tiling round radiator

UK Tiling Forum; Established 2006

Welcome to the UK Tiling Forum by TilersForums.com, built in 2006 by Tilers, run by Tilers.

View all of the UK tiling forum threads, questions and discussions here.

Tilers Forums Official Sponsors

is this any help bud


12) TEMPORARILY REMOVING A RADIATOR

Turn off valves at both ends of rad. if you have a thermostatic valve one end then take the head off and fit the decorators cap to turn it off if you have one.

At the locksheild end try to count the turns it takes to close it completely.

Once both valves closed put down plastic sheet and/or dust sheet under valve nut. Put small plastic tray under valve nut. Undo valve nut between valve and rad slowly until water runs out. When water stops open air bleed on rad to let more water drain out.

When water stops running out lift one end of rad and drop over empty plastic tray to empty last bits of water, careful here as this will probably be black and/or rusty water.

When finished draining do up air bleed, undo other end valve nut, remove rad and turn upside down to eliminate drips from valve bodies.

Fitting is a reversal of above except that after fitting you will have to top up system pressure via combi filling loop or filling link built into your boiler.
 
As bish said.............u have to watch your liability cover............springs a leak..........and your stuffed.

It does look much much better tiled behind.
 
I'd take it off.

When you have tiled the wall and come to re-drill it we provide a diamond drill kit which includes the radiator pipe. Its called the BFKMX and has a 16mm core for a radiator (15mm) and then a few 6mm and 8mm to make the holes at the back for the fixings.

Our kits make the drilling very easy to do. Each hole will take less than a minute.

As for the job with the radiator if you can totally remove all the pipework fittings to get back to the "tails" then you can slip a tile over the pipework and it will leave a great finish. If the central heating is isolated or drained down its easier. If not. IE the system is loaded you may have to avoid going that far or use a pipe freezing kit at the point of disconnection.

MVC-007F.jpg


This is a Cut hole in a tile for a radiator pipe.

bathrads.jpg


Depending on your job will depend on how much "is on view" behind the radiator. Above its clear there is a lot of wall on show so a neat job is critical. The radiator must be completley removed and the tiles placed on the wall. The pipe work or "tails" are then cut into the tile.

tap2.jpg


Above is the result of drilling a tile for a radiator pipe. Doesnt matter if its ceramic, slate, marble, granite or porcelain. Same thing.

It does involve a reasonable amount of time, prep, plumbing and interference with other systems (IE the central heating) so should be done in conjunction with a plumbing team or by a competent all-rounder.

Arctic%20Spray%202%20large%20Freezing%20Kit%20-%20OFASK01.jpg


Arctic do a little pipe freezing kit if the system is loaded. You probably need to freeze each pipe twice. Once on removal. And again on installation. A bit tricky but possible.

The diamond drilling kit for a radiator pipe




 
Last edited by a moderator:
As has been said remove the radiator if possible the finish is so much better looking but be very careful
 
I'd take it off.

When you have tiled the wall and come to re-drill it we provide a diamond drill kit which includes the radiator pipe. Its called the BFKMX and has a 16mm core for a radiator (15mm) and then a few 6mm and 8mm to make the holes at the back for the fixings.

Our kits make the drilling very easy to do. Each hole will take less than a minute.

As for the job with the radiator if you can totally remove all the pipework fittings to get back to the "tails" then you can slip a tile over the pipework and it will leave a great finish. If the central heating is isolated or drained down its easier. If not. IE the system is loaded you may have to avoid going that far or use a pipe freezing kit at the point of disconnection.

MVC-007F.jpg


This is a Cut hole in a tile for a radiator pipe.

bathrads.jpg


Depending on your job will depend on how much "is on view" behind the radiator. Above its clear there is a lot of wall on show so a neat job is critical. The radiator must be completley removed and the tiles placed on the wall. The pipe work or "tails" are then cut into the tile.

tap2.jpg


Above is the result of drilling a tile for a radiator pipe. Doesnt matter if its ceramic, slate, marble, granite or porcelain. Same thing.

It does involve a reasonable amount of time, prep, plumbing and interference with other systems (IE the central heating) so should be done in conjunction with a plumbing team or by a competent all-rounder.

Arctic%20Spray%202%20large%20Freezing%20Kit%20-%20OFASK01.jpg


Arctic do a little pipe freezing kit if the system is loaded. You probably need to freeze each pipe twice. Once on removal. And again on installation. A bit tricky but possible.

The diamond drilling kit for a radiator pipe

To get the Radiator off quickly easily and CLEANLY, get hold of a set of Radclamps, this tool allows you to take flat panel radiators off without draining ANY water, unbelievable but true, not a freezing kit method, you can see a video of this being done on www.youtube.com and search for " DIY removing radiatior" tools to make a tilers life easier when taking off Radiators, good luck.
 
took the rad off the wall but kept it connected in the end. I had to tile the floor so i just cut away the old floor boards to give me a little more play on the pipes ,and sat the rad on a block to stop it dropping to the floor.
boarded the floor prior to tiling so no sign of any holes.

thank's for all your help guy's !!
 

Advertisement

Thread Information

Title
tiling round radiator
Prefix
N/A
Forum
UK Tiling Forum
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
17

Thread Tags

Tags Tags
tiling usa

Advertisement

UK Tiling Forum

Thread statistics

Created
mike s,
Last reply from
mike s,
Replies
17
Views
11,168

Thread statistics

Created
mike s,
Last reply from
mike s,
Replies
17
Views
11,168

Weekly Email Digest

Back