Circulator Pump Noise: Cavitation, Air Lock, Speed Setting and When to Replace vs Repair

Quick Answer: Circulator pump noise in a central heating system falls into four main categories: cavitation (aggressive bubbling/knocking), air lock (intermittent clicking, humming with low flow), speed setting (excessive noise at high speed in older 3-speed pumps), and bearing failure (constant grinding or whining). Cavitation is most commonly caused by a blocked filter or undersized pump pipework. Air is resolved by bleeding. Speed should be set to the minimum that maintains adequate circulation. Bearing failure requires pump replacement.

Summary

The central heating pump (circulator) is a small centrifugal pump that circulates hot water around the heating system. Modern systems use variable speed (auto-adapt) pumps; older systems use three fixed speeds selected by a switch. When a pump makes unusual noise, it is telling you something about its operating conditions.

Unlike most mechanical components, a circulating pump can often be diagnosed from the noise alone with reasonable accuracy. The four noise types — cavitation, air lock, speed-related, and bearing failure — sound distinctly different and arise from different causes. Misdiagnosing a cavitating pump as bearing failure results in pump replacement when the underlying cause (a blocked filter, incorrect pipe sizing, or too-high flow rate) remains and destroys the new pump as well.

Pump noise is also a significant source of heating system complaints from homeowners. A pump that sounds fine to the engineer (just the characteristic hum of a running motor) may sound loud and intrusive in a quiet bedroom directly above where the pump is mounted. Understanding both the technical diagnosis and the acoustics of pump installation is important for resolving these complaints.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Noise Diagnosis

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Noise Description Most Likely Cause Immediate Action
Crackling, gravel sound, aggressive Cavitation Check strainer; check flow rate; reduce speed
Clicking, ticking, then silence Air lock in pump/system Bleed pump manually; bleed radiators
Constant hum, hotter than usual body Blocked strainer causing overheating Clean strainer immediately
Whining/grinding, worse over time Bearing failure Replace pump
Loud at night, fine during day Speed 3 in quiet environment Reduce speed setting; check minimum speed achieves heating
Vibration through pipework Pump transmitting vibration Add flexible connections; check pipe securing

Detailed Guidance

Cavitation: Causes and Diagnosis

Cavitation occurs when the pressure at the pump inlet drops below the vapour pressure of water. At normal temperatures (60–80°C), the vapour pressure is significant. If the pump inlet pressure drops below this — due to a restriction in the feed pipework, a blocked filter, or a pump running too fast — the water locally boils and forms bubbles. These bubbles collapse violently as they enter higher-pressure zones inside the pump. The collapsing bubbles cause characteristic crackling or gravel-like noise and cause physical erosion of the impeller over time.

Common causes:

  1. Blocked inline strainer: The most common cause. The strainer screen is clogged with magnetite and debris, starving the pump inlet. Clean or replace strainer.
  2. Undersized pipework on suction side: A pump with 28mm connections fed by 15mm pipe cannot receive adequate flow. Upgrade pipework.
  3. Pump set too high: Speed 3 on a small system draws more flow than the pipework can supply, causing cavitation. Reduce to speed 2 or 1.
  4. Air in system: Air pockets at pump inlet reduce effective inlet pressure. Bleed system.
  5. Water temperature too high: At 85°C+, water vapour pressure is much higher; normal residential systems are set 70–80°C; commercial or old systems at higher temps cavitate more easily.

Diagnosis:

Air Lock: Causes and Resolution

Air in a central heating pump impeller causes intermittent mechanical noise, reduced flow, and in severe cases complete loss of circulation. Air enters through:

Symptoms:

Bleeding the pump: Most domestic circulator pumps have a bleed screw on the pump housing:

  1. Turn off the pump (at the boiler timer or isolate electrically)
  2. Locate the bleed screw: typically a slotted or cross-head screw on the pump body face; sometimes under a plastic cap
  3. Place a rag or small container below
  4. Unscrew bleed screw 1–2 turns (not fully out — screw is usually captive but water will spray)
  5. Allow air and water to escape until a steady stream of water flows without air bubbles
  6. Re-tighten bleed screw
  7. Restart pump

If air returns quickly: Air ingestion is ongoing. Check:

Speed Setting

Fixed-speed three-speed pumps have a physical selector switch:

Correct speed selection: Set to the lowest speed that maintains adequate heating in all rooms under design conditions. To find this:

  1. Set to speed 1; run for 30 minutes at full heating demand
  2. Check all radiators are heating adequately
  3. If any room is significantly colder, increase to speed 2; repeat test
  4. If speed 2 is adequate, do not use speed 3

Modern auto-adapt pumps: Variable speed pumps adjust their output automatically based on the pressure differential they are maintaining. They are always quieter at part load (which is most of the time) than fixed-speed pumps running at speed 3. When replacing an old pump, specify an auto-adapt variable speed type unless cost is the only constraint.

Bearing Failure

Pump bearings wear over time, particularly if:

Symptoms:

Diagnosis: Turn pump to speed 1; if grinding is present at low speed, bearings are worn. Compare by turning to speed 3 — if noise increases proportionally with speed, bearings are the cause.

Repair vs replacement: Most modern domestic circulators are not economically repairable when bearings fail. Bearing replacement requires specialist tools and the parts cost is often comparable to a new pump. Replace the pump.

Pump replacement:

  1. Close isolating valves on pump (union fittings either side)
  2. Electrically isolate (isolating FCU or spur)
  3. Remove pump unions: use a large adjustable spanner; old unions may be stubborn — protect surrounding components from heat if using MAPP to free
  4. Install new pump: same orientation (flow direction marked on pump body, must match flow direction in system)
  5. New pump may have different port positions; rotate pump body inside the pump housing to suit
  6. Open isolating valves; check for leaks; bleed pump
  7. Set speed and re-commission

Vibration Transmission to Building

A pump that is mechanically quiet can still create noise complaints if vibration is transmitted to pipework, joists, or walls.

Solutions:

Frequently Asked Questions

My pump runs but makes no noise at all and the heating is poor. Is the pump faulty?

Possibly — or the pump impeller has broken free from the motor shaft and is spinning freely without creating flow. Open the bleed screw: if very little or no water comes out under pressure, the pump is not circulating. Confirm by opening a drain cock downstream: if water does not flow when pump is running, the impeller is not working. In this case, replace the pump.

How often should a circulator pump be replaced?

Modern high-efficiency variable-speed pumps (Grundfos Alpha3, Wilo Stratos PICO) can last 15–20 years in clean systems. Pumps in systems with high magnetite or poor water quality may fail in 5–8 years. Replacing at the same time as a boiler replacement (rather than waiting for failure) is good practice — saves a separate call-out and the new pump will be more efficient.

Can I fit a larger pump to improve circulation?

Only if the current pump is demonstrably undersized (i.e., all the radiators are cold because the pump cannot overcome the system resistance). In most UK domestic systems, a standard 25/6 or equivalent pump is sufficient. Fitting a larger pump often causes more noise (cavitation, speed issues) without improving performance. Size the pump to the system resistance using the pump curve — or consult the boiler manufacturer's recommended pump.

Regulations & Standards