Just wondering what sort of pipe work you have to the Rads ? Just some of the plastic push fit pipe is known to degrade and clog up the pipe work ( especially the grey plastic ) through time .
got to be honest, its been a decade or 4 since I did my apprenticeship, and things may have changed, but, the rad should be hottest at the top not the bottom , TBOE connections as you describe were common when rads were fed from a single pipe system or a gravity fed system, it allowed the natural tendency of cooling water to drop through the radiator and back into the circulation loop, helping the relatively slow circulation of those systems the only time the return was at the top was when someone got the pipes the wrong way around !I haven't looked more than a few posts in (lifes too short) but your radiator should start off hot at the bottom, then cooler towards the top. That's if it has been done properly, i.e. flow into the bottom, return should be at the top, meaning a long pipe. Lockvalve on inlet (flow, at the bottom), TRV on outlet at the top, where it is conveniently positioned to adjust without stooping down.
This gets the best out of any radiator.
Sure, far too many installations have both valves at the bottom, thereby wasting a lot of their capability.
Installing them with the outlet at the top and inlet at the bottom is best, but some don't like to look at the exposed vertical pipe leading to the top.
Hot water rises. Pump it in at the bottom, suck it out at the top.
An infrared thermometer waved over the thing will show you the temperature distribution, whether the flow and return are connected backwards, whether there is air in the top (so cold) and it's time to bleed, etc.
Of course your pump has to be up to the job, and is unlikely to be able to move the water around sufficiently if the balancing valves are open too far.
Depending on the lay of the pipework, and its sizing, it may be that there is far more black crud blocking up the pipes than the rads. By the time you find loads inside the rads, having taken them off and flushed them, your pipework could be far more badly clagged up. TBH flushing the pipework through properly is best left to a professional, it's not as easy as just connecting a hosepipe to one end and letting it run.
As I said, I don't have time to read this all the way through, so if these basic principles have not already been discussed, that's my pennyworth.
I defer to you.got to be honest, its been a decade or 4 since I did my apprenticeship, and things may have changed, but, the rad should be hottest at the top not the bottom , TBOE connections as you describe were common when rads were fed from a single pipe system or a gravity fed system, it allowed the natural tendency of cooling water to drop through the radiator and back into the circulation loop, helping the relatively slow circulation of those systems the only time the return was at the top was when someone got the pipes the wrong way around !
TBOE allows slightly more heat output from any given radiator (I was always told it was in the region of 5-10% depending on radiator) than the almost universal BBOE method the vast majority of people are familier with, the pump drives the water into the rad and sucks it out the opposite end, the beauty of the two pipe system at work, gravity has very little to do with the circulation in a modern system.
I suspect your system has had the flow and return replaced back to front, gravity circulation always took the flow to the top pipe if fitted TBOE, if its been converted to a twin pipe system with a pump it will probably work just fine in reverse, it won't be the only one I have ever seen work happily for years back to frontI defer to you.
I am no plumber. But my big experience was sorting out my parent's house, a four storey Edwardian pile, the heating having been put in before they bought it, prior to 1961, powered by a huge open coal fired hearth with back boiler, gravity fed. At least 150 tonnes of chimney stack above it. Together with the other six chimney stacks for the other open fires in other rooms.
We've looked into taking out that chimney stack to free up room above, not that that would make a great difference to the large grand rooms with very high ceilings. (Not very ECO to have to heat up all that, mostly above our heads, but hey ho.
Some rooms still had their gas lights operational, it was quite a period piece.
Together with an electric heater inline to keep the whole lot from freezing up whilst they were away for a month or two over the Winter. It's still there under the floor and still works, about 3kW. Now redundant thank goodness, the modern (Worcester Bosch) boiler periodically circulates, measures the temperature and fires up when required to keep it from freezing. Assuming it has not tripped out, which it sometimes does inexplicably, even puzzling the technician with the diagnostic tools.
Subsequently in the '70s that was replaced with a gas boiler, initially still gravity, But soon enough a pump was fitted. Next upgrade was to redo the pipes to a flow and return system.
Other boiler upgrades since of course.
But for this rather grand house, gravity I think is still a large part of what keeps it going, none of the pipework is insulated.
So probably totally irrelevant to the OP. But my experiments with my IR thermometer do suggest that letting the hot water in the bottom, then the cooler out of the top seems to work, though now I see that is not supposed to be how it should work. Anyway, that's how it was done, back in the day.
You are almost certainly correct. My part in "sorting it out" was simply to replace several radiators with more efficient finned ones in two rooms that struggled to warm up the rooms in chilly weather. Same dimensions, so no actual plumbing required. They were using electric oil filled radiators to supplement them. Together with fitting TRVs all round (they had none), then re-balancing the whole system. It's an open system with a header tank in the roof, and a massive hot water cylinder so bleeding it was no problem.I suspect your system has had the flow and return replaced back to front, gravity circulation always took the flow to the top pipe if fitted TBOE, if its been converted to a twin pipe system with a pump it will probably work just fine in reverse, it won't be the only one I have ever seen work happily for years back to front![]()