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- 19 Jan 2013
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My central heating seems to take a while to get the radiators hot. 30-40 minutes for the rads to get hot is normal. I'm in a 4-bedroom house. The central heating is the original one installed and so 30 years old.
I don't want to poke and prod around the system too much, but here's what I've done to diagnose the system so far.
I got back this evening (before the heating had been turned on) and turned off all the radiators except the one in the kitchen (next to the boiler). Then turned the radiator on. Within a couple of minutes, the radiator was starting to heat up. After about 5 minutes, the radiator was warm, but not hot. I then started feeling around the back of the boiler. There is a pipe that comes out the back of the heat exchanger and then goes down into the floor. I suspect that this is what feeds the radiator loops (over the course of 5 minutes it seemed to stay the same temperature as the radiator). During the first 5-10 mins after the boiler being on, this pipe warmed up gradually from cold to be hot, but I could still keep my hand clasped around the copper pipe). Is this normal? I would hope that this would be piping hot..
After this, I started opening up the radiators again. I could immediately feel the hot water flowing through the radiators as they heated up from one side to the other, so this leads me to suspect that this is not a problem with the pump or blocked pipes, otherwise the radiators wouldn't heat up immediately.
Once all the radiators were opened up, the pipe coming out of the heat exchanger and down into the floor cooled down (a load of cold water from the other 10 rads going into the system probably) and then gradually heated up again, but after an hour as I type this, the rads are still "hot but not piping hot" so that I can keep my hand on them.
I'm not about to take the boiler apart, but suspect that this isn't normal. I assume that it's a problem with the heat exchanger, but could do with some advice before I get a heating engineer out to look at it or try and sell me a new boiler. It's an old boiler, but here's the schematic of it in case that helps anyone.
I don't want to poke and prod around the system too much, but here's what I've done to diagnose the system so far.
I got back this evening (before the heating had been turned on) and turned off all the radiators except the one in the kitchen (next to the boiler). Then turned the radiator on. Within a couple of minutes, the radiator was starting to heat up. After about 5 minutes, the radiator was warm, but not hot. I then started feeling around the back of the boiler. There is a pipe that comes out the back of the heat exchanger and then goes down into the floor. I suspect that this is what feeds the radiator loops (over the course of 5 minutes it seemed to stay the same temperature as the radiator). During the first 5-10 mins after the boiler being on, this pipe warmed up gradually from cold to be hot, but I could still keep my hand clasped around the copper pipe). Is this normal? I would hope that this would be piping hot..
After this, I started opening up the radiators again. I could immediately feel the hot water flowing through the radiators as they heated up from one side to the other, so this leads me to suspect that this is not a problem with the pump or blocked pipes, otherwise the radiators wouldn't heat up immediately.
Once all the radiators were opened up, the pipe coming out of the heat exchanger and down into the floor cooled down (a load of cold water from the other 10 rads going into the system probably) and then gradually heated up again, but after an hour as I type this, the rads are still "hot but not piping hot" so that I can keep my hand on them.
I'm not about to take the boiler apart, but suspect that this isn't normal. I assume that it's a problem with the heat exchanger, but could do with some advice before I get a heating engineer out to look at it or try and sell me a new boiler. It's an old boiler, but here's the schematic of it in case that helps anyone.