Isolating CH from HW in an old system?
Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 7:16 am
Hi. I have an old and now broken central heating (CH) and hot water (HW) system, which (I googled) is based around an 'open vented indirect hot water cylinder' (exactly like this [url]https://www.diydoctor.org.uk/project_images/domestic_hot_water_systems/Indirect%20cylinder.jpg[/url].
All the cold taps are mains supplied (not just the kitchen, unusually, I read). The gas boiler in the kitchen supplied HW and CH radiators, at least the latter via a pump. The first floor water cylinder (WC) has a backup immersion heater (thankfully). The loft has a water storage tank (WST) and a feed & expansion cistern (F&EC). There are no stop valves anywhere, that I can see :( .
Well, the boiler died of old age, and the Gas Board disconnected its gas supply. I couldn't afford a new one yet, and I'm content with alternative electric heating, and the immersion heater in the WC, for the time being.
But now the old boiler has started leaking water :( . I'd like to just isolate/stop the water flow in the CH part of the system, but it isn't as easy as I imagined. I thought if I turned off the mains stop valve, ran all the taps so that the two loft tanks emptied, tied up the ball-valve in the F&EC, then the F&EC wouldn't refill and the boiler wouldn't have any water to leak.
But when I turned the mains back on, and once the WST had filled from its own ball-valve, the F&EC gradually filled up from its bottom outlet pipe, seemingly ultimately from the WST, since its ball-valve re-opened after the F&EC starting filling and only stopped once the two tanks reached an equal level.
Where's that water coming from? I thought the HW and CH supplies were separate? Does having a pump mean the boiler has its own mains supply, separate from the F&EC? Or does the partial draining and refilling of the WST imply that the source of the water in the F&EC is from the WC? If so, how (isn't the heat exchanger in the WC just a sealed pipe)?
What am I missing here, please?
Is there any reasonably easy way to 'disconnect' the whole CH/boiler 'side' of the system?
Thanks for any help or guidance you can offer.
All the cold taps are mains supplied (not just the kitchen, unusually, I read). The gas boiler in the kitchen supplied HW and CH radiators, at least the latter via a pump. The first floor water cylinder (WC) has a backup immersion heater (thankfully). The loft has a water storage tank (WST) and a feed & expansion cistern (F&EC). There are no stop valves anywhere, that I can see :( .
Well, the boiler died of old age, and the Gas Board disconnected its gas supply. I couldn't afford a new one yet, and I'm content with alternative electric heating, and the immersion heater in the WC, for the time being.
But now the old boiler has started leaking water :( . I'd like to just isolate/stop the water flow in the CH part of the system, but it isn't as easy as I imagined. I thought if I turned off the mains stop valve, ran all the taps so that the two loft tanks emptied, tied up the ball-valve in the F&EC, then the F&EC wouldn't refill and the boiler wouldn't have any water to leak.
But when I turned the mains back on, and once the WST had filled from its own ball-valve, the F&EC gradually filled up from its bottom outlet pipe, seemingly ultimately from the WST, since its ball-valve re-opened after the F&EC starting filling and only stopped once the two tanks reached an equal level.
Where's that water coming from? I thought the HW and CH supplies were separate? Does having a pump mean the boiler has its own mains supply, separate from the F&EC? Or does the partial draining and refilling of the WST imply that the source of the water in the F&EC is from the WC? If so, how (isn't the heat exchanger in the WC just a sealed pipe)?
What am I missing here, please?
Is there any reasonably easy way to 'disconnect' the whole CH/boiler 'side' of the system?
Thanks for any help or guidance you can offer.