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-   -   The Cold and Gas Boilers starting to cut out (https://www.weather-banter.co.uk/uk-sci-weather-uk-weather/149835-cold-gas-boilers-starting-cut-out.html)

gareth2701 December 4th 10 10:22 AM

The Cold and Gas Boilers starting to cut out
 
Just thought I would share this to try and stop unnecessary call out
costs

I have a Bosh Worcester boiler and it is just coming up to a year
old. This week the boiler has switched itself off twice. My mother
has the same boiler as does a colleague of mine and have all failed
this week.

On further inspection the condenser pipe from the boiler to outside
has frozen as all the drips have mounted up in the plastic pipe to the
drain and frozen and the boiler switches off,

A boiling kettle poured over the black pipe outside loosens all the
ice and the ice flows out of the black pipe into the drain. Just
press the boiler reset button and bingo it fires up and all is well.

Guess I will be doing that alot this winter!!! My work colleague had
the gas engineer who did the same thing and charged him £80!!

I guess British Gas will be making a small fortune for a 15 min call
out. My mothers boiler was the same, at least she has a sevice
contract!!

Just thought I would share.

MCC[_3_] December 4th 10 11:12 AM

The Cold and Gas Boilers starting to cut out
 
gareth2701 wrote:

On further inspection the condenser pipe from the boiler to outside
has frozen as all the drips have mounted up in the plastic pipe to the
drain and frozen and the boiler switches off,


If it's at all possible try lagging the condenser pipe.
--
MCC

Lawrence Jenkins December 4th 10 11:27 AM

The Cold and Gas Boilers starting to cut out
 

"gareth2701" wrote in message
...
Just thought I would share this to try and stop unnecessary call out
costs

I have a Bosh Worcester boiler and it is just coming up to a year
old. This week the boiler has switched itself off twice. My mother
has the same boiler as does a colleague of mine and have all failed
this week.

On further inspection the condenser pipe from the boiler to outside
has frozen as all the drips have mounted up in the plastic pipe to the
drain and frozen and the boiler switches off,

A boiling kettle poured over the black pipe outside loosens all the
ice and the ice flows out of the black pipe into the drain. Just
press the boiler reset button and bingo it fires up and all is well.

Guess I will be doing that alot this winter!!! My work colleague had
the gas engineer who did the same thing and charged him £80!!

I guess British Gas will be making a small fortune for a 15 min call
out. My mothers boiler was the same, at least she has a sevice
contract!!

Just thought I would share.



I would like to share too.

The other one to be aware off is dripping overflows for cisterns and water
storage tank and boiler expansion tanks. If there is a constant slow drip
due to usually the ball valve not closing the water supply to the tank then
ice will readily form where the overflow pipe comes out of the house and
exetends away from the brickwork. If this freezes it will effectively block
the over flow outlet and that will mean the cisten or tanks (usually in the
loft) will fill to the brim and overflow this has a nasty efect on the cheap
chipboard supports that plumbers support them on. The result will be a
disinetegtarted base so the tank has little support and evenually water
coming through you ceiling possibly made far worse by the tank toppling and
spilling its full contents.



Lawrence Jenkins December 4th 10 11:41 AM

The Cold and Gas Boilers starting to cut out
 

"Gaius" wrote in message
...
In article , mcc11639
@gmx.co.uk says...

gareth2701 wrote:

On further inspection the condenser pipe from the boiler to outside
has frozen as all the drips have mounted up in the plastic pipe to the
drain and frozen and the boiler switches off,


If it's at all possible try lagging the condenser pipe.


Make sure the condensate pipe slopes downwards at all points. The
heating engineer told me this - he reckoned that a large proportion of
winter failures are due to pooled water freezing and blocking the pipe.


That makes sense .



gareth2701 December 4th 10 02:15 PM

The Cold and Gas Boilers starting to cut out
 
On Dec 4, 12:41*pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:
"Gaius" wrote in message

...

In article , mcc11639
@gmx.co.uk says...


gareth2701 wrote:


On further inspection the condenser pipe from the boiler to outside
has frozen as all the drips have mounted up in the plastic pipe to the
drain and frozen and the boiler switches off,


If it's at all possible try lagging the condenser pipe.


Make sure the condensate pipe slopes downwards at all points. The
heating engineer told me this - he reckoned that a large proportion of
winter failures are due to pooled water freezing and blocking the pipe.


That makes sense .


Mine slopes very well but it did not stop it

John Nice December 4th 10 03:07 PM

The Cold and Gas Boilers starting to cut out
 

"gareth2701" wrote in message
...
Just thought I would share this to try and stop unnecessary call out
costs

I have a Bosh Worcester boiler and it is just coming up to a year
old. This week the boiler has switched itself off twice. My mother
has the same boiler as does a colleague of mine and have all failed
this week.

On further inspection the condenser pipe from the boiler to outside
has frozen as all the drips have mounted up in the plastic pipe to the
drain and frozen and the boiler switches off,

A boiling kettle poured over the black pipe outside loosens all the
ice and the ice flows out of the black pipe into the drain. Just
press the boiler reset button and bingo it fires up and all is well.

Guess I will be doing that alot this winter!!! My work colleague had
the gas engineer who did the same thing and charged him £80!!

I guess British Gas will be making a small fortune for a 15 min call
out. My mothers boiler was the same, at least she has a sevice
contract!!

I recall hearing that condensate pipes running in the open are supposed to
be 22mm, to avoid freezing. Any plumber/heating engineer care to comment?

John



John Nice December 4th 10 03:18 PM

The Cold and Gas Boilers starting to cut out
 

"John Nice" johnDOTniceATbtinternetDOTcom wrote in message
...

"gareth2701" wrote in message
...
Just thought I would share this to try and stop unnecessary call out
costs

I have a Bosh Worcester boiler and it is just coming up to a year
old. This week the boiler has switched itself off twice. My mother
has the same boiler as does a colleague of mine and have all failed
this week.

On further inspection the condenser pipe from the boiler to outside
has frozen as all the drips have mounted up in the plastic pipe to the
drain and frozen and the boiler switches off,

A boiling kettle poured over the black pipe outside loosens all the
ice and the ice flows out of the black pipe into the drain. Just
press the boiler reset button and bingo it fires up and all is well.

Guess I will be doing that alot this winter!!! My work colleague had
the gas engineer who did the same thing and charged him £80!!

I guess British Gas will be making a small fortune for a 15 min call
out. My mothers boiler was the same, at least she has a sevice
contract!!

I recall hearing that condensate pipes running in the open are supposed to
be 22mm, to avoid freezing. Any plumber/heating engineer care to comment?

John

Actually, quote from Worcester-Bosch FAQs:

The condensate pipe is a plastic pipe (black, white or grey), coming from
the bottom of your boiler. If this pipe is less than 32mm in diameter and
runs outside of the property or through a non-heated area then it should be
fully insulated with waterproof lagging. If it is not fully lagged and the 3
criteria (in step 1 above) apply then it is likely that it is frozen and
needs to be thawed



Roger[_3_] December 5th 10 10:00 AM

The Cold and Gas Boilers starting to cut out
 
As a company we have experienced major problems this past week with the
condensing pipes freezing up. Solution going forward is to either have pipe
plumbed internally into waste pipe or, as British Gas are suggesting,
install trace heating on the external pipe. Apparently informed that
condensing boilers are a relatively new phenoman in UK. They have been
installed for many years in Europe where they always keep the pipes inside
the property where they drain into waste. Personally I have a 24 year old
balanced flue with a heat exchanger, thermocouple and gas tap. That is all
there is to go wrong. May not be as efficient as the new ones but until the
heat exchanger gives out I have been advised by many gas engineers to stick
with it as the condenser boilers have a limited life cycle average of 10 -
12 years. Most have pcb boards that fail within 5 years at a cost to
replace of £250. The joys of new technology and no pilot light.

Roger
"John Nice" johnDOTniceATbtinternetDOTcom wrote in message
...

"John Nice" johnDOTniceATbtinternetDOTcom wrote in message
...

"gareth2701" wrote in message
...
Just thought I would share this to try and stop unnecessary call out
costs

I have a Bosh Worcester boiler and it is just coming up to a year
old. This week the boiler has switched itself off twice. My mother
has the same boiler as does a colleague of mine and have all failed
this week.

On further inspection the condenser pipe from the boiler to outside
has frozen as all the drips have mounted up in the plastic pipe to the
drain and frozen and the boiler switches off,

A boiling kettle poured over the black pipe outside loosens all the
ice and the ice flows out of the black pipe into the drain. Just
press the boiler reset button and bingo it fires up and all is well.

Guess I will be doing that alot this winter!!! My work colleague had
the gas engineer who did the same thing and charged him £80!!

I guess British Gas will be making a small fortune for a 15 min call
out. My mothers boiler was the same, at least she has a sevice
contract!!

I recall hearing that condensate pipes running in the open are supposed
to be 22mm, to avoid freezing. Any plumber/heating engineer care to
comment?

John

Actually, quote from Worcester-Bosch FAQs:

The condensate pipe is a plastic pipe (black, white or grey), coming from
the bottom of your boiler. If this pipe is less than 32mm in diameter and
runs outside of the property or through a non-heated area then it should
be fully insulated with waterproof lagging. If it is not fully lagged and
the 3 criteria (in step 1 above) apply then it is likely that it is frozen
and needs to be thawed




Dave Liquorice[_2_] December 5th 10 03:11 PM

The Cold and Gas Boilers starting to cut out
 
On Sat, 4 Dec 2010 07:15:31 -0800 (PST), gareth2701 wrote:

Make sure the condensate pipe slopes downwards at all points. The
heating engineer told me this - he reckoned that a large

proportion of
winter failures are due to pooled water freezing and blocking the


pipe.


That makes sense .


Pooled water won't help but the diameter of the pipe will. Any
condesate pipes that are external or in unheated areas should be 32mm
with a fall.

Mine slopes very well but it did not stop it


Some boilers just give a continuous slow dribble, this will freeze
and block a 22mm pipe quite quickly. Some boilers store the
condenstate in a small tank with an automatic siphon to empty it in a
whoosh. This is less likely to freeze and assuming the pipe as a
proper fall will tend to wash straight through as well.

--
Cheers Dave.
Nr Garrigill, Cumbria. 421m ASL.





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