I
idkwia
I have been advised by two plumbers but both say different things. I paid one £500 to do some work which was ok but I still have a problem. Can anyone here help me please so I can decide which of these guys is right?
I have a regular boiler which I believe is open flue. I have a thermostat on my cylinder which has just been renewed. I have a newly fitted gas valve. I also have a newly fitted room thermostat.
The CH and water is working etc but the water is much too hot. I have got the cylinder thermostat turned down to about 40 degrees. If I only have the HW on then the cylinder thermostat turns the boiler on and off as it is supposed to do. But when the heating and hot water are both on then the water from the taps is much to hot.
Because of the cold weather I have been leaving the heating on constantly and so overnight I am not using any hot water so wouldn't the water eventually heat up to 80 degrees as per the boiler thermostat anyway, or should the system somehow self regulate? In other words because I am not drawing off any water and because the heating is constantly trying to keep the house warm wouldn't the water just get hotter and hotter until it reaches the 80 degrees as set by the boiler thermostat regardless of what the cylinder thermostat says?
One plumber says that the system is fine and that is just how it works and the other says I need a new diverter valve and/or the wiring on the cylinder thermostat is wrong. Who is right please?
I have a regular boiler which I believe is open flue. I have a thermostat on my cylinder which has just been renewed. I have a newly fitted gas valve. I also have a newly fitted room thermostat.
The CH and water is working etc but the water is much too hot. I have got the cylinder thermostat turned down to about 40 degrees. If I only have the HW on then the cylinder thermostat turns the boiler on and off as it is supposed to do. But when the heating and hot water are both on then the water from the taps is much to hot.
Because of the cold weather I have been leaving the heating on constantly and so overnight I am not using any hot water so wouldn't the water eventually heat up to 80 degrees as per the boiler thermostat anyway, or should the system somehow self regulate? In other words because I am not drawing off any water and because the heating is constantly trying to keep the house warm wouldn't the water just get hotter and hotter until it reaches the 80 degrees as set by the boiler thermostat regardless of what the cylinder thermostat says?
One plumber says that the system is fine and that is just how it works and the other says I need a new diverter valve and/or the wiring on the cylinder thermostat is wrong. Who is right please?
Last edited by a moderator: