V
Vondaz
Hi
We bought an old house approx 20 months ago and have made no changes to pipes or tanks or cylinders etc. For the last 4 or 5 months we have been experiencing problems with no hot water in our shower caused we think by airlocks in the hot water taps (upstairs and downstairs).
We know how to cure the airlocks (feeding the cold mains into the open hot tap in the kitchen). But, the airlocks are a recurring problem - every day. And it is the cause that we are trying to uncover.
I have drawn (rather crudely) the set up in the loft. I have also included measurements, because I wonder if the problem might be water being drawn from the hot water cylinder faster than it can be replaced by the cold water storage tank (possibly due to the pump) thereby creating an airlock?
But if that was the case then it should've been a problem ever since we moved in and not something that has developed over time.
Alternatively, could the air be getting in from the cold water storage tank i.e. the water is being drawn from it faster than it can be replaced from the mains pipe? Could it be the ball cock in the cold water storage that is causing the problem?
Any thoughts would be appreciated.
We bought an old house approx 20 months ago and have made no changes to pipes or tanks or cylinders etc. For the last 4 or 5 months we have been experiencing problems with no hot water in our shower caused we think by airlocks in the hot water taps (upstairs and downstairs).
We know how to cure the airlocks (feeding the cold mains into the open hot tap in the kitchen). But, the airlocks are a recurring problem - every day. And it is the cause that we are trying to uncover.
I have drawn (rather crudely) the set up in the loft. I have also included measurements, because I wonder if the problem might be water being drawn from the hot water cylinder faster than it can be replaced by the cold water storage tank (possibly due to the pump) thereby creating an airlock?
But if that was the case then it should've been a problem ever since we moved in and not something that has developed over time.
Alternatively, could the air be getting in from the cold water storage tank i.e. the water is being drawn from it faster than it can be replaced from the mains pipe? Could it be the ball cock in the cold water storage that is causing the problem?
Any thoughts would be appreciated.