No Water in Hot Water Tank?

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Hi there,

I have a problem... lol

I'm afraid I'm going to err on the side of giving too much information, rather than too little. My experience in my own field (IT) shows this to be the most helpful.

About me:

The problem is in my own home, not a business, not a landlord, etc. I'm fairly practical and handy, good with carpentry etc, okay with electronics, but plumbing is pretty new to me. I thought I understood the basics of how central heating works, but I've obviously missed something, and I suspect it's basic! I realise that anything done by other than by a professional may be dangerous, invalidate insurace, etc...

Background to Problem:

Basically my boiler is dead, and needs replacing. I've explored that elsewhere, but it's not relevant here (I think). Should it have any significance, it's a Potterton Netaheat 16/22, non-combi gas boiler, and it's ~25 years old.

Essentially this has died, and I don't have any money for engineers or a replacement (unemployed, borderline bankrupt, threatened repossession. etc) so I'm seeing what I can do about things myself. Tinkering with the boiler has shown I can get about an hours use out of it every 3 days at some random point, but it consumes gas the whole time, even when not lit. This doesn't seem a terribly good idea to me, so mostly it's switched off now. I use electric heaters where necessary (thankfully the weather has warmed up now), and kettles for baths (an hour long process).

The Problem:

What struck me, was in a previous house I had an immersion heater in the tank, , which when the gas failed provided not loads of hot water, but enough. Checking my hot water tank, it did indeed have one, but no hot water, so it's not working some where along the line.

The hot water tank is what I have identified (I believe) as an indirect vented tank. I have a large and a small water tank up in the loft, with open overflow pipes going into them etc. It's a plain copper tank with a red foam jacket around it. I suspect it's 25 years old like the rest of the CH system. Water is very hard if it makes a difference, although the previous occupants had a softener on the mains.

HotWaterTankFullViewLarge.jpg


Having decided I couldn't do much more with the boiler, I looked at the tank and immersion heater. First of all I checked all the fuses (house distribution board, and three at the tank) but they are all fine.

This led me to think the next stage was replacing either the immersion heater, or the thermostat in it. I figured probably the whole unit was safest. I couldn't get the large nut undone though, and went to B&Q's, and got a special tool. I didn't know what length immersion heater I needed either so I figured I'd drain the tank, and get mine out, and see what it was.

I switched off the only stop cock I could find (actually the wrong one - I think it's hot water circulating from boiler (Pipe 6)), ran the hot taps upstairs, but it didn't stop at all. After a while I turned them off, and figured I'd try anyway.

Problem 1: Even with WD40, a hell of a lot of effort and swearing, I can't undo that immersion heater screw. It may turn out being irrelevant (see below), but is there any trick, or is it just the application of brute force? I just ended up rocking the tank back and forth...

Problem 2: The ease with which the tank rocked, coupled with the noise of tools on the copper made me think it's empty. Some knocking later and I'm convinced.

I've taken the thermostat rod out of the immersion heater, and yes it's dry, no sign of water, etc. Clearly the tank did have water when I was getting some hot water from the boiler, because I checked and felt the tank heating in these times. I have switched the boiler off, CH clock off, and house thermostat off - would any of these cause the tank to drain itself?

Question 1: How is the hot water tank empty?

Now obviously if the tank was empty, the thermostat or immersion heater could have burnt itself out, but the empty tank is only a recent event, so I don't think that's it. If I could get the tank full, my next plan was still to replace the immersion heater, unless someone competent has better advice?

Now, here's the bit that I really don't understand...

Question 2: How come with an empty tank, the hot water taps still have an unlimited supply of (cold) water?

I mapped out the pipes besides the tank, followed them into the loft etc, and I have labelled them in the pictures:

PipestoLoftLarge.jpg


LoftPipesTanksLarge.jpg


Now, when I turn off the tap on Pipe 1 up in the loft, after a short time the water to the hot taps stops. Now this is the pipe that feeds the hot water tank, so this behaviours is what I expected, BUT, I expected the cold water to flow through the hot water tank. As I understand it, the cold water is pushed into the tank at the bottom, which then displaces hot water at the top, sending it to the taps, etc. Is that right? What am I missing?

Other details:

Pipe 2 clearly is the one that takes the hot water out of the top of the tank, and distributes it to the taps, shower, etc I have just realised that I have marked Pipe 3 on the loft photo twice, The high pipe which hangs over the top of the tank is actually Pipe 2. I assume this is a safety overflow for steam/hot water?

Pipe3 - I have absolutely no idea what this is or what it does? It has a stopcock in the loft, and it doesn't enter the hot water tank at all. Is it possible that cold tap water upstairs runs from this rather than mains? My childhood home worked that way (much older house), and cold water pressure is very low upstairs, and very high downstairs, so this is my best guess?

Pipe 4 - this is mains water refilling the tank by the ballcock.

Pipe 5 - No idea. It splits into two rising pipes, just where the lagging obscures it in the photo.

Pipe 6 and 7 - the input/output of hot water from the boiler I assume, and thus the normal heating method when the whole system is working. I assume the thermostat on the immersion heater lets that kick in, when there's not enough hot water at the top of the tank?

The grey box labelled control box was replaced 15 months ago.

I don't know what the red metal box behind it does, but previously it made noises when water was running - some kind of pump/valve?

Sorry if that was very long. I've just been trying to provide all the possibly useful information in case any of my terminology or assumptions have been incorrect.

Can anyone shed any light on:

a) Why is the tank empty?

b) When it wasn't, why wasn't the immersion heater working? (I'm assuming limescale/corrosion/burnt out)

c) Why do I get cold water direct to the hot taps, now the tank is empty?

d) How do I get that damned immersion heater out? lol

Thanks all for your time reading this! My gf would be so pleased if she could wash her hair without using kettles! Especially when she has to be up at 5am...

Jonathan
 
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this is far too long and tedious

Question 1: How is the hot water tank empty?

the q is wrong. The cylinder is not empty. you cannot drain a cylinder by running the taps. the water to the taps comes out of the top of the cylinder, not the bottom.

the thermostat is in a tube inside the cylinder, so the thermostat is not wet even though the cylinder is full of water.

Question b
is electricity going to the immersion heater element? If not, it obviously won't get hot.
 
I am surprised that someone who understands electronics is unable to perform simple checks to find the fault on the immersion heater element and thermostat.

Next your cylinder is full !

Even if there was no feed to it then it still remains full because the water is fed into the bottom and taken out of the top.

The support is inadequate! Seriously so and it could fail at any time!

They should be mounted on a flat sheet of marine ply ( not chip board or MDF ).

Concentrate on checking the immersion heater and stat to find out whats wrong!

Tony
 
Thanks for the reply John. I had assumed that the immersion thermostat rod went into the water - it certainly seems to open up to the whole tank when I peer through with a torch, but I could be wrong. Regardless, there is definitely no water in the tank - wrong echo, it is very light to lift/rock, etc

I won't have a multimeter or anything to test the wires at the immersion end, but all fuses are intact, and the trip hasn't gone either. If I could get it out, I'd just feel for heat on the element, but... Any other easy way to tell?
 
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yes, go and buy a multimeter in the high street for £10

if you prefer you can hold the wires in your hand but that would be very dangerous.

you can't drain a cylinder with the taps. if water comes out of the hot taps, then the cylinder is full
 
Well if the cylinder was empty, then how can you explain cold water coming out of the hot taps?

However, to check it can you disconnect the outlet pipe coming out of the top of the cylinder and describe the result?

I suppose that you will then say you dont have an adjustable or a fixed spanner.

If you then clicked my "help" button I would respond by saying you cannot expect to fix your problem without suitable tools.

To work in IT I had always assumed that a logical mind is required!

I dont see how you can manage anything in electronics without at least a multimeter. A signal generator and scope help too!

You gave a useful clue about this girlfriend getting up at 5 am. That sounds as if she is going to work as no other reason would get most people up at such an unsociable hour. If she has a job then she will have a pay packet and she is likely to have to spend that on a good heating engineer to sort out your problem.

Just prior to that she could buy you a cheap spanner first though. I am surprised she has not taken charge of the situation before now and got it sorted out.

I am often called out by women after their man has failed to sort something out quickly. Their men are usually made to stay in the front room until I have finished.

Tony
 
Thanks Tony.

I am surprised that someone who understands electronics is unable to perform simple checks to find the fault on the immersion heater element and thermostat.

Well my father was an electronics engineer, so I know some basics, and I'm happy turning off the mains, and changing switches, plug sockets, fitting lights etc. That's about the extent of it though - I'm not an electrician, and don't have any meters or anything.

Next your cylinder is full !

You have both said this - could you tell me why please?

I'm far from the expert here, and the fact you have both said it gives me pause, but:

- It makes a very hollow sound when knocked - unless these things are double jacketed with a big airgap between?

- it rocks easily, and if I kneel down, I can lift the thing and attached pipes an inch. There's no way I could do that with a full tank?

Even if there was no feed to it then it still remains full because the water is fen into the bottom and taken out of the top.

I'm afraid I'm not understanding this part? That way the feed works is also my understanding, but if water is NOT being fed in somehow, then how would it remain full?

The support is inadequate! Seriously so and it could fail at any time!

They should be mounted on a flat sheet of marine ply ( not chip board or MDF ).

Which part are you referring to? The tanks in the loft or the cylinder on the 1st floor?

The cylinder is sitting on 2 batons on a chipboard floor, and the loft tanks on a raised 'pallet' type affair over the rafters.

Having said that, both parts have been viewed by one insurance inspector, and 2 HIP surveyors in the past 3 years or so, and no-one has raised a comment. Either way I'm not in a position to do anything with it now, but if you think part of it needs looking at, I will file it away for future reference.

Thanks for your help![/u]
 
If you can lift it 25 mm then it must be empty so use the opportunity to put a sheet of ply under it.

I cannot explain how it can be empty and you still get cold water out of the hot.

That defies normal logic for those who understand how these things are connected up.

In this case I cannot offer any more suggestions other than you check the cistern in the loft and all valves from its outlet to the cylinder feed point at the bottom.

Hopefully this girlfriend will see the sense of getting a professional to sort it out.

Tony
 
Next your cylinder is full !

You have both said this - could you tell me why please? [/u]
running the taps takes water out of the top of the cylinder

this is intentional because convection takes the hottest water to the top

you cannot empty the cylinder without making a hole in the bottom, or having a drain cock there

the cylinder is like a big milk bottle. if you add water to it, it spills out of the top, but you can't empty it from the top unless you turn it upside down. if water comes out of the hot taps, then it is coming from the top of the cylinder.

I suppose there is a faint chance your HW system has been altered and the cylinder is no longer in use, for example if you have a combi boiler fitted.
 
A Netaheat is not a combi, John!

There is something very odd about either this fellow or his system!

If one even considered that the vent was closed then it would syill not siphon the water out from a downstairs tap because the cylinder would just collapse.

Anyone in Berkshire fancy going round? It intreagues me!

Tony
 
Well if the cylinder was empty, then how can you explain cold water coming out of the hot taps?

I can't, hence my questions.

If you are both sure it's full, then I will go with it, but it doesn't seem to fit what I'm seeing. I could be wrong though.

However, to check it can you disconnect the outlet pipe coming out of the top of the cylinder and describe the result?

I suppose that you will then say you dont have an adjustable or a fixed spanner.

I possibly have an adjustable spanner somewhere, but certainly adjustable pliers which will work, I will try that. If you are correct, I'm assuming I'll get a spray of water and then retighten it?

Edit: Lost the internet connection for half an hour then, so I tried as you suggested. When I undo the collar at the top of the cylinder water trickles out. I undid it about 90% of the way, and it was running out - certainly not under high pressure, but there was water there. Presumably the lack or pressure is because the tap is still turned off in the loft, but I assume this proves both your theories that the tank has water in it? If it was empty, gravity would have dropped all the water out of that pipe I assume.

If you then clicked my "help" button I would respond by saying you cannot expect to fix your problem without suitable tools.

Indeed. All I am asking for are suggestions of what I CAN do in my current circumstances. Even buying the multimeter is likely out of budget until next giro. Well, if I get that, I can't get the immersion unit... :(

To work in IT I had always assumed that a logical mind is required!

Things are only 'obvious' when you understand them - something I am all to aware of from managing an IT Service Desk, and I'm sure it's the same in plumbing, and most other fields too. It's fair to say I knew almost nothing about Central Heating 3 weeks ago, and very little about hot water tanks 48 hrs ago.

I dont see how you can manage anything in electronics without at least a multimeter. A signal generator and scope help too!

All equipment my late father had several times over, but I don't, and only the multimeter I would know how to read usefully. Lets assume for our purposes then that I have no useful knowledge or equipment for electrical purposes. I have certainly never claimed to be an electrician or close to it.

You gave a useful clue about this girlfriend getting up at 5 am. That sounds as if she is going to work as no other reason would get most people up at such an unsociable hour. If she has a job then she will have a pay packet and she is likely to have to spend that on a good heating engineer to sort out your problem.

Indeed she is employed, although still pretty broke, and lives down in Kent, not with me. She visits overnight when working in London though. I'm not sure if the point was made tongue in cheek, but it's a new relationship, and definitely paying for this is not something I'm getting her involved in.

Just prior to that she could buy you a cheap spanner first though.

I have the spanner ;)

If you can lift it 25 mm then it must be empty so use the opportunity to put a sheet of ply under it.

I cannot explain how it can be empty and you still get cold water out of the hot.

This is what I can't understand? Okay, I accept that I am probably rocking it on a fixed point (ie: the water intake in the back right corner), and it's partially supported by this etc, but I am amazed I can get it to budge at all if it's full? Water is heavy!

running the taps takes water out of the top of the cylinder

this is intentional because convection takes the hottest water to the top

you cannot empty the cylinder without making a hole in the bottom, or having a drain cock there

This all makes sense, but I'm still really amazed by being able to move it and the echo, but I can't argue with the fact there appears to be water.

I've seen reference to a drain cock in diagrams online, but not seen one on it. I'm guessing it's round at the rear, where the water intake is. God knows how they installed it that way. I'm half suspecting the airing cupboard was built around it afterwards.

I suppose there is a faint chance your HW system has been altered and the cylinder is no longer in use, for example if you have a combi boiler fitted.

No, I am certain that it's not a combi-boiler, and the hot water tank heated up when I got about an hours water out of it sometime last week - weds or thursday, so it's definitely part of the active system.

There is something very odd about either this fellow or his system!

Likely just my lack of knowledge I am afraid. I am merely describing what I see/think with an uneducated eye - hence I'm trying to give lots of info and pictures etc In case they help more than my descriptions!.

If one even considered that the vent was closed then it would syill not siphon the water out from a downstairs tap because the cylinder would just collapse.

You lost me on the vent - where/what is that?
 
So.... would a fair summary be:

1) You both think I'm mistaken on the tank being empty, and that's all a red herring

2) We are back to the problem I was originally investigating, which is a non-working immersion heater

3) Likely causes are:
a) faulty thermostat
b) faulty immersion unit (or both)
c) problem with electrical supply to the immersion*

4) likely solutions would be:

a) replace thermostat
b) replace immersion unit
c) test wiring somehow

Is that about right?

* Wouldn't this cause the trip to fail on the house distribution board?

Thanks for all the help guys!
 
start with (c)

Identify the problem before applying a solution.

* No.
 
As already said, your hot water cylinder IS full of water - the cold water from your loft tank enters the bottom side of your cylinder and this 'head' of water pressure pushes the hot water out of the top when you open the hot tap.

Obviously, as your water heating isnt working this water is remaining cold and is the reason why you are getting cold out of your hot taps - the water is passing straight through the cylinder from the loft tank and out of your taps via the top of the cylinder without being heated.

BE CAREFUL messing about with your immersion heater. Even with a dedicated immersion spanner you are at VERY high risk of splitting/buckling the copper surrounding the immersion and getting very wet indeed and through the ceiling etc especially considering how poorly your cylinder is supported (it will probably fall and empty the CH system as well!)........... If this happens do you know how to stop it? dont proceed until you do, otherwise you will end up with the entire contents of the cylinder AND the loft tanks coming through the cylinder then ceiling - the loft tank will continue to refill from mains and continue to empty through your ceiling via the cylinder until you stop it.

Personally I would declare yourself bankrupt if you have mounting debts as it all looks to me like you need a good £10k spending as the whole lot needs ripping out and replacing new.

I wouldn't pull out the immersion without draining and isolating the cylinder AND only then if you know its at fault - Are you sure its switched on? You should have a 16Amp breaker on your consumer unit (hopefully your electrics are up to scratch) for it which leads to a fused switch in the airing cupboard (is this fuse AND breaker ok?) is the fused switch turned on? is the thermostat on the element turned up (~60 degrees?) is there a reset on the thermostat?

Concentrate on one thing at a time. I got bored reading your whole post and couldn't remember the start of it - mines not a lot shorter though!
 
Basically my boiler is dead, and needs replacing. I've explored that elsewhere, but it's not relevant here (I think). Should it have any significance, it's a Potterton Netaheat 16/22, non-combi gas boiler, and it's ~25 years old.
How do you know the boiler is dead? Has it been checked by a registered engineer?

Tinkering with the boiler has shown I can get about an hours use out of it every 3 days at some random point, but it consumes gas the whole time, even when not lit.
Are you saying that it leaks gas? That's dangerous and the boiler should be disconnected and the supply capped off.

What tinkering do you do to get it working?

As you are on benefits, you may be eligible for a Warmfront Grant to replace the boiler.
 

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