The water in the coil in your cylinder is the same water that circulates through the rads and ufh so draining that leaky pipe will involve draining rads- as you say, only the upper floor though.
If the leak is in the pipe run from boiler to cylinder then crack on. If (as is quite likely) the leak is tracking from a fitting on the cylinder you're venturing into G3 registered territory (cos the thing is pressurised).
HW cylinder is mains pressure type. I.e. I don't have a cold water tank but I do have a pressure vessel.
After terryplumb helped me understand that UFH CH and HW are all fed by same flow and return, I'm starting to think that the leak travels in the ceiling void before coming through the ceiling. The location of the water on the ceiling was making me think that it was in the run between the cylinder and the boiler. But because it only drips when the cylinder is being heated, the leak must be after the boiler flow and return are split/directed to CH/UFH/HW. And all that happens near the cylinder, not near the boiler.
Going to find the source of the leak today and report back. And because the leak is probably near the cylinder, I might even be able to find it without cutting ceilings!
After terryplumb helped me understand that UFH CH and HW are all fed by same flow and return, I'm starting to think that the leak travels in the ceiling void before coming through the ceiling.
Still haven't found the leak. However, shortly after turning the hw on, a small trickle flows into a recepticle which passes it into a copper pipe which is connected to the soil stack.
Is this to relieve pressure as the water in the cylinder expands? Is it normal /expected?
Here's a wider angle
For context, the cylinder is a horizontal gledhill tank just to the left of the pic, just in view below my hand
That's a tundish ,and shouldn't have water flowing through it unless there is a problem,with hot water expansion not being accommodated ,or the PRV is passing when it shouldn't. Probably the former. Have you followed the pipe from the lower part of the tundish connection ,to see if it's leaking ?
That receptacle is called a tundish. It's there so you can see when water is flowing through it, which it shouldn't do under normal circumstances. Not sure those pressure relief vessels will work properly on their sides.
Yes - followed the pipe from the tundish. Can't find any leak yet. I'm leaving it to run a lot longer to see if perhaps a build up is required before the leak starts
You could ,but I doubt it would make much difference.
Where does the pipe run , in relation to water on the ceiling?
As you know where water is showing on the ceiling ,is it not possible to expose that area from above ,where water should be visible on top of the ceiling ?
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