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As I've never had the opportunity to help install (or see designed) a traditional system boiler/cylinder plumbing set-up, some airing cupboards leave me scratching my head.
1. When the boiler is housed next to cylinder and the return rises up from ground level and T's into the cylinder coil tapping as it passes, wouldn't that unintentionally heat the cylinder even when hot water wasn't being called for?
2. When you see a pipe T'd off the flow from the boiler before it passes through the pump and divertor valve, what is this likely to be for? Since it would get hot no matter what you were calling for....I'm guessing often a bathroom rad? Or could it be something else?
3. If the flow has a bleed valve at it's highest point which has been replaced with a cap is this simply because the lazy plumber didn't want to get a replacement valve and all he had was a cap? Or could there be a good reason?
4. Do even experienced guys like some of you sometimes look in an airing cupboard and think...I have no idea what half of this is doing or where it's going...?
1. When the boiler is housed next to cylinder and the return rises up from ground level and T's into the cylinder coil tapping as it passes, wouldn't that unintentionally heat the cylinder even when hot water wasn't being called for?
2. When you see a pipe T'd off the flow from the boiler before it passes through the pump and divertor valve, what is this likely to be for? Since it would get hot no matter what you were calling for....I'm guessing often a bathroom rad? Or could it be something else?
3. If the flow has a bleed valve at it's highest point which has been replaced with a cap is this simply because the lazy plumber didn't want to get a replacement valve and all he had was a cap? Or could there be a good reason?
4. Do even experienced guys like some of you sometimes look in an airing cupboard and think...I have no idea what half of this is doing or where it's going...?