1) The system may still have air in it, so persevere with bleeding rads for a couple of days.
2) the pressure relief valve may be faulty and letting pressure out the boiler- check the 15mm copper pipe on the outside of the property if suspect, tie a balloon or condom on to check overnight.
3) any fault with the boiler will be covered by warranty so don't do anything that may invalidate the warranty.
2006-12-10 05:25:21
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answer #1
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answered by Daddybear 7
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May be you have
low water pressure
fualty valve (needs replacing)
air lock in radiator.
a combi boiler needs a constant water pressure of at least 1.5
so fill the boiler with enaf water.somehow air is getting in the boiler.
if you cant figure it out then get the guy who fitted the boiler to check it again.
2006-12-10 01:02:09
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answer #2
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answered by **tomtom 5
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Bring the ruddy plumber back to sort it out. I never did like Combi Boilers. They are very wasteful in my opinion.
2006-12-09 22:25:14
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answer #3
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answered by ALLAN L 2
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ceck all the rads at both entry and exit points where the valves are.You will prob find that it is the over flow pipe outside that is losing the pressure thru the pressure release valve.That needs special attention.if it is a rad then gently give it a minute tighten to stop the leak
2006-12-09 22:30:08
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answer #4
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answered by paul t 4
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If there are no obvious signs of a leak it may be you may be losing pressure from the safety valve if so the water would be going outside .
2006-12-09 22:52:59
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answer #5
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answered by derek 3
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You dont, get a corgi registered engineer in to check it out for you. Dont mess around with gas, as you may not have a house left to warm.
2006-12-09 22:19:42
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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start looking in the yellow pages, for a plumber.
2006-12-09 22:19:31
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answer #7
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answered by o0ojazzo0o 4
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