Hi all,
I have a problem with my boiler as per the title. Btw, it is a direct rear flue boiler if that makes any differenece.
Maybe once a year or so, or when weather is just right anyway, I end up getting quite a lot of water down the flue when wind and rain is battering the side of my house.
The boiler has been installed for about 4 years now and because it is intermittent I have never been able to have a gas engineer catch it in the act so to speak.
When it first happened my installer said it can happen with condensing boilers as the flue is designed to point up slightly. I.e the core hole is drilled level but the moulding of the flue itself tilts towards the boiler, which is correct accoring to the manual itself so I guess that backs my installer up. I can't prove it is 100% level though, even if it is the flue is moulded with a run so water could get down it anyway I guess to be fair to the installer.
I've had another engineer to service the boiler recently and he thinks the flue will need to point down slightly from where it is to stop it, he thinks it isnt level but with the moulding of the flue it is had to tell. He just thinks water coming in, flue needs to point down slightly.....certainly that would cure it but I assume it is designed this way for a reason!
Surely this can't be right though? I see it is quite common via Google search with condensing boilers but how can I fix this?
If need be I am happy to remove some concrete round the flue to move it slightly, if that doesn't fix it then I assume it is beyond me and it is boiler off the wall time....thoughts???
Or should the water end up out the separate condensing drain and the seal from boiler to flue isn't right?
BTW, the water is not ending up in the boiler, it very clean the service engineer said, it is running down the back of the boiler I think as he seen zero evidence inside anywhere.
Manual here -
http://library.plumbase.co.uk/flipbooks/RE/gwf30cx_22285_t/mobile/index.html#p=1
And for the flue specifically -
https://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&s..._4FkOVO37i9QnkFeg&sig2=zC8jZregmPBevWGB3Xrxvw
Thanks for help folks.
I have a problem with my boiler as per the title. Btw, it is a direct rear flue boiler if that makes any differenece.
Maybe once a year or so, or when weather is just right anyway, I end up getting quite a lot of water down the flue when wind and rain is battering the side of my house.
The boiler has been installed for about 4 years now and because it is intermittent I have never been able to have a gas engineer catch it in the act so to speak.
When it first happened my installer said it can happen with condensing boilers as the flue is designed to point up slightly. I.e the core hole is drilled level but the moulding of the flue itself tilts towards the boiler, which is correct accoring to the manual itself so I guess that backs my installer up. I can't prove it is 100% level though, even if it is the flue is moulded with a run so water could get down it anyway I guess to be fair to the installer.
I've had another engineer to service the boiler recently and he thinks the flue will need to point down slightly from where it is to stop it, he thinks it isnt level but with the moulding of the flue it is had to tell. He just thinks water coming in, flue needs to point down slightly.....certainly that would cure it but I assume it is designed this way for a reason!
Surely this can't be right though? I see it is quite common via Google search with condensing boilers but how can I fix this?
If need be I am happy to remove some concrete round the flue to move it slightly, if that doesn't fix it then I assume it is beyond me and it is boiler off the wall time....thoughts???
Or should the water end up out the separate condensing drain and the seal from boiler to flue isn't right?
BTW, the water is not ending up in the boiler, it very clean the service engineer said, it is running down the back of the boiler I think as he seen zero evidence inside anywhere.
Manual here -
http://library.plumbase.co.uk/flipbooks/RE/gwf30cx_22285_t/mobile/index.html#p=1
And for the flue specifically -
https://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&s..._4FkOVO37i9QnkFeg&sig2=zC8jZregmPBevWGB3Xrxvw
Thanks for help folks.
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