Hi all,
looking for some advice about an overflowing cold water tank. Each morning the tank has continued filling up, so by the morning we have water coming out the overflow pipe outside.
My initial thought was either (a) the ball valve was not set to the right height to turn off the water feed; or (b) the valve itself had failed and wasn't turning off the water. But these are both fine. The water turns off well below the overflow pipe.
So the only option is that water is feeding back into the tank as there's only 3 things going in/out of the tank. (1) the incoming cold water feed (2) the over flow pipe (3) an outlet at the bottom of the tank that then goes into a water pump which feeds toilets/showers/sinks.
I thought i'd try and confirm this by last thing at night, turning off the valve in the pipe between the tank outlet and the water pump. This turns off the water to the sinks/showers if I'm changing a tap etc. I thought this would stop water feeding back up. But it didn't work - water was still overflowing by the morning. I'm going to try again tonight and ensure its fully turned off. So my first question is, should closing this valve stop any water feeding back into the tank?
House was built mid 90s. We moved in a few years ago and haven't changed any of the plumbing. This is our setup:
The mains a combi boiler downstairs, the kitchen, and the washing machine/dishwasher.
Cold water tank in a boiler cupboard on the 1st floor. i.e. not in the loft.
Cold water tank feeds the sinks/toilets/showers via a water pump
2 showers have thermostatic mixers (I've recently replaced the valve in one of the showers, but timing doesn't fit in with when we first noticed the tank overflowing) - both showers are fed from the cold water tank.
Any ideas what could be causing the problem?
thanks in advance
G
looking for some advice about an overflowing cold water tank. Each morning the tank has continued filling up, so by the morning we have water coming out the overflow pipe outside.
My initial thought was either (a) the ball valve was not set to the right height to turn off the water feed; or (b) the valve itself had failed and wasn't turning off the water. But these are both fine. The water turns off well below the overflow pipe.
So the only option is that water is feeding back into the tank as there's only 3 things going in/out of the tank. (1) the incoming cold water feed (2) the over flow pipe (3) an outlet at the bottom of the tank that then goes into a water pump which feeds toilets/showers/sinks.
I thought i'd try and confirm this by last thing at night, turning off the valve in the pipe between the tank outlet and the water pump. This turns off the water to the sinks/showers if I'm changing a tap etc. I thought this would stop water feeding back up. But it didn't work - water was still overflowing by the morning. I'm going to try again tonight and ensure its fully turned off. So my first question is, should closing this valve stop any water feeding back into the tank?
House was built mid 90s. We moved in a few years ago and haven't changed any of the plumbing. This is our setup:
The mains a combi boiler downstairs, the kitchen, and the washing machine/dishwasher.
Cold water tank in a boiler cupboard on the 1st floor. i.e. not in the loft.
Cold water tank feeds the sinks/toilets/showers via a water pump
2 showers have thermostatic mixers (I've recently replaced the valve in one of the showers, but timing doesn't fit in with when we first noticed the tank overflowing) - both showers are fed from the cold water tank.
Any ideas what could be causing the problem?
thanks in advance
G