I agree too. I'm trying to keep open-minded, but I reckon I've been through all the obvious things, in my mind, approximately four million timeschrishutt said:I agree. You've got to be absolutely sure that the obvious things aren't the cause of the problem before chasing after obscure phenomena.
Thanks - you're absolutely right. I believe the pipes are right but I just wrote it down wrong, but I'll check again when I'm next there.chrishutt said:The cold outlet should really be the lower of the two, so are you sure you've got them the right way round?softus said:Another outlet, slightly higher, is to the cold side of a Stuart Turner twin impeller pump.
Thanks Agile. One of my ideas was exactly that - to fit an isolating valve to the kitchen cold side so that the owner can turn it off overnight to see if the problem goes away.Agile said:If the kitchen tap is a mixer type it could be allowing cold mains water to flow back up the hot supply pipe.
If course it should have had a NRV in the hot but nobody fits them as they should! Even if there is then it could be leaking.
Test would be to isolate the cold supply to kitchen.
Just to recap one point in case I didn't make it clear - the problem occurs when no water is being used at all, anywhere in the house. For example overnight. This is what made me concur with the porous casting idea, and what made me think that the NRV would stop it.
