When to replace pump (Grundfos 15/50)?

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27 Oct 2010
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Manchester
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Hello everybody!

I have a Grundfos 15/50 in my flat and it stopped working the other day. A friend told me that I could take out the screw in the centre of the pump and play around a little bit with a screwdriver in the hole. This little trick did work, and now I have heating in my flat again.

My question is: is my problem now solved, or should I consider replacing the pump altogether? Presumably, this shouldn't happen (or is this normal?). How long would you guys reckon that I have until the pump completely fails?

Cheers,
Mala
 
Hi Mala,
Grundfos pumps are pretty reliable. It's possible there is some gunk in the head that is stopping it from starting up. Or that it has not been used for a long time?
If you can - remove, dismantle and clean the pump.
 
Hi Mala,
Grundfos pumps are pretty reliable. It's possible there is some gunk in the head that is stopping it from starting up. Or that it has not been used for a long time?
If you can - remove, dismantle and clean the pump.


Thank you for your quick answer! The pump worked fine the other week, so it's not that it hasn't been used in a long time. It just didn't start the other day.

There is no way I can remove it or dismantle anything (I'm pretty bad at these things and I'm still surprised (shocked) that my fiddling with the screwdriver worked so well).

I don't mind getting a new one installed, but I obviously don't want to do it if the pump is alright and this fiddling is normal. When I fiddle with the screwdriver I can stop the pump with the screwdriver. If I want it to run again I can fiddle around a bit more and it'll start again. Seems pretty dodgy to me...

Don't know the age of the pump. Previous owner installed it together with a boiler called "Ideal Classic RS 30". The system looks pretty old to be honest...

Cheers,
Mala
 
Sounds like its time to get an expert in then - Either to strip and clean the pump or install a new one...
 
casn take pump head off - usually 4 allen key screws (4mm size) - then see if impellor is clean/intact and running smooth - don't forget to isolate pump at valves if any or drain down pipework if not - or as above - get an expert in
 
Thank you for your help! I've had an expert in who said it was time to replace the pump. Cost me a total of £100 for the new pump (a Myson CP53) and the installation. Does that sound reasonable?

I'm happy with everything, although I guess I'll never know if the repair was necessary.

Cheers,
Mala
 

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