Body & Soul3 mins ago
Parkray & central heating.
2 Answers
Hi can anyone help my sister.
She has recently moved to a bungalow in the countryside that has a Parkray fire with a back boiler that is supposed to provide her central heating.
All new radiators where fitted prior to her moving in.
She lights a fire and it doesn't take long before her water is piping hot but her radiators only get luke warm.
The chimney has been cleaned in the last two weeks.
She has tried using both coal and wood, but they give the same results.
She can cope at the moment with the milder weather but she needs to get it sorted before winter again.
Many thanks Fiona
She has recently moved to a bungalow in the countryside that has a Parkray fire with a back boiler that is supposed to provide her central heating.
All new radiators where fitted prior to her moving in.
She lights a fire and it doesn't take long before her water is piping hot but her radiators only get luke warm.
The chimney has been cleaned in the last two weeks.
She has tried using both coal and wood, but they give the same results.
She can cope at the moment with the milder weather but she needs to get it sorted before winter again.
Many thanks Fiona
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by feebee102. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hard to say without knowing how the system has been installed. I can say though, that I guess it's a "thermo-syphonic" type of installation. (ie, relies on natural rising motion of hot water.) ........ will work a treat for hot water, but for rads, pipework has to be set up very precisely regarding pipe gradients for it to work at all. (In simple terms - the slope on the pipe runs.)
Modern pumped systems have no trouble pumping all around a system.
I assume there is no pump?
Modern pumped systems have no trouble pumping all around a system.
I assume there is no pump?