As part of a full bathroom refurbishment, I'm installing one of those tall, narrow designer radiators - a Hudson Reed Revive double-panel unit, model number HL368. This particular rad is 1500mm high and 354mm wide. Each panel consists of six vertical oval tubes that are interconnected at the top and bottom by a short horizontal tube. Full details of the product are here:-
https://www.hudsonreed.co.uk/products/heating/revive-double-panel/HL368
The unit was supplied with a blanking plug and a bleed valve installed conventionally at the top of the rad. The bottom two connectors just have plastic blanks installed - presumably ready to receive a balancing valve and an on/off or thermostatic valve on the other side.
Now to the point of this post.....
The installation instructions on the manufacturer's website (they can be found on the above web page) state that when the rad is installed "upright" - i.e. the installed radiator is "tall and narrow" as opposed to "wide and short", the flow side should be connected to the top of the radiator and the return should be connected to the bottom on the same side.
Is this really necessary? I suppose it's intended to avoid the situation where, if installed with flow and return connections at the bottom, the hot water tends to cut straight across to the return without properly circulating through the full radiator, but it will involve rather messy pipework and will, I think, rather spoil the finished look of the installation.
If it's really necessary I'll certainly follow the manufacturer's recommendations - far better to have an effective radiator than one that doesn't work properly. But if the general consensus is that conventional connections at the bottom of the rad will work, then I'd rather do that.
Anyone got any experience of installing one of these rads, or something similar?
Thanks,
Mike
https://www.hudsonreed.co.uk/products/heating/revive-double-panel/HL368
The unit was supplied with a blanking plug and a bleed valve installed conventionally at the top of the rad. The bottom two connectors just have plastic blanks installed - presumably ready to receive a balancing valve and an on/off or thermostatic valve on the other side.
Now to the point of this post.....
The installation instructions on the manufacturer's website (they can be found on the above web page) state that when the rad is installed "upright" - i.e. the installed radiator is "tall and narrow" as opposed to "wide and short", the flow side should be connected to the top of the radiator and the return should be connected to the bottom on the same side.
Is this really necessary? I suppose it's intended to avoid the situation where, if installed with flow and return connections at the bottom, the hot water tends to cut straight across to the return without properly circulating through the full radiator, but it will involve rather messy pipework and will, I think, rather spoil the finished look of the installation.
If it's really necessary I'll certainly follow the manufacturer's recommendations - far better to have an effective radiator than one that doesn't work properly. But if the general consensus is that conventional connections at the bottom of the rad will work, then I'd rather do that.
Anyone got any experience of installing one of these rads, or something similar?
Thanks,
Mike