There's water hammer in the system
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Published
July 10, 2009
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Check the pitch with a line level.
Get the boiler manufacturer's installation-and-operating manual and check the piping on the job against their drawings in their booklet.
Check the pH of the water with pH paper. A good pH for a steam system ranges between seven and nine. If the pH gets to 11, the water will start to prime and foam and carry over into the system, causing water hammer. Dead Men often added vinegar to steam heating systems to lower the pH and lessen the priming and surging.
Make sure the piping is right, and that the water is clean.
Don't oversize replacement boilers. Always check the firing rate against the connected load.
Insulate the steam lines.
Try raising the water line to within an inch of the top of the gauge glass. If the water in the boiler is clean, it will not surge over the top of the gauge glass. If it does, clean the boiler and the system piping.
Check this critical point in your gravity-return systems, and make sure it has either a close nipple or a wye fitting.
Check the boiler manufacturer's specifications on the proper level for the close nipple or wye fitting. If it's too high, lower it to the proper level.
Flooding also causes sludge to wash down from the radiators. This sludge can lodge in the horizontal runouts to the risers and cause water hammer in the middle of the cycle. It will also make it difficult to deliver steam to the upper radiators.
There's a telltale sign that there's sludge in the riser: The radiator vents will "pant." Remove the vent and hold a lit match next to the hole. Watch the flame. As the radiator "pants," the flame will tilt toward and away from the hole. This happens because steam is quickly condensing in a pocket of trapped water near the base of the riser.
You may have to disconnect the riser and flush the lines to cure this one. Also, make sure you check the pitch of the mains with a line level.
If you have a one-pipe steam riser that feeds up more than one floor you should ideally drip it into a wet return or into a dry return through a loop seal or a steam trap. Dripping two-pipe steam risers isn't as critical because the condensate returns through a separate line. Just keep in mind that any steam pipe will be more efficient if you drip it.
To avoid water hammer, always keep the steam and the condensate as far away from each other as you can. Look around for places where water can gather and drip it.
You can usually flush the returns to get rid of the sludge, but there will be times when it will be easier to replace those returns. Do one or the other.
Motorized valves really have no business being on a gravity-return system. You may have to add a boiler-feed pump and steam traps to cure this one. Always avoid using motorized valves on gravity-return systems.
When you're dealing with a large radiator, check the pitch from section to section. Big radiators often sag in the middle, and a long level might not pick this up. Don't go by eye because your eyes can play tricks on you.
Use small blocks of wood or plastic checkers to prop the end of the radiator up. Notice, too, how an old radiator will dig a trench into a wooden floor. That comes from years of expansion and contraction. Don't go by eye when you're checking the pitch. Always use a level.
If you think the valve is fully opened and you're still getting water hammer, check to make sure parts of the valve haven't fallen off and lodged in the valve's seat.
If the valve is new, check its internal size. Steam supply valves of the old days had more space inside than their modern replacements. You may have to use a bigger size.
At the ends of mains and at the base of risers, float & thermostatic and bucket traps serve the same purpose as radiator traps. If they fail in the open position, or, with bucket traps, if they lose their prime water, steam will move into the dry return lines and cause water hammer. Trap maintenance is essential. Don't neglect it.
If you suspect this is your problem, try an air vent with a slower venting rate. This simple trick often works wonders when it comes to water hammer. Not every radiator needs a quick vent.
Measure the distance between the boiler's water line and the lowest steam-carrying pipe. And take your time looking around the basement because that pipe could be anywhere.



