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- 8 Nov 2020
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Hi everybody, I would be grateful if I could get some help on the issue I am having.
My boiler (Ideal response 120) gives me hot water but no central heating. Pressure is at zero. I have looked here and elsewhere and I realise I am not sure:
1) where the filling loop is, and
2) how to go at it exactly.
As to 1)
The first pic below shows the tubes that are directly under my boiler. The "valve" on the left is the one a technician once told me to use to eliminate air bubbles (open valve with a screwdriver and close again when water comes out). It worked a couple of times so I am satisfied that screw is, in fact, a valve.
The "valve" on the right (another screw) is where I, after reading on the internet, thought it was I had to open it to get the pressure up again. However, I have seen the following:
a) when I try to open the screw on the right, a huge quantity of water comes out. This happens with the screw on the left both open and close. Even after letting an awful lot of water out, nothing happened to the pressure of the boiler, which is still at "flat tyre level". I have left the screw on the right open long enough to fill a small bucket of water without pressure level results, I think I am barking at the wrong tree here.
b) I am wondering whether this is really the loop I am looking for. From what I have read around, the "loop" should be left hanging after use, attached on one side only. This is not the case here. It is not possible to even begin to screw the caps, in any combination I have tried (e.g., both valves closed) without an awful lot of water **at high pressure** coming out. Therefore, I suspect this is not the loop I am looking for?
(Also very strange: the screw on the left is in position "closed" with the screw's head (where the screwdriver goes) perpendicular to the direction of the tube. The screw on the right is in position "closed" with the screw's head aligned with the tube. This is clearly visible in the picture. Makes no sense to me).
As to 2)
The second pic below shows what I have under my kitchen sink. You will see two valves (the red one and on the left and the blue one on the right), which actually look an awful lot like other outfits I have seen on youtube. If I open the red valve, there is water coming out, so the valve is clearly "unemployed", looking just like it would in a boiler loop and waiting only to be connected to the blue valve cap. I can obviously not see where all that plumbing goes as there is some distance between the boiler and the sink, but could it be that my "loop" is actually the one under the sink?
Again, the apparent "loop" that I saw under the boiler (pic 1) does not seem to want to work as advertised, so I am in a quandary.
I am grateful for any help!
Many thanks
My boiler (Ideal response 120) gives me hot water but no central heating. Pressure is at zero. I have looked here and elsewhere and I realise I am not sure:
1) where the filling loop is, and
2) how to go at it exactly.
As to 1)
The first pic below shows the tubes that are directly under my boiler. The "valve" on the left is the one a technician once told me to use to eliminate air bubbles (open valve with a screwdriver and close again when water comes out). It worked a couple of times so I am satisfied that screw is, in fact, a valve.
The "valve" on the right (another screw) is where I, after reading on the internet, thought it was I had to open it to get the pressure up again. However, I have seen the following:
a) when I try to open the screw on the right, a huge quantity of water comes out. This happens with the screw on the left both open and close. Even after letting an awful lot of water out, nothing happened to the pressure of the boiler, which is still at "flat tyre level". I have left the screw on the right open long enough to fill a small bucket of water without pressure level results, I think I am barking at the wrong tree here.
b) I am wondering whether this is really the loop I am looking for. From what I have read around, the "loop" should be left hanging after use, attached on one side only. This is not the case here. It is not possible to even begin to screw the caps, in any combination I have tried (e.g., both valves closed) without an awful lot of water **at high pressure** coming out. Therefore, I suspect this is not the loop I am looking for?
(Also very strange: the screw on the left is in position "closed" with the screw's head (where the screwdriver goes) perpendicular to the direction of the tube. The screw on the right is in position "closed" with the screw's head aligned with the tube. This is clearly visible in the picture. Makes no sense to me).
As to 2)
The second pic below shows what I have under my kitchen sink. You will see two valves (the red one and on the left and the blue one on the right), which actually look an awful lot like other outfits I have seen on youtube. If I open the red valve, there is water coming out, so the valve is clearly "unemployed", looking just like it would in a boiler loop and waiting only to be connected to the blue valve cap. I can obviously not see where all that plumbing goes as there is some distance between the boiler and the sink, but could it be that my "loop" is actually the one under the sink?
Again, the apparent "loop" that I saw under the boiler (pic 1) does not seem to want to work as advertised, so I am in a quandary.
I am grateful for any help!
Many thanks