Egon
Epic Contributor
Leave the circulating pump on.
Leave the circulating pump on.
How long is this run of copper pipe?
Is taking the ceiling tiles down enough to get through this winter?
Is it the only run that is close to the outside?
Does this run feed a radiator above it, i.e., can you relocate the entire run or does some of it have to remain near the outside wall?
Can these runs be isolated from the rest of the system to replace them so you don't have to shut off the entire system? (only pertinent if you're thinking of replacing pipe now.
Obviously, taking down the ceiling tiles is a temporary solution. The Heatline solution, while it can remain in place permanently, falls into the temporary category, IMO. Relocating the pipes, with or without anti-freeze, is a permanent solution.
Instead of guessing the pipe might freeze, do you have a thermometer you could place near the pipe to see how cold it gets? This will help determine whether you have to take immediate action.
This would work on a two pipe system(with a three way valve) but not on a typical one pipe system used for residential heating system.You are talking about a recirculating line use mostly for commercial domestic water systems;that is a three pipe system.Jymbee,
The first thing I'd try is to insulate your wall to the exterior. Being in the ceiling, i'm guessing at the band board. They are tricky with air leaks, spray foam to seal and insulate. The next might be to add a return line to have a natural thermal loop, siphon. The return can just tee off near the end in the cold part and go back to the return at the heat source. Then insulate the line but not the return. So feed is warmer than return.
This is used for keeping tap hot water warm 24 hr a day so you don't have to wait so long.