by ericmark »
Sun Jan 17, 2021 4:48 pm
Your not on your own, this house on three floors is rather large for an 18/24 oil fired boiler, but it is ample the way now configured.
The original however was a mess, two pumps and thermo syphon clearly the installed thought one pump for flat under main house and one pump for main house.
However the control was simply not there, had to manually plug in the pump.
Also one pump would cause reverse flow through the other, so simply switch one off when that part of house not being used did not work.
At nearly 70 I would have a problem working in the confined space to fit motorised valves, I expected one pump and two motorised valves, but for some reason I have two pumps.
The normal way is thermostat works the motorised valve, and the motorised valve works boiler and pump, but could not connect boiler and pumps all to same supply so means also need relays.
I wanted a bypass valve, but pumps are on the return, so that will not work. What seems really daft is the installer has actually put his name on the boiler for serving etc. If I had installed such a poor system last thing I would want to do is put my name on it, at least I know who not to use.
But a central heating pump is good for around 15 psi, so two 30 psi and pipes are used on mains pressure which is well over 30 psi (2 bar) so can take the pressure, but normal by-pass valve adjustment range : 0.1 to 0.5 bar. So I would think the high pressure would cause either the by-pass valve to lift or cause a problem with the thermostatic radiator valves (TRV).
In the old days the TRV was directional, today most work either way, but better on inlet as then closer to hot part of radiator and where duel sensors used one for air and one for water, the compensation for water temperature works better on the feed side.
On my system using electronic TRV heads transformed the system, rooms only heated when required.