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Baxi Bermuda 552

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Keith R

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Apr 19, 2013, 4:45:06 PM4/19/13
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My 28 year old back boiler has just developed a water leak from the heat
exchanger.

Can anybody help in advising if it is likely to be a simple gasket
change or the exchanger itself. If it is the exchanger is it worth it
based on the boilers age?

The boiler has been very reliable since I fitted all those years ago.

Many thanks
Keith




--
Keith R

Roger Mills

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Apr 19, 2013, 6:07:32 PM4/19/13
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Can you run it with the gas fire removed, and actually see where it's
leaking?

The heat exchanger is a fairly heavy cast iron affair, so I'd be
surprised if it had rusted through. It's made of several bits bolted
together, with gaskets in between - so a gasket failure is a likely
candidate.

Having said that, I wouldn't rate your chances of dismantling it
non-destructively after 28 years. Nor, unfortunately, would I rate your
chances of being able to buy a new one - unless you can find a good used
one at a scrappy.
--
Cheers,
Roger
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harry

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Apr 20, 2013, 3:59:02 AM4/20/13
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It is junk because of it's age, inefficiency and it is self defeating
because it draws (cold) combustion air into the room.
Getting a new condensing, room sealed, wall hung boiler will likely
cut gas bills by nearly 50%

Roger Mills

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Apr 20, 2013, 5:15:14 AM4/20/13
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I'm surprised you know anything about boilers since, with all your solar
panels, you presumably have no need of such crude devices!

To the OP: If you can't easily find and cure the leak, it may well be
time to consider replacing the boiler. If you like the Bermudu concept,
there is now a condensing version which (apparently) meets the latest
efficiency requirements.

harry

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Apr 20, 2013, 11:40:52 AM4/20/13
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On Apr 20, 10:15 am, Roger Mills <watt.ty...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 20/04/2013 08:59, harry wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Apr 19, 9:45 pm, Keith R<keithrump...@sky.com>  wrote:
> >> My 28 year old back boiler has just developed a water leak from the heat
> >> exchanger.
>
> >> Can anybody help in advising if it is likely to be a simple gasket
> >> change or the exchanger itself.  If it is the exchanger is it worth it
> >> based on the boilers age?
>
> >> The boiler has been very reliable since I fitted all those years ago.
>
> >> Many thanks
> >> Keith
>
> >> --
> >> Keith R
>
> > It is junk because of it's age, inefficiency and it is self defeating
> > because it draws (cold) combustion air into the room.
> > Getting a new condensing, room sealed, wall hung boiler will likely
> > cut gas bills by nearly 50%
>
> I'm surprised you know anything about boilers since, with all your solar
> panels, you presumably have no need of such crude devices!


I have no need for central heating now as I have a solar passive
house.

But in days gone by I had a CORGI certificate because of the gas
fitters I had working for me. Mostly but not entirely industrial
boilers.

Dave Liquorice

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Apr 21, 2013, 7:44:25 AM4/21/13
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On Sat, 20 Apr 2013 00:59:02 -0700 (PDT), harry wrote:

> It is junk because of it's age, inefficiency and it is self defeating
> because it draws (cold) combustion air into the room.
> Getting a new condensing, room sealed, wall hung boiler will likely
> cut gas bills by nearly 50%

Just looked it up in the SEBUK database http://www.boilers.org.uk/
(I would post a direct link but they hide those). Gawd is that a crap
boiler SAP 2009 Annual effciency of 65%...

A decent condensing modern boiler will certainly cut the gas bill
noticeably. Installing a modern boiler might be more fun as that Baxi is
a back boiler and modern boilers tend to require being mounted on an
external wall. I don't know if you can get a condensing back boiler, that
will be happy with presumably a normal height flue attached, even fitting
the condensate drain might be fun...

As a stop gap I wonder of some rad weld added to the primary would stop
the leak whilst the research/planning for the replacement is carried out.

--
Cheers
Dave.



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