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Descaling...
There are two separate types of 'descaling'. Cleaning the corrosion deposits
from the radiator system and main heat exchanger of a boiler, and cleaning hard
water deposits out of a combi boiler.
The former is more accurately described as 'powerflushing'. Powerflushing and
descaling are closely related because the same equipment and chemicals are used,
even though the faults being addressed are different.
Powerflushing:
The expression was coined by Kamco Ltd, who are the originators of the
technique and the equipment needed to do it. Read ALL about it on their website www.kamco.co.uk
In summary, a heating system is connected to a large pump with a reservoir
via which either chemicals or clean water can be introduced and circulated
around the heating system. The pump distributes these chemicals at high speed
through each individual radiator in turn where and they loosen and bring into
suspension most of the magnetite corrosion deposits. This dirty fluid is then
pumped out to drain at high speed and replaced with fresh water and neutralising
agent. This mixture is in turn flushed to drain and replaced with new water and
corrosion inhibitor. The whole process takes several hours to carry out
thoroughly in my experience. Roughly one hour per radiator on the system.
Descaling:
Descaling is needed when a heat exchanger accumulates a significant thickness
of calcium on it's surface, enough to insulate the water from the heat source
and impair performance.
This effect only occurs on heat exchangers that carry fresh tap water. Sealed
systems such as radiator circuits contain a finite amount of calcium (typically
30 grams or so) that was contained in the initial fill of water, and once this
has precipitated there is no more left to deposit. Fresh tap water on the other
hand, can continuously deposit ever more calcium resulting in very thick layers
of scale which can virtually seal off all water flow in extreme cases. Combi
boilers and thermal stores (PulsaCoils, BoilerMates etc) suffer from this in
particular. Symptoms can be reduced water flow, reduced temperature, wildly
fluctuating water temperature, or any combination of these.
The answer is to either replace the heat exchanger, or pump descaling acid
though it for an hour or two. It's a much simpler procedure than powerflushing
as only one item (the heat exchanger) needs attention. The powerflushing pump is
set up and connected to the heat exchanger via the washing machine hot and cold
taps usually, turned on and the scale gradually dissolved away. Once performance
has been restored the equipment is disconnected and the chemicals flushed from
the pipework simply by restoring the water supply and turning on the taps.
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