Brown hot water | Plumbing Zone | All Other Country's | Plumbers Forums

Welcome to the forum. Although you can post in any forum, the USA forum is here in case of local regs or laws

American Visitor?

Hey friend, we're detecting that you're an American visitor and want to thank you for coming to PlumbersTalk.net - Here is a link to the American Plumbing Forum. Though if you post in any other forum from your computer / phone it'll be marked with a little american flag so that other users can help from your neck of the woods. We hope this helps. And thanks once again.

Discuss Brown hot water in the Plumbing Zone | All Other Country's area at Plumbers Forums

L

Leeky

I replaced my hot water tank about a year ago. The original one had been installed when the house was built in 1957 and had started to leak. It is an all in one indirect unit that supplies hot water to the radiators and the hot running water. It has one cold water feed unlike a true indirect system that uses two cold water feeds. I am no expert but i believe the tap water and radiator water is separated by some sort of air lock.
The problem arises when the hot water and heating are on together. The hot water is very rusty coloured and you have to run off a whole tank full of hot water before the next tank is clear. This happens everytime. If only the hot water is on without the heating everything is fine. I wouldn't of thought the hot water tank is corroded just after a year.
Please help with any advise.
 
Thanks for reminding me its called a primatic. I had forgotten.
I will drain the tank when i get chance in the next day or so.
Thanks for the information. I will let you know if it works.
 
Upvote 0
I drained my system and refilled really slow as suggested. The hot water is still really brown when the central heating is on.
Any more ideas please.
 
Upvote 0
I'm going to replace all my radiators soon as they are quite old.
I know i can't use any chemicals on a primatic system due to cross contamination.
With the radiators removed can i flush the system?
 
Upvote 0
you can use chemicals if you bypassed the cylinder.
but then thats alot of mucking around.

but you can flush the whole system with a hose.
have you tried it with the pump speed lower ?
 
Upvote 0
Hi. Just a thought re:- primatic cylinders were in general fitted to back boiler gravity type installations to protect the boilers from corrosion, being a cheap alternative to an indirect system. However they do not cope well with pumped systems. It could be the reason the air lock has been effected? Good Luck
 
Upvote 0
I think we have established the air bubble has burst, i would look at why,the overall problem will be the temperature of the circs going through the cylinder, either the pump or circulator has malfunction or the thermostat(s) may be defective
 
Upvote 0

Similar plumbing topics

  • Question
What type of cylinder do you have?
Replies
6
Views
951
C
  • Question
Is there a ball valve on the flexihoses? Might...
Replies
1
Views
911
  • Question
Yeah will deffo try I’ve got a strong magnet...
Replies
6
Views
561
  • Question
Hi, We have solar panels for our hot water...
Replies
0
Views
667
  • Question
Not to my knowledge but they're not things I...
Replies
4
Views
1K
Back
Top