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Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
Small plumbing snag: occasionally there's a bit of hot water coming out
of my cold water taps: I open a tap, the water runs cold for a few seconds, then suddenly hot for another few seconds, and then cold again. And if I turn off the water at the mains and open a cold water tap, the water from my hot water tank eventually drains out through the cold water tap. Shouldn't there be some kind of non-return valve ensuring that the hot water doesn't drain back into the cold water side??? |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
"oh" wrote in message ... Small plumbing snag: occasionally there's a bit of hot water coming out of my cold water taps: I open a tap, the water runs cold for a few seconds, then suddenly hot for another few seconds, and then cold again. My En-suite basin cold tap does this also. It is because both hot and cold pipes are close together under the floor so the heat from the hot pipe heats up a short section of cold pipe and therefore the water inside. And if I turn off the water at the mains and open a cold water tap, the water from my hot water tank eventually drains out through the cold water tap. Have you actually done this, i.e. EMPTIED the hot water cylinder via a cold tap? Sounds a bit strange and costly IMO. Shouldn't there be some kind of non-return valve ensuring that the hot water doesn't drain back into the cold water side??? Are your taps in question mixer type or two individual pillar taps? John |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
On 18/11/2007 15:47, John wrote:
Have you actually done this, i.e. EMPTIED the hot water cylinder via a cold tap? You shouldn't be able to /empty/ your hot water cylinder through a hot tap, let a lone a cold tap. |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
"Andy Burns" wrote in message ... On 18/11/2007 15:47, John wrote: Have you actually done this, i.e. EMPTIED the hot water cylinder via a cold tap? You shouldn't be able to /empty/ your hot water cylinder through a hot tap, let a lone a cold tap. I must ask why you think this, If the main stoptap into the house is turned off as the OP stated and a hot tap is opened then the cylinder would eventually empty (apart from the dregs in the bottom), unless my understanding of gravity is wrong! John |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
John wrote:
"oh" wrote in message ... Small plumbing snag: occasionally there's a bit of hot water coming out of my cold water taps: I open a tap, the water runs cold for a few seconds, then suddenly hot for another few seconds, and then cold again. My En-suite basin cold tap does this also. It is because both hot and cold pipes are close together under the floor so the heat from the hot pipe heats up a short section of cold pipe and therefore the water inside. Yeah, ours is the same. And the 'profile' of hot-cold-hot-cold is recognisably different in the winter when the central heating is on! David |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
My En-suite basin cold tap does this also. It is because both hot and cold pipes are close together under the floor so the heat from the hot pipe heats up a short section of cold pipe and therefore the water inside. I was thinking that at first but it doesn't matter which tap I run and it happens even when the central heating is off and I haven't ran any hot water taps. And if I turn off the water at the mains and open a cold water tap, the water from my hot water tank eventually drains out through the cold water tap. Have you actually done this, i.e. EMPTIED the hot water cylinder via a cold tap? Sounds a bit strange and costly IMO. Yep. If I were to want to do a plumbing job on the cold water side these days, I'd have to turn off the water at the mains, open a cold water tap, and wait for the content of my hot water cylinder to have drained through the cold water tap. Bizarre and annoying... Shouldn't there be some kind of non-return valve ensuring that the hot water doesn't drain back into the cold water side??? Are your taps in question mixer type or two individual pillar taps? They are individual taps, apart from in the kitchen which is the usual mixer. Doesn't matter where I experiment, same result :-( ... |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
"oh" wrote in message ... My En-suite basin cold tap does this also. It is because both hot and cold pipes are close together under the floor so the heat from the hot pipe heats up a short section of cold pipe and therefore the water inside. I was thinking that at first but it doesn't matter which tap I run and it happens even when the central heating is off and I haven't ran any hot water taps. Has this just started or have you had a plumber in recently? And if I turn off the water at the mains and open a cold water tap, the water from my hot water tank eventually drains out through the cold water tap. Have you actually done this, i.e. EMPTIED the hot water cylinder via a cold tap? Sounds a bit strange and costly IMO. Yep. If I were to want to do a plumbing job on the cold water side these days, I'd have to turn off the water at the mains, open a cold water tap, and wait for the content of my hot water cylinder to have drained through the cold water tap. Bizarre and annoying.. I assume you have a normal gravity fed HW system as you have a cylinder in an airing cupboard or the loft? If so can you not just turn off the main stopcock and the cold feed to the cylinder then the water in the storage tank cannot empty into the cylinder so the hot water within is not 'forced' out to your taps? Shouldn't there be some kind of non-return valve ensuring that the hot water doesn't drain back into the cold water side??? Are your taps in question mixer type or two individual pillar taps? They are individual taps, apart from in the kitchen which is the usual mixer. Doesn't matter where I experiment, same result :-( ... John |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
You shouldn't be able to /empty/ your hot water cylinder through a hot
tap, let a lone a cold tap. I must ask why you think this, If the main stoptap into the house is turned off as the OP stated and a hot tap is opened then the cylinder would eventually empty (apart from the dregs in the bottom), unless my understanding of gravity is wrong! I've been googling to find out exactly how it should work, it appears to me that the hot water exits at the top of the cylinder, while cold water enters the cylinder at the bottom. So the only way of actually draining a hot water cylinder completely would be out of the cold-water inlet. Some of the diagrams I've seen seem to have a figure like "--|--" which looks like a non-return valve to me (and the "" is an expension valve): Mains -- Press. reducer -- T to cold circuit --|------ cylinder So my suspicion is that the non-return valve is broken or missing, would that typically be part of the cylinder itself? |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
John wrote:
"oh" wrote in message ... My En-suite basin cold tap does this also. It is because both hot and cold pipes are close together under the floor so the heat from the hot pipe heats up a short section of cold pipe and therefore the water inside. I was thinking that at first but it doesn't matter which tap I run and it happens even when the central heating is off and I haven't ran any hot water taps. Has this just started or have you had a plumber in recently? It's actually a complete re-plumbing job and it doesn't have a gravity feed, the problem is that several sets of plumbers were in on different stages and I didn't get in again until a couple of months after it was all done and appeared to be working OK :-( ... |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
On 18/11/2007 16:13, John wrote:
I must ask why you think this, I /know/ it because I have recently had to drain my hot water cylinder to fit a side flange for a shower. If the main stoptap into the house is turned off as the OP stated and a hot tap is opened then the cylinder would eventually empty (apart from the dregs in the bottom), unless my understanding of gravity is wrong! Given that the hot cylinder fills at the bottom, and empties from the top I suggest you try emptying one ... if it hasn't been fitted with a draincock near the inlet you'll need a siphon tube. |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
"oh" wrote in message ... You shouldn't be able to /empty/ your hot water cylinder through a hot tap, let a lone a cold tap. I must ask why you think this, If the main stoptap into the house is turned off as the OP stated and a hot tap is opened then the cylinder would eventually empty (apart from the dregs in the bottom), unless my understanding of gravity is wrong! I've been googling to find out exactly how it should work, it appears to me that the hot water exits at the top of the cylinder, while cold water enters the cylinder at the bottom. So the only way of actually draining a hot water cylinder completely would be out of the cold-water inlet. Some of the diagrams I've seen seem to have a figure like "--|--" which looks like a non-return valve to me (and the "" is an expension valve): Mains -- Press. reducer -- T to cold circuit --|------ cylinder So my suspicion is that the non-return valve is broken or missing, would that typically be part of the cylinder itself? You are right that it is not possible to empty your cylinder by turning on a tap. It is very unlikely that you have any kind of non return valve fitted. What kind of work did your plumber carry out prior to the problem of hot water from cold tap? |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
"oh" wrote in message ... John wrote: "oh" wrote in message ... My En-suite basin cold tap does this also. It is because both hot and cold pipes are close together under the floor so the heat from the hot pipe heats up a short section of cold pipe and therefore the water inside. I was thinking that at first but it doesn't matter which tap I run and it happens even when the central heating is off and I haven't ran any hot water taps. Has this just started or have you had a plumber in recently? It's actually a complete re-plumbing job and it doesn't have a gravity feed, the problem is that several sets of plumbers were in on different stages and I didn't get in again until a couple of months after it was all done and appeared to be working OK :-( ... I am not understanding something here. If it "doesn't have a gravity feed" why have you got a HW cylinder? I am not a plumber but I was under the understanding that Cylinder = gravity system (header tank in loft and No Cylinder = mains fed HW on demand (combi boiler)? John |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
oh wrote:
Small plumbing snag: occasionally there's a bit of hot water coming out of my cold water taps: I open a tap, the water runs cold for a few seconds, then suddenly hot for another few seconds, and then cold again. As other posters have said, a hot pipe is close to the feed pipe for the cold water tap. And if I turn off the water at the mains and open a cold water tap, the water from my hot water tank eventually drains out through the cold water tap. Shouldn't there be some kind of non-return valve ensuring that the hot water doesn't drain back into the cold water side??? Hmmm. I would expect that that normally the hot tank would be fed by a header tank above it. Typically in the loft. Perhaps your hot water tanks cold feed is directly connected to the incoming mains cold water. Thus, if you turn of the main stop cock and open a cold tap the water in the hot tank could flow back out of the feed to the cold tap. Guy |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
oh wrote:
It's actually a complete re-plumbing job and it doesn't have a gravity feed, the problem is that several sets of plumbers were in on different stages and I didn't get in again until a couple of months after it was all done and appeared to be working OK :-( ... So this is a mains pressure stored hot water system then? Might have helped if you had mentioned this in the first place! -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
John wrote:
"Andy Burns" wrote in message ... On 18/11/2007 15:47, John wrote: Have you actually done this, i.e. EMPTIED the hot water cylinder via a cold tap? You shouldn't be able to /empty/ your hot water cylinder through a hot tap, let a lone a cold tap. I must ask why you think this, If the main stoptap into the house is turned off as the OP stated and a hot tap is opened then the cylinder would eventually empty (apart from the dregs in the bottom), unless my understanding of gravity is wrong! I think your understanding of gravity may actually be wrong! ;-) Conventional HW cylinders draw off hot water from the top. The only way to get it out of the top is to feed more (cold) water in at the bottom. Hence it is never possible to empty it from the top connection - it remains full no matter how much water you draw. Usually the connection to the bottom of the cylinder from the cold cistern is a dedicated one. I can just about visualise a plumbing error that instead uses one feed to provide this and then continues to supply other cold outlets in the house. In this case it might be possible to drain a hot cylinder if you tied up the ballcock on the main cistern, opened a hot tap to allow air in, and then opened a cold tap well below the height of the hot cylinder. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
oh wrote:
Small plumbing snag: occasionally there's a bit of hot water coming out of my cold water taps: I open a tap, the water runs cold for a few seconds, then suddenly hot for another few seconds, and then cold again. This sounds like a result of the proximity of hot and cold pipes. Presumably it only happens if you leave enough time to allow it to reheat the adjacent pipe. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps
oh wrote:
My En-suite basin cold tap does this also. It is because both hot and cold pipes are close together under the floor so the heat from the hot pipe heats up a short section of cold pipe and therefore the water inside. I was thinking that at first but it doesn't matter which tap I run and it happens even when the central heating is off and I haven't ran any hot water taps. But assuming your HW is hot, there will still be at least a hot pipe from the boiler feeding the HW tank, no? So all that has to happen is for this pipe to be in close proximity to the cold water pipe somewhere along its length. David |
UPDATE [ Plumber screwed up? Hot water out of the cold water taps]
oh wrote:
Small plumbing snag: occasionally there's a bit of hot water coming out of my cold water taps: I open a tap, the water runs cold for a few seconds, then suddenly hot for another few seconds, and then cold again. And if I turn off the water at the mains and open a cold water tap, the water from my hot water tank eventually drains out through the cold water tap. Shouldn't there be some kind of non-return valve ensuring that the hot water doesn't drain back into the cold water side??? Called the various plumbers and the guy who installed the hot water cylinder came out. What I thought was just a T to a pressure relief valve just before the cylinder was indeed a non-return valve as well. Of course it was stuck open, however it was only a five-minute job to replace it once the plumber got going. Thanks all for your replies! |
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