deadlegs

Joined
17 May 2008
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Location
Liverpool
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United Kingdom
hi, i recently had a new kitchen put in and a rad taken out, unfortunatly the people who removed the rad left the drops in and the flow connected to the top off the rad so i now have a 22mm dead leg comming up for about a meter in the middle of my kitchen wall! not good! i want to remove it and am quite capable of simply cutting the pipe and capping off but im wondering if im going to have to drain down the whole central heating system just to remove the deadleg or if there is another way?
 
yeah i was thinking that but heard that they arnt that reliable and not done it before. can they be trusted to work?
 
They do work but if you haven't done it before you probably would be better draining down.
 
ok new problem! if i drain down when refilling the system am i now going to have to mess about with inhibitor and balancing the rads? starting to start like a lot of work!
 
am i now going to have to mess about with inhibitor
Er, if you regard adding inhibitor to the system as "messing about", then you will indeed to have mess about.

...and balancing the rads?
No. The removal of water from, and the later addition of water to, the system does not require any adjustment to any radiator valve.

You're probably confusing "draining down" with "unnecessarily inventing unnecessary tasks". These are two quite distinct and non-overlapping concepts.

starting to start like a lot of work!
In that case it's a task that you're not well equipped to tackle.
 
lol ok thanks guys im not a plumber but can do the basics in my own home where i dont have to worry about upseting anyone but the wife! just wondering if it was a job i could do myself or something that needs a profesional
 
If its a sealed system I.E a combi boiler you have. You could simply drop the pressure via a drain valve, Close the drain valve to seal the system again, Cut and cap the pipe and re-pressurise the system. The water will hold in a sealed system (a bit like holding a glass full of water upside down in the bath). You will get a bit of water loss witch will dilute the inhibitor but a standard dose usually covers a boiler and 10 rads anyway.
 
ok as i say im not a plumber so forgive me for asking stupid questions but i have just been having a look behind kitchen cupbords and there is a gate valve on my flow pipe! im a builder by trade and never seen that before (just moved in to the house) im gussing i can just turn water off via gate valve nice and easy?
 
If you try to do it just by dropping the pressure as suggested and the aav is open on the boiler you will get very wet cos the system wont be sealed, obviously I didn't find this out the hard way it was a mate etc etc :oops:
 

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