Discuss Is a leak sealer ever a suitable solution for a new system? in the UK Plumbing Forum | Plumbing Advice area at PlumbersForums.net

Messages
12
I assume the answer is no, but if this fixes the issue I know it will be what my builders sub contractor plumber will do.

Therefore, before he is allowed near the system I would like to either find the issue or eleimnate parts of the system that do nto have an issue.

As you will note from my post I am not a plumber, but I can follow basic to complex instructions. I assume plumber tested system but was not present when he left.

Situation:

New Viessmann Gas Boiler fitted a few months ago to a new build garden house

I turned on the heating for the first time last week. Three days about 3 to 5 hours each day.

Each morning the boiler had lost all pressure and had to be re-pressurised with the valve that loops form pipe D to E - see image

Following guidance from Viessmann (now closed for Christmas) I closed off all valves to the boiler after ensuting pressure was about 1.2 bar and left it overnight. Pressure has not dropped this morning.

Fairly sure that eliminates the boiler - would you agree?

Is there any possible fault other than a leak in the heating pipes?

There is no sign of water damage to any of the plasterboard - (timber frame building)

If there is a leak, will the pressure drop when I open one or more valves - without turning on the boiler.

A Heating Flow
D Cold Water
E Heating return

Will turning on one valve at a time help identify where the issue is?

Which valves? - then leave for a few hours or overnight? I assume A & E and order will make no diference.

As hot water does not have a valve am I right in assuming the leak must be in the radiator system.

Is there any chance of identifying a leak, with the boiler running, pointing a Laser temperature guage at the plasterboard walls?

Any comments of suggestions would be appreciated.

ColinK
 

Attachments

  • Boiler- low pressure.png
    Boiler- low pressure.png
    280.7 KB · Views: 18
Yep it’s a no from me time to pressure test the heating system to 4 bar with water

Also wouldn’t pay the plumbers a penny until they fix it and you inspect the pressure test being on for 2 days
 
Yep it’s a no from me time to pressure test the heating system to 4 bar with water

Also wouldn’t pay the plumbers a penny until they fix it and you inspect the pressure test being on for 2 days
Thanks for your comment and suggestion which I will push for. Unfortunately the main build / contractor has already paid the plumber, though we have not fully paid him. Sorry for him as I know he i sunder some financial pressure.

If you have any thoughts on my comments about self diagnosis (me) before getting plumber (which will not happen quickly) in I would appreciate it.
 
It really isn't your place to find the issue you've employed a contractor to fit a new boiler and make alterations it's leaking so it needs finding , leak sealer is not acceptable on a new install and is only masking the problem which will not go away . As Shaun has said get them to isolate the boiler from the system raise the pressure in the pipework 4 bar is a bit much in my opinion as it could damage the radiators ? but 3 bar is the maximum the system should get to so I'd say raise it to that then throughly check round for signs of leakage keeping it pressurised up . Kop
 
My initial thought is could a pipe have burst due to the freezing weather if the heating was not on?

Fill boiler to 2.5 bar cold.
Isolate boiler from system with boiler valves.
Leave boiler turned off overnight.
Check boiler pressure in morning, we expect it to be 2.5b as per last test.
Then open boiler valves and we then expected the pressure to drop as the pressure in the boiler equalises with the leaking heating pipework. If the pressure drops, it’s a leak on the pipework.

I’ve got a thermal camera I use to find leaks like this.
 
leak sealer is not a good option for the new system. You can contact a good plumber and fix it. You can contact Caliber Plumbing for any plumbing issues you are facing. I have personal experience with them.
 
My initial thought is could a pipe have burst due to the freezing weather if the heating was not on?

Fill boiler to 2.5 bar cold.
Isolate boiler from system with boiler valves.
Leave boiler turned off overnight.
Check boiler pressure in morning, we expect it to be 2.5b as per last test.
Then open boiler valves and we then expected the pressure to drop as the pressure in the boiler equalises with the leaking heating pipework. If the pressure drops, it’s a leak on the pipework.

I’ve got a thermal camera I use to find leaks like this.
 
Thanks for the detailed reply. Satisfied it was not due to ice, started before frost and building well insulated.

Followed your guidance. Leak in radiator pipe work.

I tried to find leak with a laser thermometer but as expected it was not sensitive enough to defect a leak.

Would you expect all plumbers to have a thermal camera?

A few years ago a plumber found a leak under my son‘s concrete floor with a sound detection device.

Once concrete floor was dug up in a tiny area he fixed it in 10 seconds. Previous plumber from 5 years earlier did not tighten one of several plastic joints.

thanks ColinK
 
Thanks for the detailed reply. Satisfied it was not due to ice, started before frost and building well insulated.

Followed your guidance. Leak in radiator pipe work.

I tried to find leak with a laser thermometer but as expected it was not sensitive enough to defect a leak.

Would you expect all plumbers to have a thermal camera?

A few years ago a plumber found a leak under my son‘s concrete floor with a sound detection device.

Once concrete floor was dug up in a tiny area he fixed it in 10 seconds. Previous plumber from 5 years earlier did not tighten one of several plastic joints.

thanks ColinK

I sometimes use a stethoscope, although it’s hard to hear the water. I’ve also disconnected pipework and connected a air compressor, pressurised to 3-4bar and then used stethoscope.

Not many plumbers carry thermal cameras, although that may be changing as the cost of the cameras has reduced.
 

Reply to Is a leak sealer ever a suitable solution for a new system? in the UK Plumbing Forum | Plumbing Advice area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

Every two weeks or so I have to go and top up the system because the hot taps are running cold. Boiler display is flashing 0.6 bar and I fill up...
Replies
2
Views
283
PSxxxxxx
P
Our kitchen mixer tap has started dripping. Like so much of the plumbing in our almost new build bungalow, it is lacking! The plumber didn't...
Replies
12
Views
433
  • Question
Ideal Logic 24, Previous problem was that the hot water was only cold or barely warm if the heating was in use. If heating was off and boiler cold...
Replies
2
Views
221
We run a community village hall and have a large kitchen provided for the use of hirers. This includes a Lincat SLR9 gas cooker which I believe is...
Replies
5
Views
555
Hi, Can anyone advise as to why the cold water to my bathroom keeps airlocking? This originally happened about 12 months ago and has happened 3-4...
Replies
9
Views
450

Newest Plumbing Threads

Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock