HI, sorry I'm obviously not explaining myself very well.
Here's the original posted diagram of my CH system (the original posted diagram seems to have disappeared). Notice the loft piping:
View attachment 41439
So, originally, I disconnected all the pipes in the loft from the supply and return (copper pipes from 1st floor to loft). I then flushed through one of the radiators and pipes and successfully cleared them. This radiator is now connected back up, so the current loft setup is shown as follows:
View attachment 41440
As you can see now, only ONE of the loft radiators is connected to the CH system and this radiator is working perfectly - it gets red hot. I'm now working on the towel rail, shown in the diagram as Loft En-suite, which is currently disconnected from the CH system, allowing me to work on the towel rail and connected pipes in isolation. Here's how I initially connected up the pipes for the towel rail to create a small isolated "circuit":
View attachment 41441
Note: The towel rail and the valves connecting the towel rail to the Hep20 plastic piping (via copper tails) have been removed, so I'm now working with ONLY the piping. Each pipe run (supply - red and return - blue) is around 4m, so not very long, but they are obviously well and truly blocked.
The above diagram shows I have connected one end of a hose pipe (yellow) to the tail of the supply pipe and the other end is connected to an outside tap, with mains water pressure. Another hose pipe (green) is connected to the tail of the return pipe, with the other end of the hose pipe in a bucket ready to catch the sludge. Between the flow and return pipes I have fitted a flexible hose, so I now have a circuit of piping.
When I turn on the outside tap, the water should end up in the bucket! But I get nothing because the pipes are well and truly blocked. I've tried the following circuits to reduce the length of pipe being cleaned, so I'm doing one pipe at a time:
View attachment 41442
I've tried the above setup on both the flow and on the return and reversed the hose pipes to flush from both ends, but can't get water through either pipe (apart from the smallest of drizzles).
So, last night I put some X800 into the tails of each pipe until it started (very,very slowly) leaking out of the other end of the pipe, so I knew it had gone through, or at least it was pushing water out. By tonight, this concentrated X800 will have been in for 24 hours and I will attempt to flush the pipes through again.
However, I'm not convinced that X800 is actually the correct chemical to use as I've read it doesn't dissolve sludge, which is what I need it to do, hence the question about other chemicals that may do a better job.