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Hi all,

Appreciate any advice, I have an issue of some sort of grainy blue material clogging up the hot water lines. Because I have mixer taps everywhere, that means all of my taps eventually get clogged and I have to remove and clean them.

I know its isolated to hot water because only the hot water side of the shower mixer bars gets clogged.

My system is comprised of (sorry, I'm a complete amateur so I may be laying this out wrong) a Worcester Greenstar Ri boiler, with a Magnaclean Micro attached (not sure if relevant). Upstairs is a (around 10 years old) Megaflo unvented hot water cylinder. Until recently, the boiler was not supplying hot water to the tank, which I had repaired in around March. Prior to that, the tank was being heated by the electric element for about a year (I didn't know it was broken to be honest, this is all new stuff to me, so that's why it was broken for a year :( ). Adding that in case the fact that pipes may have been lying dormant for months may make any difference.

I really appreciate any advice. I'll get someone in if I need to, just don't want to waste anyone's time.

I've attached a few photos. No idea what this stuff is.

IMG-20181013-WA0038.jpg


IMG-20181014-WA0002.jpg
 
First things first. What type of hot water system do you have? Do you have tanks in the loft? Are they open?

So, from what I can see:

1. Worcester Greenstar Ri (installed around 2016)

which heats the radiators and also feeds

2. Heatrae Sadia Megaflo Unvented Indirect Cylinder (installed around 2008)

3. Peripheral stuff like a Magnaclean Micro attached direct to the boiler, which I assume is for the radiators. Also the pressure expansion tank attached in the airing cupboard to the Megaflo.
 
So, from what I can see:

1. Worcester Greenstar Ri (installed around 2016)

which heats the radiators and also feeds

2. Heatrae Sadia Megaflo Unvented Indirect Cylinder (installed around 2008)

3. Peripheral stuff like a Magnaclean Micro attached direct to the boiler, which I assume is for the radiators. Also the pressure expansion tank attached in the airing cupboard to the Megaflo.

Sorry, forgot to add - no additional tanks. That's everything, according to my knowledge. We don't have a loft so I'm 90% sure there isn't anything hidden. The stuff reminds me of a water softener salt so I've hunted for one of those with no luck.
 
Do you live in a hard water area could be limescale
 
I live in Kent, so yes. Does limescale often appear like this?

Yea builds over time the blue bit I bet there's a blue flow restrictor behind the scale

I would test the hardness of your water to see if you need a softener
 
Yea builds over time the blue bit I bet there's a blue flow restrictor behind the scale

I would test the hardness of your water to see if you need a softener

We do get scale, as we have very hard water. But it usually appears as a really stubborn, white caked on substance. This is a really slushy, almost gel like substance.
 
We do get scale, as we have very hard water. But it usually appears as a really stubborn, white caked on substance. This is a really slushy, almost gel like substance.

You haven't already got a softener have you if yes could be the salt out of said softener
 
It could be the ion exchange resin out of a softener, I have known this to happen when a column splits. Makes an awful mess, however the only times I've seen it the resin beads have been yellowish, maybe some makes are blue?
 
I thought it could be that, but I don't have a softener. We bought the house a couple years back - and have yet to come across one. They're fairly big and need to be accessible so I'm sure we would've by now.

The only other thing I considered was this could be the result of a used up aluminium anode in the Megaflo? It looks an awful lot like aluminium hydroxide would. But from what I've read, the Megaflo has no anode :(
 
As it's an unvented cylinder, the fine mesh on the control set would stop this from coming from the cold mains. This has to be being introduced on the hot side...
 
Could it be copper sulphate? Could be saturated solution in cylinder which then would then drop out of solution as it cooled, such as travelling along pipes and/or mixing with cold.
 
As it's an unvented cylinder, the fine mesh on the control set would stop this from coming from the cold mains. This has to be being introduced on the hot side...

That would make sense, given that the shower mixer ONLY has this stuff on the hot supply side.

My boiler was not supplying my tank for about 12 months (the electric immersion heater did the job instead, much to the dismay of my electric bill :)).

Someone fixed that in March, by replacing a broken zone valve (IIRC, not 100% sure if that's the right name).

Is it possible this stuff (whatever it is) was sitting in the boiler -> tank supply pipe and has started shifting now, months later?

I'm a complete amateur so my understanding might be way off. I didn't even spot the system was broken until someone fixing an unrelated issue told me it was :)
 

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