The clinical signs of a microbore blockage are distinct and progressive. The earliest symptom is slow response time : a radiator that takes 30 minutes to heat instead of five. This is followed by differential temperature , where the flow pipe (connected to the manifold) is boiling hot, but the return pipe is cold, indicating zero circulation. In multi-radiator systems, the blockage often manifests as a circulation cascade : closing the working radiators forces pump pressure onto the blocked circuit, temporarily clearing it, only for the fault to reappear when the system is balanced.
The ultimate failure of microbore systems is that they were designed without adequate filtration. A modern standard system mandates a magnetic filter (e.g., MagnaClean or Fernox TF1) to continuously remove magnetite. Retrofitting a magnetic filter on the return pipe to the boiler can dramatically extend the life of a microbore system, but it cannot reverse existing hard blockages. Furthermore, the use of corrosion inhibitor (e.g., Sentinel X100) at installation is non-negotiable; an uninhibited microbore system will typically fail within 5–7 years, whereas a treated system may survive 15–20 years. microbore central heating blockage
The most pernicious consequence is boiler short-cycling . Modern condensing boilers are equipped with overheat thermostats and flow sensors. A blocked microbore circuit reduces overall system flow rate to a trickle. The boiler heats the static water in its heat exchanger to setpoint within seconds, then shuts down to prevent boiling, only to reignite a minute later. This rapid cycling destroys the boiler’s heat exchanger and fan, wastes gas, and fails to heat the property. In extreme cases, the blockage can cause the pump to cavitate, producing a characteristic “gravelly” noise as it churns air and debris. The clinical signs of a microbore blockage are