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Why is the pressure relief valve on my boiler leaking?

Why is the pressure relief valve on my boiler leaking?

If the system pressure is 30 psig and the relief valve, rated for 40 psig, is leaking, the relief valve is most likely defective. The most common causes are leaking gauge glass fittings above the water line of the tank, excessive system pressure, undersized tank, or the tank has a leak above the water line.

Why is my boiler leaking from underneath?

#1 Water leaking from underneath? Poorly installed or corroded pipework. The pipes immediately underneath your boiler are going to be your number one culprit for the leaking boiler. The most common cause of this pipework causing a boiler leak is corrosion of the pipes.

What to do if your boiler pressure relief valve is leaking?

Some boilers have a tankless water heater or what is also known as a hot water coil. Sometimes, this coil will develop a pin in it, and this causes pressure to seep into the boiler and leads to leaks in the pressure relief valve. Turn off the water to the coil and check if the pressure stops rising.

What causes a water heater relief valve to leak?

Leaks into the heating boiler or water heater: leaks into a heating of water from a higher pressure building source can cause recurrent TP valve leaking. For example, if the tankless coil in a heating boiler is leaky, higher pressure water inside the tankless coil may leak out of the coil into the heating boiler.

Can a leak in a heat exchanger cause boiler pressure to rise?

Watch out: under normal conditions, because building water supply pressures are above boiler pressures, an internal leak in the tankless coil or indirect water heater’s heat exchanger coil will cause boiler pressures to rise. But there can be exceptions in the direction of water leakage, as we explain

Can a leak cause high water pressure in a heater?

This same leak problem can cause high water pressure in a heating boiler that is used to heat water in an indirect-fired water heater.