Pump noise and sometimes pulsing | UK Plumbers Forums | Page 2 | 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

Discuss Pump noise and sometimes pulsing in the UK Plumbers Forums area at Plumbers Forums

Messages
29
Hi guys

Have moved into a house with a fairly old plumbing system from 70’s. However boiler has been replaced around a decade ago by a Worcester- working great. Pump is around 5 years old.

I have a bit of a strange problem (to me at least). In the morning after the boiler has been off all night everything seems to work great. All rads get hot and pump is pretty quiet and as expected. This seems to run great for at least a few hours then during the day the problems seem to begin.

The pump gets noisier and noisier with loud humming that can be heard throughout the house. Some of the downstairs rads then appear to struggle to get hot In the evening. Also in the evening the pump starts pulsing. If you turn it off it stops the pulsing and noise for a time. But usually only a few minutes before it comes back. You have to leave it off for hours (like overnight) it seems to get a good run of quiet operation with no pulsing.

Is the pump just done? Why does it run quietly and properly for hours at a time in the mornings?

Other things to note. We use hot water much more heavily later in the day, although it is on in the mornings. Also there is a short gurgling noise that happens when the pump switches off after it’s been pulsing. It doesn’t do this when switched off when it’s not been pulsing - like in the mornings.

It’s been doing this for a good week or two now since the weather turned.

Hope someone can help!

Edit. Forgot to add that it’s fed from a tank in the loft and is a y plan system.
 
Sounds like pump is knackered
 
I’ve Been trying the pump on the variable setting (flashing light). It seems to be running a lot slower than even speed 1 fixed setting.

Boiler has now stopped cycling so much and the pump is quiet and everything runs nicely for as long as I want.

However none of the rads really get more than lukewarm and the boiler never really fires up ‘properly’. Green light is on but it’s in a sort of ‘tick over’ state.

Seems like a catch 22? Slow the pump down and rads don’t get hot. Speed it up and it draws air in.

What are my options!

Cheers for all help so far
 
Can you put up some photos of the pipework around the pump?
72047E72-83CC-4F7D-9931-3177831A8843.jpeg


A complete mess I’m sure you’ll agree. I know it need’s ripping out and starting again ideally but this airing cupboard won’t even be there in a couple of years! We’re planning quite a bit of work and will be entirely re plumbing the house.

Edit. Just out of shot at the bottom is the mid position valve
 
The UPS2 PP settings are truly appallingly low, the reason I asked you to try it was a sort of test for the pump as its only consuming probably 12/14 watts so very little load on the electronics, if it is running for hours on end now then IMO it points more and more to a knackered pump, if it was mine I would just throw it out, install a new pump and start from there. In the mean time, to give some bit of heat, it might help to shut down say u/stairs rad until you get a new pump.
 
Agree. Points to the pump electronics. Replace the pump. Sometimes it's best to do the most obvious thing.

UPS2 had a chequered history. Grundfos withdrew it after only just over 5 years because it proved to be unreliable.
 
The UPS2 PP settings are truly appallingly low, the reason I asked you to try it was a sort of test for the pump as its only consuming probably 12/14 watts so very little load on the electronics, if it is running for hours on end now then IMO it points more and more to a knackered pump, if it was mine I would just throw it out, install a new pump and start from there. In the mean time, to give some bit of heat, it might help to shut down say u/stairs rad until you get a new pump.
I’m not sure I fully understand your logic. The pump heats up the rads fine when on fixed speed 1 (or 2 or 3), but only for a few hours as it seems to draw air into the system which causes problems until it finds a way out after the system is switched off usually.

I don’t really understand why this points to a knackered pump? Why would a new pump not just draw in the same amount of air? It seems the current pump is too powerful for the way it’s been plumbed? Or it’s plumbed in wrongly somehow?

Sorry if the above makes no sense, I just want to be able to give my plumber some good pointers come Wednesday. Thanks again
 
If it draws air in your feed and vent are in the wrong position
 
Does it look wrong in my pictures? Where should they be?

My gut feeling as a non plumber is that this is the underlying cause of my problems

The 3rd one eg right is what you want
 

Attachments

  • 48132107-BB9E-4AE5-953E-ABB0BC6C93FC.jpeg
    48132107-BB9E-4AE5-953E-ABB0BC6C93FC.jpeg
    52 KB · Views: 49
If it draws air in your feed and vent are in the wrong position
I agree that this is the first thing to look at but there are other possibilities. I'm struggling with a similar problem and my feed and vent are in the textbook location. It's well known that restrictions in the connections can cause pressure differentials that push/pull water in the vent but in my case there's no significant displacement taking place in the vent.

What if during the overrun period boiling is taking place on heat-exchanger hot spots? I ask because I've noticed the temperature on my boiler display ramping up significantly after the burner is extinguished. I did once see a number in the 90's for a few seconds and that gave me quite a fright. This kind of event will disassociate gas within the water and make it foamy (which the pump will definitely not like). Again, it is far more likely to occur after the system has been running than from cold. I think this is the kind of reason that some systems only seem to behave at lower temperatures.
 
It looks as though my cold feed and vent pipes are exactly as they should be.

I think the last owner of this house gave up on trying to fix it and that’s why they spent good money on a nice gas fire (despite being tighter than a ducks behind by all accounts). Think I might be about to do the same
 
Seal the system then you can seal it at 0.5 bar if you got any hidden pipework in concrete
 
Seal the system then you can seal it at 0.5 bar if you got any hidden pipework in concrete
That’s a good shout. Is there anything that could be a deal breaker here? Will speak to my plumber about this I think.

I think the boiler should be ok as we had the same one in our last house with a sealed system - greenstar ri.

We don’t have any pipes in the concrete/screed ground floor.

Is it a large job/cost? Not too keen on spending fortunes on a system that will quite soon be ripped out!

Most importantly will it actually work and stop air being drawn in so I can run the pump at a sensible speed!?
 
Tbh should be less than £300 depends how much your plumber charges
 
It will stop it pumping over and you can set the pump speed to your system requirements
 
The pump is pumping downwards??, what is the " H" above it and where are the vent & cold feed?. or is the H a combined vent and cold feed.

And is it pumping into the return of the cylinder?.

1638129496369.jpeg
 
Last edited:

Similar plumbing topics

  • Question
Up to you, but if it’s drawing air down the...
Replies
18
Views
3K
  • Question
Hi SI......is the shower on the same floor as...
Replies
12
Views
369
  • Question
You can, as suggested, top up at night/very...
Replies
18
Views
985
K
  • Question
Hi, So for the past month or so I’ve been...
Replies
0
Views
547
Kevin L
K
  • Question
Might be worth the effort to call the...
Replies
3
Views
658
Back
Top