Morning all
I have a Worcester 28i RSF Boiler which has been in place and operating since 2003. It has a overheat cut-off thermostat which when trips, turns off the gas so you don't get hot water.
This has now tripped twice in the past 24 hours, whereas before then it has never tripped at all.
Now I just wanted to check this with you guys because at the moment the radiators are all drained of water while we redecorate the front room (I had to take the radiator off the wall).
Would this affect the boilers ability to produce hot water? I didn't think so as I have been in this position before without any water in the system, and the switch never tripped then when we were using hot water.
3 questions then
1) Can the hot water work correctly and independently without the radiator system being full of water?
2) If the switch is tripping, what could be wrong with it. Is it worth me calling in a service engineer? I can reset it, but I doubt it should be tripping.
3) Slightly unrelated, but this boiler is now 7 years old. I know boilers get more efficient all the time, but at what point should I consider replacing it for a more modern appliance. I notice the new Worcester 28i Boiler claims to be 30% more efficient thanks to reusing the exhaust gases.
Any help appreciated
Chris
I have a Worcester 28i RSF Boiler which has been in place and operating since 2003. It has a overheat cut-off thermostat which when trips, turns off the gas so you don't get hot water.
This has now tripped twice in the past 24 hours, whereas before then it has never tripped at all.
Now I just wanted to check this with you guys because at the moment the radiators are all drained of water while we redecorate the front room (I had to take the radiator off the wall).
Would this affect the boilers ability to produce hot water? I didn't think so as I have been in this position before without any water in the system, and the switch never tripped then when we were using hot water.
3 questions then
1) Can the hot water work correctly and independently without the radiator system being full of water?
2) If the switch is tripping, what could be wrong with it. Is it worth me calling in a service engineer? I can reset it, but I doubt it should be tripping.
3) Slightly unrelated, but this boiler is now 7 years old. I know boilers get more efficient all the time, but at what point should I consider replacing it for a more modern appliance. I notice the new Worcester 28i Boiler claims to be 30% more efficient thanks to reusing the exhaust gases.
Any help appreciated
Chris