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Radiator rarely heats up

syb388
syb388 Member Posts: 2
edited January 2021 in Strictly Steam
I have what I think is a 1 pipe steam system. There's a supply valve on 1 end of the of the radiator and steam vent on the other side. 
At the furnace there's a thick pipe with smaller runoff pipes which seems to supply all the radiators in the house. This thick pipe spans 3 sides of the house at the end of which there is main steam valve and then a thinner pipe which connects back to the furnace. 

There really isn't a problem with any of this. All the radiators connected to this main heating pipe are working. The issue is with the heater in the downstairs bathroom. This bathroom is built outside of the original exterior wall. Basically was converted from a mud room. The pipe which supplies this radiator and another small radiator in the kitchen is separate from the main. It branches off the main to supply these 2 heaters. It doesn't circle back to the furnace either like the main does. Now the kitchen furnace functions like it should. It heated up everytime without any problem. At the moment I removed the Gorton C vent from the kitchen and I'm using this vent in 1 of the upstairs bedrooms. I put a cheap generic vent in it's place in the kitchen since I don't need the heat in the kitchen. I also turned the supply valve off to the kitchen. The kitchen is sufficiently warm without the extra heat. The issue is the bathroom. It used to come on only sometimes with a lot of banging and gurgling. I tried putting new vents to reduce the banging but the system didn't even turn on at all so I put the old vent back. It's a Gorton D. At one time when the dining room wasn't heating correctly and the thermostat was cold then this bathroom turned into a sauna so I know it's capable of working. But now the supply pipe remains cold to the touch. Sometimes if I remove the vent completely it will start coming on. If I turn the thermostat to 85 it will work. But under normal circumstances the pipe just stays cold. I check the pipe in the basement the pipe was hot where it runs left to the kitchen. But where it runs to the bathroom the same pipe is cold. Especially where the pipe goes vertical at which point it's cold. When I reach up to where the pipe disappears into the basement ceiling or bathroom floor it's actually very cold to the touch. Like outdoor temps. Keep in mind the pipe running under the bathroom floor is essentially outdoors since the bathroom is outside the original external wall of the home.

In the below photo the black pipe is supposed to heat the kitchen and bathroom. It runs about 8 feet to the left and that's for the the kitchen. On the right side with the peeling tape that's the pipe to the bathroom. Usually the black pipe gets hot and the left side to the kitchen gets hot (though later than the rest of the system) but the right side is just warm until the vertical runoff after which it's cold. I'm in Luzerne, PA, day temps are in the mid 30s.

Any help is appreciated, Thanks!




Comments

  • Jamie Hall
    Jamie Hall Member Posts: 23,168
    Put a level on the two pipes -- the one to the kitchen and the one to the bathroom. They are both supposed to pitch back towards the T by about an inch or so -- which, since that is a T, they can't both do -- the piping there is incorrect.

    Report which way they pitch, and we'll see what we can figure out from there.
    Br. Jamie, osb
    Building superintendent/caretaker, 7200 sq. ft. historic house museum with dependencies in New England
  • Grallert
    Grallert Member Posts: 643
    You might also want to relocate the vent to its proper hole which is on the same side only lower, about half way down. You see a plugged hole.
    Miss Hall's School service mechanic, greenhouse manager,teacher and dog walker
  • syb388
    syb388 Member Posts: 2
    Thank you heatinghelp members for your help

    Jamie, I measured the slope
    On the kitchen side the pipe visibly slopes most of it's span. Measures around 1degree towards the black pipe, but before it connects to the black pipe it straightens out. On the shorter bathroom side the pipe slopes also about 1degree towards the black pipe and because of the wood blocking my way I'm not able to measure at the connection. 

    Gallert I see only one screw closing what could be a vent hold towards the bottom. I should try to change them?
  • Jamie Hall
    Jamie Hall Member Posts: 23,168
    Is the can I see on the picture of the radiator the only vent? If so, that could be part of the problem -- the steam will come in, happily rise to the top, and it will shut -- long before the radiator as a whole is warm. Try seeing what happens if you move it down to where the screw is. If, of course, you can get things loose...
    Br. Jamie, osb
    Building superintendent/caretaker, 7200 sq. ft. historic house museum with dependencies in New England
  • EBEBRATT-Ed
    EBEBRATT-Ed Member Posts: 15,453
    @skyb388

    Whomever piped or re piped those two radiators did not do it righ. It is piped wrong and will never work the way it is. The supplu run into a bull head tee. There is no way the pipes to those two radiators can be pitched properly to both radiators.

    It needs re piping . It's not a big job
  • Grallert
    Grallert Member Posts: 643
    syb388 said:

    Thank you heatinghelp members for your help


    Jamie, I measured the slope
    On the kitchen side the pipe visibly slopes most of it's span. Measures around 1degree towards the black pipe, but before it connects to the black pipe it straightens out. On the shorter bathroom side the pipe slopes also about 1degree towards the black pipe and because of the wood blocking my way I'm not able to measure at the connection. 

    Gallert I see only one screw closing what could be a vent hold towards the bottom. I should try to change them?
    Yes if you can Like Jamie said those screws can be a bear to remove. It can be done. Sometimes a bit of heat applied to the surrounding surface some penetrating oil and a big stout screw driver does it. Sometimes grinding off the slotted portion making a center punch hole in what's left of the plug and drilling it out. I use a reverse twist drill because sometimes it will grad and turn the plug out, preventing any potential damage to the threads. Is it all worth the effort? Maybe, sometimes, it depends. I'd do it if it were mine.
    Miss Hall's School service mechanic, greenhouse manager,teacher and dog walker