RobertMP
Established Member
Been struggling with this for far too long today! Sorted now.
New boiler being fitted next week (like for like conventional but hopefully cheaper on the gas!) so no hot water for a couple of days... unless I fit an immersion heater to the indirect cylinder. Easy job... just unscrew the plug bunging the hole and screw an immersion heater in its place.
I tried a big stilson - I could see the cylinder flexing.
I tried a cold chisel to knock the edge flange round - nothing.
I tried a blowlamp on the bung to heat it up and hopefully break the seal - still no movement.
So its give up the idea or go for broke
Battery drill, cheapy dremel type thing and hacksaw blade in a padsaw handle time.
Cut as much into the thread as I dared then wiggled the lump with a mole wrench until it cracked out. I'd imagined that having got a bit out it still might not move and I'd have to cut in in half.. fortunately the stilsons shifted it
Quick clean up and ready for the immersion to go in.
Peering down the hole the indirect coil looks reasonably clean for a 20+ year old cylinder. Not worried about a few brass shavings ending up in the bottom of the cylinder.
Immersion is wired to a long cable and a plugtop with 13A fuse. Only going to be used for a short while so don't want it permanently connected.
Phew. Cup of tea time now
New boiler being fitted next week (like for like conventional but hopefully cheaper on the gas!) so no hot water for a couple of days... unless I fit an immersion heater to the indirect cylinder. Easy job... just unscrew the plug bunging the hole and screw an immersion heater in its place.
I tried a big stilson - I could see the cylinder flexing.
I tried a cold chisel to knock the edge flange round - nothing.
I tried a blowlamp on the bung to heat it up and hopefully break the seal - still no movement.
So its give up the idea or go for broke
Battery drill, cheapy dremel type thing and hacksaw blade in a padsaw handle time.
Cut as much into the thread as I dared then wiggled the lump with a mole wrench until it cracked out. I'd imagined that having got a bit out it still might not move and I'd have to cut in in half.. fortunately the stilsons shifted it
Quick clean up and ready for the immersion to go in.
Peering down the hole the indirect coil looks reasonably clean for a 20+ year old cylinder. Not worried about a few brass shavings ending up in the bottom of the cylinder.
Immersion is wired to a long cable and a plugtop with 13A fuse. Only going to be used for a short while so don't want it permanently connected.
Phew. Cup of tea time now