for it to go), when you start to pump in air the pressure will go up but still leave no space for expansion. You do need to ensure there is somewhere for the water that may be in the expansion vessel to go and that is the drain. Yes, that's what I wondered, otherwise one is trying to compress water! -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
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