How to diagnose & fix a too-cold steam radiator?
What to check first. Troubleshooting cold steam radiators: this article describes the diagnosis & repair of cold steam heating convectors or steam radiators.
We also describe how to fix a steam radiator that is too hot and we include warnings about other radiator or baseboard types that are too hot or that overheat.
And we list less common causes of cold steam radiators in buildings and we describe how to fix these conditions.
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First let's be sure we're reading the best cold-radiator diagnostic advice for your situation.
This article will help you fix a steam heating system radiator that is not heating up as it should.
If your heating system uses steam radiators or steam convectors then you are on the right page to get help in diagnosing and fixing steam radiators that won't get hot. Continue reading below.
If your heating system runs on hot water (it's a hydronic heating system) but it uses those skinny horizontal baseboards instead of radiators, you will be happier if you
see BASEBOARD HEAT REPAIR for cold baseboard diagnosis and repair.
Our page top heating system illustration and the sketch at left were provided compliments of Carson Dunlop Associates, a Toronto home inspection, education & report writing tool company [ carsondunlop.com ].
Make sure that your room thermostat is set to a temperature higher than the temperature in the room - so that it is calling for heat.
Make sure that your heating boiler is working, that is that the heating boiler turns on and off normally. A steam boiler will usually turn on right away in response to the thermostat being turned up or on a call for heat.
Make sure that the control valve at the heating radiator is "open" or "on" as we describe just below.
First check the radiator valve itself.
At COLD HEATING RADIATOR REPAIR (hot water / hydronic heat) we illustrated different types of heating radiator control valves and explained their operation.
Details are at RADIATOR VALVES & HEAT CONTROLS.
It's standard to ask first "is the radiator valve turned on or "open" (fully counter-clockwise)?
Experts warn that a radiator slow to heat could have a supply valve that is too small (the problem would always have been observed since date of installation) or a supply valve that is partly closed (the problem would have originated when the valve was closed and would go away when the valve is fully opened, provided the valve is undamaged and really opens internally when its handle is turned.)
We also see both radiators and other forms of steam or hot water heat that are not hot enough if the supply piping is undersized, a valve is partly closed, piping is clogged or blocked, or the hot water flow rate or for steam heat the rise of steam is too slow.
Other problems can cause a steam heat radiator to stay cold when you want heat as we explain next where after the above digression we continue our diagnostic and repair advice for cold radiators or convectors in steam heating systems.
If some of your steam heat radiators are not getting hot, the steam vent may not be working, may not be venting at all (radiator stays cold) or may be venting too slowly (radiator heats to proper temperature but too slowly)[2]
If a steam radiator valve is open but the radiator is still cold, the steam vent may not be working.
Our photo at left shows a typical steam radiator vent.
When steam is first rising in the heating system, the steam heating radiator will be cool as will be the steam vent. The vent opens, allowing rising steam to enter the radiator by pushing air out through the vent.
When the steam radiator and steam vent are warm or hot, the vent closes. If a steam vent stops working, rising steam cannot enter the radiator and it will be slow to heat or may not heat at all.
See STEAM VENTS and
also STEAM HEATING SYSTEMS for details about the choice, installation, diagnosis & repair of steam radiator vents - a common source of cold steam radiators, slow to heat steam radiators, even overheating steam radiators and that incessant hissssssss or spitting condensate when a steam vent doesn't close as it should.
A cold upper part of the radiator may indicate the
vent is plugged with scale or is malfunctioning.
Vapor or slight moisture from the vent is normal.
Steam continuously passing through the vent
indicates a malfunction. Replace the vent as
needed or every 10 years.
Source: ITT Hoffman Specialty STEAM VENTS for RADIATORS MODEL 1A 1B AIR VALVE INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS [PDF] (2007), ITT 8200 N. Austin Ave. Morton Grove, IL 60053 tel: 847-966-3700 fax: 847-966-9052 www.hoffmanspecialty.com
If there are no steam vents on your steam heat radiators don't despair: your steam heat is probably a two-pipe steam heating system that uses
STEAM TRAPS - take a look at that article: steam traps are used on two pipe steam heating systems to release air and condensate while keeping hot steam in the radiator.
Steam radiator sloped the wrong way - steam condensate blockage
As our Carson Dunlop Associates sketch shows (above, left), steam radiators can be sensitive to exactly how they are installed and pitched or sloped.
You'll want to learn if your steam heating system is a "one pipe" or a "two pipe" design, but in either case, if the steam supply or condensate return piping have been moved or settled so as to have lost the proper slope, correcting those conditions may be needed.
That's because condensate, produced by cooling steam in the radiator, has to be able to drain back out of the radiator.
A steam radiator that is sloped the wrong way, perhaps due to building floor settlement or a change made by an inexperienced re modeler, will become partly or even completely blocked by accumulated condensate, leading to loss of heat.
Steam heating system controls, inspection, diagnosis, and repair
are discussed beginning
Above: dust-clogged fins on the tubing in a heating convector unit block air flow and so reduce its heat output. Vacuum ff the dust carefully to avoid bending the fins.
If your steam radiator is too hot in a two-pipe steam system, according to the U.S. DOE, check the steam traps:
In two-pipe systems, older steam traps often stick in either the open or closed position, throwing off the balance in the system.
If you seem to have problems with some radiators providing too much heat and others providing too little, this might be the cause.
The best approach is often to simply replace all the steam traps in the system.
If your electric heater is too hot or is not shutting off when you think it should
see ELECTRIC BASEBOARD HEAT INSPECTION
Watch out: an overheating electric heater is a fire hazard.
Also see HEAT WON'T TURN OFF for complete diagnosis of too much heat or heat that won't turn off.
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Below you will find questions and answers previously posted on this page at its page bottom reader comment box.
One of two radiators won't get hot
Hi I Have a Question about my Radiator. I HAVE Two Radiators One one each corner of the house one gets Hot one is cold .
On the Radiators do thE Shut off VALVES Hot and cold need to be open at the same Time Hot water does run down the pipe to Radiator.
DOES not run into Radiator. Thank you - On 2020-11-24 by Peter Gruber -
Reply by (mod) - be sure the valves are open at both radiators
Peter
Each radiator has its own control valve; both need to be open if you want both to produce heat.
I would not expect both "hot" and "cold" valves to be present at a heating radiator, just a single control valve at each radiator.
If you've got something different, perhaps you can use the "add image" button to post a photo.
I think my boiler pressure is too low to get heat upstairs
The psi for water pressure does not increase when furnace is running so no heat second floor - On 2020-11-15
by Bob -
Reply by (mod) - check the actual pressure and don't trust the gauge
Bob:
You are commenting on a steam heating page so I'll assume your boiler is a steam heating system.
Residential steam heating boilers operate at a very low pressure typically under one psi. So looking at the pressure gauge on your boiler is not going to be a complete diagnostic and in fact if the gate shows no change at all with the boiler heat up I suspect that the gauge itself is debris clogged and might want to be replaced.
So if you have no heat on an upper floor in your home and it's steam heat the most likely the radiator steam vent or vents are not working on the radiator valves are closed.
Some steam radiators are not getting any steam at all
I have an apt block floors 2,3,4 no problems 1floor 2 front apts and 1 back apt no heat to steam radiatos all line vrnt and radiator vents replaced i took out the line vent in basement no steam comming out boilet was running for 45 min plugged main sumwhere? - On 2018-01-06 by Anonymous -
Reply by (mod) -
Anon if burner is operating but the boiler is not producing steam TURN IT OFF and call for service - the system may be unsafe, out of water, and risking boiler damage too.
Start by looking at the water level in the boiler.
Our steam radiator doesn't have a vent and does not get hot
We moved a steam radiator in a bathroom second floor. The radiator builds pressure the system has no vents at the sources of heat.
We tried replacing the steam trap thinking it was our problem.Feed pipe coming out of the wall is pretty hot but pretty much stops at the 90 coming out of the wall. - On 2017-12-14 by Anonymous -
Reply by (mod) -
Anon, your steam radiator won't heat if it cannot vent air in the the radiator from its cold state. Each steam radiator normally requires its own steam vent.
Steam boiler shuts down after just a few minutes - broken steam vent?
Boiler works for a while ( 3 mins) and then shuts down. Surrounding pipes get very hot. Just discovered my steam vent might be a problem.
Just turned the small screw on top and now is hissing steam. Is the value possibly dirty and jammed preventing the radiators to warm up. On 2017-10-21 by bomahony -
Reply by (mod) -
Bom
I don't know what sort of safety equipment is installed on your steam boiler; some units may indeed use a temperature limit to shut down the boiler at unsafe heat levels.I'd also look for spillage from a pressure relief valve and I'd check the system's operating pressure against it's specifications - residential steam heat typically runs at about 0.5 psi.
As the boiler is shutting down, a review of its safety controls would indeed be diagnostic. I can't offer more, knowing not a shred of information about your particular system.
Radiators won't get hot after new boiler installed
my heat gas boiler was replaced with a new one ---now all radiators dont get hot only when its first turned on...
throughout the day when it kicks on, not all radiators get hot or sections of the radiators get hot...i also get cracking, thumping ,sounds....
it kicks on like 5minutes then turns off , only the pipes going upstairs get hot ..radiators downstairs are mostly cold
my old boiler heated up all sections of every radiator and was quiet no noises at all - On 2016-12-24 by mike -
Reply by (mod) -
Mike
I'm flying blind here, Mike. Did a tech who knows steam install the boiler? For example a mistake with condensate return piping can cause trouble.
CHeck the pressure control switch: normally it's set between 0.2 and 0.5 psi. Not higher.
If the boiler is making steam and the steam riser at the boiler is hot but steam doesn't continue to rise, I suspect that a main steam trap or vent could have become clogged, maybe with crud stirred during boiler replacement or from the old boiler. I'm guessing that direction because if it were steam vents on the individual radiators it'd be unusual for all of them to fail at once.
Follow the steam supply pipe to see where it changes from hot to cold - that could be diagnostic.
If you search InspectApedia for STEAM HEAT there are quite a few diagnosis and repair articles.
Also see the top of this page: STEAM HEAT RADIATOR REPAIR where we list hings to check.
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