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No Heat in 1 of 3 Zones. Air locked?

smithfan
smithfan Member Posts: 91
edited September 2016 in THE MAIN WALL
I've attached a detailed picture. Basically the hot water drastically loses heat at the elbow I circled in the middle of the diagram causing that whole zone to not get warm. (Circulator is working fine) This is the supply side of zone 2. Zone 1 heats just fine. I purged each zone about a month ago because last winter I could hear a bit of air in there, but stupidly never checked to make sure each zone was heating properly until now. I assume it's air locked at that elbow since the heat drastically dissipates there?

Also, I want to purge it right now but the Triangle Tube is still at 130 degrees. I hear it's bad to introduce cold water into a hot system so my next question is if I shut off that ball valve, circled in the bottom left, if that's enough to isolate the boiler from the system or not?

Also, is there a chance my air problem is in my primary loop, and not my secondary loops? If so is there a way and is it appropriate to purge just the primary loop and if so how would I go about doing that?

Additional details.
1 story home with basement. 2 upstairs zones are baseboard, downstairs is infloor heat. System pressure about 15 PSI when running.

Thanks in advance for your help!!

Comments

  • Paul S_3
    Paul S_3 Member Posts: 1,261
    how do you know circulator is running fine? try purging your loop again, regardless of temp....i doubt its an air problem in your primary loop....other zones heat fine.....how high is the zone that doesnt heat from the fill valve.....15 psi should be fine (about 35 ft from fill valve)....what is the static pressure without pumps running?....system looks piped correctly....
    ASM Mechanical Company
    Located in Staten Island NY
    Servicing all 5 boroughs of NYC.
    347-692-4777
    ASMMECHANICALCORP@GMAIL.COM
    ASMHVACNYC.COM
    https://heatinghelp.com/find-a-contractor/detail/asm-mechanical-company
  • smithfan
    smithfan Member Posts: 91
    Paul S said:

    how do you know circulator is running fine? try purging your loop again, regardless of temp....i doubt its an air problem in your primary loop....other zones heat fine.....how high is the zone that doesnt heat from the fill valve.....15 psi should be fine (about 35 ft from fill valve)....what is the static pressure without pumps running?....system looks piped correctly....

    Same distance as the other zone that is heating fine as both are on the same floor. 1 is bedroom zones the other is living areas. I'm going purging it again right now. The pressure at cold is always above 12 psi. As for the circulator, I just put my ear up against it and it's running through it on both sides of the pipe. I don't know if there's something else I can do to test the ciculator is functional?
  • Paul S_3
    Paul S_3 Member Posts: 1,261
    edited September 2016
    if you have a electrical meter, you can check the amp draw that sometimes helps....those pumps are funny ive seen them pull the rated amp draw when they were bad.....listening to the pump is definitely not accurate you could be hearing the boiler pump etc.....I would purge the zone really good ....turn on all the other zones if it still doesn't heat and the other zones do I would replace the pump......shut the bottom isolation flange on the pump, shut the return valve and open the return boiler drain in that zone....just knock the pressure down it should not be a lot of water...try not to let air get sucked in once the pressure is down....then shut the 2nd isolation flange on the pump and replace the pump with the gaskets.....but without an electrical meter this is just a guess....that Taco circulator control relay could be bad as well
    ASM Mechanical Company
    Located in Staten Island NY
    Servicing all 5 boroughs of NYC.
    347-692-4777
    ASMMECHANICALCORP@GMAIL.COM
    ASMHVACNYC.COM
    https://heatinghelp.com/find-a-contractor/detail/asm-mechanical-company
  • smithfan
    smithfan Member Posts: 91
    The purge fixed it, was totally air locked. Still mad because in that zone I still get this "dribble" sound from the rads. No matter how hard I try I can't get a silent baseboard on that zone, but at least now it's heating properly. You can only purge so many times!
  • Paul48
    Paul48 Member Posts: 4,469
    Why are those valves closed in the photo?
  • smithfan
    smithfan Member Posts: 91
    Now my dang condensate pump is running non-stop. Usually runs for a few seconds and shuts off, what could that be about?
  • smithfan
    smithfan Member Posts: 91
    Paul48 said:

    Why are those valves closed in the photo?

    I was getting ready to purge it. Air is out, but now the condensate pump on the floor won't stop running?
  • Paul48
    Paul48 Member Posts: 4,469
    I can't visualize how that low temp zone works. I'm use to seeing it in diagrams from TMV manufacturers.
  • delta T
    delta T Member Posts: 884
    smithfan said:

    Now my dang condensate pump is running non-stop. Usually runs for a few seconds and shuts off, what could that be about?

    Is it only accepting condensate? is the relief valve or backflow draining into it as well? Could just be the float is stuck. Most of those, the top just lifts off and you can get to the float and un stick it if that's the problem. If the relief valve is draining into it then you might have too much pressure, or you your relief valve may be shot. Hard to say exactly without seeing it.
    Zman
  • smithfan
    smithfan Member Posts: 91
    delta T said:

    smithfan said:

    Now my dang condensate pump is running non-stop. Usually runs for a few seconds and shuts off, what could that be about?

    Is it only accepting condensate? is the relief valve or backflow draining into it as well? Could just be the float is stuck. Most of those, the top just lifts off and you can get to the float and un stick it if that's the problem. If the relief valve is draining into it then you might have too much pressure, or you your relief valve may be shot. Hard to say exactly without seeing it.
    Just replaced the whole thing, including the tubing. The pump literally had never been cleaned so it was probably a combination of mucked up impellers and clogged tubing. New ones working flawlessly :)
  • hot_rod
    hot_rod Member Posts: 22,022
    What is the pressure without any pumps running? You want 12-15 psi static to assure the system is filled.

    I assume you have a pump on the primary loop pumping into the boiler? if so the gauge on the boiler will read the fill plus the delta P the circulator adds, since you are correctly pumping away from the expansion tank..

    Sometimes adding a few psi on the fill will help remove the last small bubbles. Adjust the expansion tank pressure if you add pressure and leave it elevated.

    Is the air purger at the boiler working? Sometimes getting all the air out of primary secondary piped systems takes a few days. A second air purger on the secondary loop sometimes is needed.
    Any high point float vents on the system?
    Bob "hot rod" Rohr
    trainer for Caleffi NA
    Living the hydronic dream
    Ironman
  • Ironman
    Ironman Member Posts: 7,367
    edited October 2016
    The supply and return for that secondary loop are reversed. Look a how they are on the other loop.

    The way it is now, the secondary pump for that loop is "pumping towards" the primary which is the PONPC. This will cause the pressure differential that the circulator creates to be DEDUCTED from the static fill pressure. If it was reversed, and "pumping away" from the primary, the delta p of the circ would be ADDED to the static fill pressure.

    In other words, reverse the piping coming out of those two tees.

    If you have 20' of elevation that takes about 9 psi from your 12 psi static fill pressure. That leaves 3 psi at your highest point. The circulator can produce about 5 psi pressure differential (delta p). That 5 psi is DEDUCTED from the 3 psi that your have at the highest point leaving it in a vacuum, which in turn lowers the boiling point. If the circulator was "pumping away" like it should, the 5 psi would be ADDED to the 3 psi static = 8 psi.

    Raising the static fill pressure to 18 psi may alleviate the issue, but then you run the risk of the system over-pressurizing when it reaches 180* because the expansion tank may not be able to accept the volume.
    Bob Boan
    You can choose to do what you want, but you cannot choose the consequences.
  • hot_rod
    hot_rod Member Posts: 22,022
    I think supply to pump 2 is wrong, pump 1 and the mixed are correct? Hard to tell exactly from the camera angle. The mix valve has the hot port facing down, return ties in into an odd place but should work. Often the mixed return is into a tee at the cold port of the mixer.
    Bob "hot rod" Rohr
    trainer for Caleffi NA
    Living the hydronic dream
  • smithfan
    smithfan Member Posts: 91
    hot rod said:

    What is the pressure without any pumps running? You want 12-15 psi static to assure the system is filled.

    I assume you have a pump on the primary loop pumping into the boiler? if so the gauge on the boiler will read the fill plus the delta P the circulator adds, since you are correctly pumping away from the expansion tank..

    Sometimes adding a few psi on the fill will help remove the last small bubbles. Adjust the expansion tank pressure if you add pressure and leave it elevated.

    Is the air purger at the boiler working? Sometimes getting all the air out of primary secondary piped systems takes a few days. A second air purger on the secondary loop sometimes is needed.
    Any high point float vents on the system?

    Thanks for the replies. Didn't see them until today. As of now the is system working. I think the mistake I made was purging it and then not running it. Definitely air locked on that second zone. So I purged the problem zone and its pushing water again fine. The system seems quieter now as well. I can still hear a bit of air in the baseboards, but it's not that bad. So I think it's working it's way out. On my way to reply to your other comments:)
  • smithfan
    smithfan Member Posts: 91
    Ironman said:

    The supply and return for that secondary loop are reversed. Look a how they are on the other loop.

    The way it is now, the secondary pump for that loop is "pumping towards" the primary which is the PONPC. This will cause the pressure differential that the circulator creates to be DEDUCTED from the static fill pressure. If it was reversed, and "pumping away" from the primary, the delta p of the circ would be ADDED to the static fill pressure.

    In other words, reverse the piping coming out of those two tees.

    If you have 20' of elevation that takes about 9 psi from your 12 psi static fill pressure. That leaves 3 psi at your highest point. The circulator can produce about 5 psi pressure differential (delta p). That 5 psi is DEDUCTED from the 3 psi that your have at the highest point leaving it in a vacuum, which in turn lowers the boiling point. If the circulator was "pumping away" like it should, the 5 psi would be ADDED to the 3 psi static = 8 psi.

    Raising the static fill pressure to 18 psi may alleviate the issue, but then you run the risk of the system over-pressurizing when it reaches 180* because the expansion tank may not be able to accept the volume.

    It's not a great pic of the boiler piping. The piping itself was completely redone to meet the primary/secondary specifications as the original homeowners had it installed wrong. I've had a small amount of air in the system since the job was done.
    The piping is a little messy because they didn't want to have to re-do the pex on the ceiling just to get everything fitted on the wall, so there's a few more elbows than normal.

    Just to clarify, as of now it's working and I'm at between 12-15 psi on the boiler. Are you basically saying my tees on the secondary loop are backwards? Or the supply side should be in front of the return tee on both loops?