Hi,
I have a Worcester Greenstar Ri Boiler with an unvented cylinder(Megaflo)
The boiler seems to heat up water without a problem. It reaches a point when it stops burning gas and the indicator light switches off, which I think it is normal. To me it means that all the water in the cylinder has reached an ideal temperature.
The problem is that after about three minutes when this happens, the boiler fires again, burns some gas for about 30 seconds (the indicator light on). Then after this, the indicator light switches off and it stops burning gas. After 3 more minutes it repeats the same process ( boiler fires and burn some gas for 30 seconds, then switches off and fires 3 minutes after). It does this indefinitely. No one in the house is using hot water, there are no leaks and the central heating is not on.
A certified Megaflo engineer checked the cylinder and the valves that it uses a couple of days ago, and told me that the fact that the boiler was firing even when it was not necessary, is not related to the Megaflo cylinder. He mentioned that the Megaflo is sending the signal to the boiler to switch on when required, and if the boiler is firing without reason, then the problem is to do with the boiler.
I'm not too convinced with his explanation, and would like to get a second opinion about the issue.
I have a Worcester Greenstar Ri Boiler with an unvented cylinder(Megaflo)
The boiler seems to heat up water without a problem. It reaches a point when it stops burning gas and the indicator light switches off, which I think it is normal. To me it means that all the water in the cylinder has reached an ideal temperature.
The problem is that after about three minutes when this happens, the boiler fires again, burns some gas for about 30 seconds (the indicator light on). Then after this, the indicator light switches off and it stops burning gas. After 3 more minutes it repeats the same process ( boiler fires and burn some gas for 30 seconds, then switches off and fires 3 minutes after). It does this indefinitely. No one in the house is using hot water, there are no leaks and the central heating is not on.
A certified Megaflo engineer checked the cylinder and the valves that it uses a couple of days ago, and told me that the fact that the boiler was firing even when it was not necessary, is not related to the Megaflo cylinder. He mentioned that the Megaflo is sending the signal to the boiler to switch on when required, and if the boiler is firing without reason, then the problem is to do with the boiler.
I'm not too convinced with his explanation, and would like to get a second opinion about the issue.