Mitsubishi ASHP - Circulating pump noise?
Hi,
We had our ASHP installed about 2 weeks ago. Hot water and heating all work well and the outside unit is much quieter than I expected it to be. Unfortunately it's the noise inside the house that's the problem. There a constant whooshing noise whenever the heating kicks in. I set the schedule to stop the water heating overnight and have set the honeywell thermostat to 15 degrees at night to stop the system running at night so I can at least sleep. This worked until the outside temp dropped below 5 degrees and suddenly the pump started circulating constantly from 11pm until 6:30 am.
We've had the installed back who says it should be quieter and must be residual air in the system which can take time to clear, just keep topping up the system to maintain pressure around 1.6 bar. I'm hoping this is all it is but it's been nearly 2 weeks and I'm topping up daily yet there are times I fancy it's getting louder and sometimes its so intrusive. I wonder about getting the whole system removed and going back to gas boiler.
Our installer had been very good and he's disabled the frost protection to stop it running at night soI can now sleep but I do worry what will happen in winter, not so much for house temp over night but for potential damage to the ASHP itself. As far as I'm aware, there is no antifreeze in the system as the manufacturer advises against it apparently.
The system is set to flow temp 46 degrees, we can't use the auto setting as the room thermometer is Honeywell so we've been advised to leave on flow temp setting.
Does anyone have any thoughts? Is there anyone who's had the same experience and it has settled down or they've found a fix?
Our system is:
Mitsubishi 6 Kw Ecodan Standalone (PUZ-WM60VAA) 150 L cylinder, low loss header/buffer tank.
Thanks
Posted by: @snuffyHi,
We had our ASHP installed about 2 weeks ago. Hot water and heating all work well and the outside unit is much quieter than I expected it to be. Unfortunately it's the noise inside the house that's the problem. There a constant whooshing noise whenever the heating kicks in. I set the schedule to stop the water heating overnight and have set the honeywell thermostat to 15 degrees at night to stop the system running at night so I can at least sleep. This worked until the outside temp dropped below 5 degrees and suddenly the pump started circulating constantly from 11pm until 6:30 am.
We've had the installed back who says it should be quieter and must be residual air in the system which can take time to clear, just keep topping up the system to maintain pressure around 1.6 bar. I'm hoping this is all it is but it's been nearly 2 weeks and I'm topping up daily yet there are times I fancy it's getting louder and sometimes its so intrusive. I wonder about getting the whole system removed and going back to gas boiler.
Our installer had been very good and he's disabled the frost protection to stop it running at night soI can now sleep but I do worry what will happen in winter, not so much for house temp over night but for potential damage to the ASHP itself. As far as I'm aware, there is no antifreeze in the system as the manufacturer advises against it apparently.
The system is set to flow temp 46 degrees, we can't use the auto setting as the room thermometer is Honeywell so we've been advised to leave on flow temp setting.
Does anyone have any thoughts? Is there anyone who's had the same experience and it has settled down or they've found a fix?
Our system is:
Mitsubishi 6 Kw Ecodan Standalone (PUZ-WM60VAA) 150 L cylinder, low loss header/buffer tank.
Thanks
Do you have radiators or UFH?
Hi @Snuffy, we had the same with our Mitsubishi system, it did calm down after a while (a good few weeks). I found that there was air in the system settling in the upstairs radiators (on the same level as the hot water cylinder. So I did a weekly radiator bleed for a few weeks too, and therefore had to top up the tank to get the pressure right. It is a lot quieter now. So the system got quieter after a few weeks, the air in the system took 2/3 months to work through, but it was a while before I found that the radiators needed bleeding.
That's good to hear. I've been bleeding the radiators from the start, first morning the towel rail in the en-suite was cold so bled it on the off chance and loads of air came out and I've been checking every couple of days since. Seems to settle mainly in this one. The others stay pretty clear.
Least I know it should improve.
Thanks, I've been bleeding them and topping up. Only the last one seems to have anythingin it now so hopefully not much air left to shift. Just worried as it didn't seem to be improving, there might be something else going on. Looks like I'm worrying over nothing though and just need to be allow more time.
Fingers crossed it'll settle in a few more weeks
Hello, our Daikin EDLA 8 kW/h system was installed in mid-February and the system has been bled approximately once per week and I think almost all the air is now out of he system. The ASHP only supplies space heating via 10 radiators - DHW is via a Sunamp Thermino ePV210 unit. I used to find that in the previous heating system with a gas boiler, the first radiator (bathroom) took the gulps of air and other radiators tended to stay totally clear of air. The new pipework has been extended with a dual fuel radiator above the new bathroom radiator. I find the towel rail now takes all the circulating air (possibly because it is the highest point in the system now); a quick bleed and then a pressure top-up seems to be showing the system as settling down nicely now. Fortunately I have not had noise problems though I used to with the old gas boiler installation. I think this is partly due to the low-loss header tank having the 2 pumps - 1 on the ASHP itself and the secondary pump circulating the water around the ten radiators. I have the Wilo Pico pump set fairly low and this tends to have the advantage of little to no noise from lock shield and TR valves too. Regards, Toodles.
Toodles, he heats his home with cold draughts and cooks his food with magnets.
Posted by: @snuffyI wonder about getting the whole system removed and going back to gas boiler.
Aaagh! It's that bad?
Is this just one sort of sound, or a mixture of different types?
If you put your ear to a radiator, for example, do you actually hear a pump motor running?
Any chance you could post a photo here if we wanted to see something?
The point where the external pipes enter the house would be a good start.
Save energy... recycle electrons!
I think wanting to rip it out was the product of a couple of bad nights sleep after listening to it all night but it is pretty loud. It usually starts a a loud whoosh before settling to a quieter, constant tank filling type noise. Probably only about 45 dBA but enough to be heard throughout the house. Mercifully it doesn't run for very long. You can heard it queitly through the radiators if you put your ear to them but yhe noise is largely airborne.
I've added pictures below
- 26 Forums
- 2,150 Topics
- 47.2 K Posts
- 18 Online
- 5,667 Members
Join Us!
Podcast Picks
Latest Posts
-
RE: Octopus tariffs - a quick comparison
Interesting comparison! Another good angle is the dif...
By HCas , 1 hour ago
-
RE: Electricity price predictions
Each village appears to have an entire aspect where the...
By Scalextrix , 2 hours ago
-
RE: Solar Power Output – Let’s Compare Generation Figures
@julianc Our solar PV has produced more this August tha...
By Toodles , 8 hours ago
-
RE: is a home battery without an EV worth it?
I feel thats likely it, there are after all a lot of te...
By JamesPa , 11 hours ago
-
RE: Who's your electricity provider and what's your tariff?
I am pleased to see the change. We definitely need t...
By Jeff , 22 hours ago
-
RE: A Customer's Lessons Learnt from a Heat Pump Installation in a Large House
@jamespa Crossing sheep with kangaroos?
By Toodles , 1 day ago
-
RE: How Do I Know When the Hot Water Has Run Out?
@transparent that is a very interesting suggestion, tha...
By GrahamF , 2 days ago
-
RE: The good, the bad and the not that great – my heat pump installation
Sorry to resurrect this thread, but it is sort of relev...
By cathodeRay , 2 days ago
-
RE: Getting the best out of a heat pump - is Homely a possible answer?
I missed your 22nd June post on this. I am sure it can ...
By cathodeRay , 2 days ago
-
Now posting on the right topic.... With general build...
By benson , 2 days ago
-
RE: How to waste energy (and time) playing with AI.
I’m sure like many software toys that it is addictive! ...
By Judith , 2 days ago
-
RE: Does anyone have experience of a smart water meter?
@judith With Anglia Water it was a compulsory upgr...
By TechnoGeek , 3 days ago
-
RE: Balancing financial efficiency and comfort using the Octopus Cosy tariff
We’re high energy users other than the ashp so the OVO ...
By Judith , 3 days ago
-
RE: Midea ASHP – how to set weather compensation
Something isn't right here, you don't design ufh to wor...
By JamesPa , 3 days ago
-
RE: What crazy nonsense are inverter limits and why are they imposed?
No I'm not mining anything @drei but I am doing R&...
By Transparent , 3 days ago
-
RE: Rodents! A word of warning for heat pump owners
Wasps caused frequent tripping of my lighting circuit a...
By JamesPa , 3 days ago
-
RE: Ecodan & MelCloud scheduling
Yes, the 2 are separate. To add to the complex desig...
By HCas , 5 days ago
-
I should clarify that the FoxESS web interface is not l...
By Old_Scientist , 5 days ago
-
RE: Mitsu Wireless Controller and MelCloud
@robs Hi Rob, At the end of a note to Mitsu UK, thank...
By DavidAlgarve , 6 days ago
-
RE: Why so many sigenergi installer recommendations?
@adamk Tesla is a great option, it’s also one we instal...
By SAEnergy , 7 days ago