Fault Finder: Cold Radiators — Diagnosis & Fix

Quick Answer: A cold radiator is most commonly caused by trapped air (bleed it), a closed lockshield valve, a stuck or closed TRV, or system imbalance (distant radiators getting insufficient flow). Work through the decision tree below before replacing any components. A radiator that is hot at the top but cold at the bottom usually has sludge/magnetite build-up and needs a flush or powerflushing.

Decision Tree

COLD RADIATOR
│
├── Is the boiler running and heating other radiators?
│   ├── NO → Fix the boiler first. See [boiler not firing](/knowledge/fault-finder/heating/boiler-not-firing)
│   └── YES → Continue
│
├── Is the radiator cold at the top?
│   ├── YES → Trapped air. Bleed the radiator.
│   │         Bleed until water runs steadily. Top up system pressure if needed.
│   │         Does this fix it?
│   │         ├── YES → Done. Check system pressure (sealed system 1.0–1.5 bar cold).
│   │         └── NO → Continue
│   └── NO → Continue
│
├── Is the TRV head fitted and on a setting above 0?
│   ├── TRV on 0 or frost setting → Turn up the TRV. Does this fix it?
│   │                               ├── YES → Done.
│   │                               └── NO → Continue
│   └── YES → Is the TRV pin stuck?
│             Remove the TRV head — is the pin depressed (pushed in)?
│             ├── PIN STUCK DOWN → Pin is seized. Spray with lubricant, free with
│             │                    pliers, or replace TRV body.
│             └── PIN MOVES FREELY → TRV head may be faulty. Replace head.
│
├── Is the lockshield valve open?
│   ├── Remove lockshield cap. Is the valve open?
│   │   ├── CLOSED → Open it (anti-clockwise). Does radiator warm up?
│   │   │           ├── YES → Re-balance the system.
│   │   │           └── NO → Continue
│   │   └── OPEN → Continue
│
├── Is the radiator cold all over but pipes warm?
│   ├── YES → Likely sludge/magnetite blocking the radiator body.
│   │         Isolate, remove, flush outside with hose. Add inhibitor on refill.
│   │         For widespread sludge, consider powerflushing.
│   └── NO → Continue
│
├── Is the radiator hot at top, cold at bottom?
│   ├── YES → Sludge settled at bottom of radiator. Same as above — remove and flush.
│   └── NO → Continue
│
├── Is this radiator the furthest from the boiler?
│   ├── YES → May be a balancing issue. Other nearer radiators are taking all the flow.
│   │         Partially close lockshield valves on near radiators.
│   │         See [thermostatic radiator valves](/knowledge/heating/thermostatic-radiator-valves) for balancing procedure.
│   └── NO → Check pipework for isolation valve closed on circuit or at boiler.
│             Check for zone valve — is it open for this circuit?
│             If all checks pass, power flush the system.

Summary

A radiator that fails to heat up is one of the most common heating call-outs in the UK. The cause is almost always simple — trapped air, a stuck valve, or sludge — and does not require replacing the radiator or any major work in the majority of cases.

The key diagnostic principle is to isolate which part of the system is at fault: is it one radiator or multiple? Is the boiler running normally? Is water reaching the radiator at all (pipe temperature check)? Systematic elimination avoids unnecessary parts replacement.

Key Facts

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Detailed Guidance

Bleeding a Radiator

Sealed (pressurised) system:

  1. Note the system pressure gauge on the boiler (should read 1.0–1.5 bar cold)
  2. Place a cloth or small container under the bleed valve
  3. Insert bleed key and turn anti-clockwise 1/4 turn
  4. Air hisses out — wait until a steady flow of water emerges, then close the valve
  5. Check the system pressure — if it has dropped below 1.0 bar, top up via the filling loop
  6. Run the heating and check the radiator warms evenly

Open-vented (gravity) system:

  1. Same process, but pressure drop is not a concern — the feed and expansion tank maintains system level automatically
  2. If the radiator needs repeated bleeding, the F&E tank may be low or the ball valve may be stuck — check

If air keeps returning: Repeated air bleeding indicates a persistent air entry point. Causes: micro-leak drawing in air; pump cavitation (pump running dry or air lock at pump); corroding internal components generating hydrogen gas (inhibitor depleted). Add inhibitor and investigate leak.

TRV Pin Diagnosis

  1. Remove the TRV head — on most UK TRVs, the head unscrews anti-clockwise. Some have a locking ring or push-and-turn mechanism
  2. Inspect the pin on the valve body. It should project upward approximately 5mm when the head is removed
  3. Pin stuck down (depressed): The valve is jammed closed. This is common in radiators that have been left on frost setting for a long time. Free the pin:
    • Spray with penetrating oil (WD40 or similar) and allow to soak for 10 minutes
    • Grip the pin with pliers and work it gently up and down
    • If the pin cannot be freed, the TRV body must be replaced (drain system, isolate, unscrew body from radiator tail)
  4. Pin moves freely: Replace the TRV head — the thermostatic element inside has failed

Sludge and Magnetite

Magnetite (iron oxide) is produced by corrosion of the radiator steel in the presence of dissolved oxygen and water. It is black, heavy, and abrasive. In severe cases, it reduces flow through radiators to near zero, causes boiler pump failure, and fouls heat exchangers.

Diagnosis:

Treatment — single radiator flush:

  1. Isolate the radiator at both valves (TRV and lockshield)
  2. Drain by placing a bowl under the bleed valve and the drain plug (or lockshield valve union)
  3. Remove the radiator and take outside
  4. Connect a hosepipe to one of the tails and flush until water runs clear
  5. Reinstall and rebalance

Treatment — powerflushing: For widespread sludge affecting multiple radiators, a powerflush machine (high-flow, low-pressure) flushes the entire system with a cleansing chemical and flushes out magnetite to a drain. This is specialist work — a qualified heating engineer with a powerflush machine. Cost: typically £300–£600 for a domestic system. Add Fernox F1 or equivalent inhibitor on completion. Fit a magnetic filter (Adey MagnaClean or equivalent) to catch future magnetite before it circulates.

Zone Valve Diagnosis

On systems with multiple heating zones (e.g., upstairs/downstairs, or heating/hot water), motorised zone valves control which circuits receive hot water.

Symptoms of zone valve failure:

Manual override test:

Zone valve wiring check:

Frequently Asked Questions

My radiator was fine last week — why is it cold today?

Most sudden-onset cold radiators are caused by trapped air (system has accumulated air from somewhere), a TRV head that has failed (temperature-sensing capsule ruptures), or a lockshield valve that was accidentally knocked shut during maintenance. Bleed, check TRV, and check lockshield before assuming a system fault.

Can I bleed a radiator while the heating is on?

You can, but it's better with the heating off and the pump stopped — when the pump is running, air in the system is actively circulating and may move during bleeding. Turn the heating off, let the pump stop (1–2 minutes), then bleed. On a gravity (open-vented) system, this is less critical.

How often should I add inhibitor?

Most corrosion inhibitors last 1–2 years. Annual top-up is good practice — test the inhibitor concentration with a test strip (Fernox test strips available from most heating trade suppliers). A powerflushed or freshly installed system should have a fresh full dose. Never rely on old inhibitor if the system has been drained and refilled.

Regulations & Standards

No specific regulation governs radiator fault-finding. Relevant standards: