overdriv
Well-known member
In a older thread,here, I explained how I set the expansion tank pressure the same as the supply pressure in an effort to control system pressure. Now I wonder if that is the correct way to do it.
The problem is in my open system, the system pressure continues to creep up untill I drain off some water to lower it.
The supply pressure is 48 PSI. There is a check valve in the supply line just before it goes into the hot water line to the floor. See pictures in the other thread. I think the problem is when it doesn't run for a longer period of time, the water cools and volume shrinks and the supply adds water to maintain pressure. Then the floor calls for water and everything heats up expanding the volume of water which is larger than before so the pressure goes up. After this happens a few times, the pressure becomes higher than supply pressure by as much as 25PSI. The highest I've let it go is 72PSI.
Am I settin g the expan sion tank pressure correctly? Or is my expansion tank not large enough? Or is there another design flaw that I am missing?
The problem is in my open system, the system pressure continues to creep up untill I drain off some water to lower it.
The supply pressure is 48 PSI. There is a check valve in the supply line just before it goes into the hot water line to the floor. See pictures in the other thread. I think the problem is when it doesn't run for a longer period of time, the water cools and volume shrinks and the supply adds water to maintain pressure. Then the floor calls for water and everything heats up expanding the volume of water which is larger than before so the pressure goes up. After this happens a few times, the pressure becomes higher than supply pressure by as much as 25PSI. The highest I've let it go is 72PSI.
Am I settin g the expan sion tank pressure correctly? Or is my expansion tank not large enough? Or is there another design flaw that I am missing?