russgs
Mechanical
- May 24, 2002
- 7
We have a school with a primary heating loop off the boilers and a secondary glycol loop via a converter. Our plumbers are telling me that in the shoulder seasons when the temperatures are warmer they have to add fluid beacause the pressures in the glycol side are too low but when the outdoor temp gets very cold the loop gets to full heat (180F) the pressure gets too high and they have to drain some fluid out of the system.
My first thought was too small an expansion tank, but I checked and rechecked and the sizing is OK. What else could cause such large pressure swings. Perhaps the initial charging of the expansion (diaphragm) tank was incorrectly done. Is this a possibility? I don't think incorrect pump sizing would be the culprit?
Thanks for any tips.
My first thought was too small an expansion tank, but I checked and rechecked and the sizing is OK. What else could cause such large pressure swings. Perhaps the initial charging of the expansion (diaphragm) tank was incorrectly done. Is this a possibility? I don't think incorrect pump sizing would be the culprit?
Thanks for any tips.