Hi
In the process of redoing bathroom and have come to the stage of needing to turn the water off. Installed in the house is a mains fed direct system with an unvented cylinder and boiler set up.
There is a mess of pipes in the cylinder cupboard but only one with a traditional stop cock on it. The only problem is that when I turn that off only the hot water is affected - i.e. nothing comes out of the hot water pipes but the cold still pumps it out!
I can turn the cold water off with the water company's stop cock outside the house but that is a pain!
So guess the question is - is this normal with an unvented cylinder (or does that not affect it?). Is there any reason why you would position a stop cock in the house AFTER you have separated out the cold water supply? There are also two red gate valves on the central heating pipes but they don't seem to affect the flow of water (which makes sense I guess!)
Any thoughts / help much appreciated!
In the process of redoing bathroom and have come to the stage of needing to turn the water off. Installed in the house is a mains fed direct system with an unvented cylinder and boiler set up.
There is a mess of pipes in the cylinder cupboard but only one with a traditional stop cock on it. The only problem is that when I turn that off only the hot water is affected - i.e. nothing comes out of the hot water pipes but the cold still pumps it out!
I can turn the cold water off with the water company's stop cock outside the house but that is a pain!
So guess the question is - is this normal with an unvented cylinder (or does that not affect it?). Is there any reason why you would position a stop cock in the house AFTER you have separated out the cold water supply? There are also two red gate valves on the central heating pipes but they don't seem to affect the flow of water (which makes sense I guess!)
Any thoughts / help much appreciated!