R
Riz
Hi guys and girls,
I'm a first time poster so apologies if my knowledge comes across a tad green. My system is a standard boiler system (i.e. not a combi).
I've got an issue where my radiators downstairs are cooler than the ones upstairs. The upstairs ones are nice and hot but the downstairs are luke-warm.
I've had my local plumber out and he's flushed the system using his special flushing equipment.
I've also noticed that there's a bit of noise coming from the heating system, which I think emanates from the pump. However I mentioned this to my plumber and he thinks the pump is fine.
There's also one radiator that's closest to the hot water tank that has to be bled regularly (1-2 times a week). I don't know if this is relevant or not.
The house is struggling to get above 16C, even when having the heating on for a week. The house is fairly well insulated (the snow didn't vanish off the roof recently).
Can anyone offer any advice as to why my downstairs radiators are comparatively cold?
I'm a first time poster so apologies if my knowledge comes across a tad green. My system is a standard boiler system (i.e. not a combi).
I've got an issue where my radiators downstairs are cooler than the ones upstairs. The upstairs ones are nice and hot but the downstairs are luke-warm.
I've had my local plumber out and he's flushed the system using his special flushing equipment.
I've also noticed that there's a bit of noise coming from the heating system, which I think emanates from the pump. However I mentioned this to my plumber and he thinks the pump is fine.
There's also one radiator that's closest to the hot water tank that has to be bled regularly (1-2 times a week). I don't know if this is relevant or not.
The house is struggling to get above 16C, even when having the heating on for a week. The house is fairly well insulated (the snow didn't vanish off the roof recently).
Can anyone offer any advice as to why my downstairs radiators are comparatively cold?
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