What a magnetic filter does
It catches the tiny bits of magnetite (that black sludge) and metal debris circulating in the system, before it ends up inside your new boiler’s heat exchanger, pump, or valves.
If you’ve ever sat through a boiler quote and heard “filter and inhibitor” said like it’s an upsell… I get why people switch off. The problem is: in London, system water is rarely perfect. A brand-new boiler dropped onto a tired system without protection is basically a new engine filled with old grit.
We’re ARA Services Ltd — Gas Safe engineers based in Forest Gate (E7). We’re in and out of Stratford, Leyton, Hackney, Islington and the wider North/East patch most weeks. If you want a straight answer on what your system needs, call +44 7727 154 746. Phone first. No finance plans. No nonsense.
It catches the tiny bits of magnetite (that black sludge) and metal debris circulating in the system, before it ends up inside your new boiler’s heat exchanger, pump, or valves.
It’s a chemical treatment added to the system water that helps reduce corrosion, sludge build-up and scale. In normal language: it helps keep the water “well-behaved”.
London’s housing stock is mixed: terraces with old pipework, conversions where the heating has been “modified” five times, flats where the system gets topped up without anyone checking inhibitor levels, and radiators that have been on and off the wall during refurb jobs. All of that creates debris.
When a new boiler goes in, it runs differently too — higher efficiency, different flow characteristics, tighter waterways in modern heat exchangers. That’s great… until sludge and metal bits start circulating and you get restrictions, noise, pump issues or sensor faults.
Bleed a radiator in a lot of London homes and you’ll see it: water that’s grey, brown, sometimes basically Guinness. That’s magnetite and corrosion products. A magnetic filter is built for that exact reality.
Old boilers used to tolerate a bit of muck because they were chunky. Newer ones are more efficient and more precise — which means small restrictions can cause bigger headaches.
For the wider “installed properly” picture, start here: boiler installation done properly.
Manufacturers want the system protected and commissioned properly. That usually means clean-enough system water, inhibitor, and sensible protection. If it’s skipped and faults follow, it’s not unusual for warranty conversations to get… awkward.
If you’re choosing between brands: Worcester vs Vaillant vs Ideal.
We got called to a place near Leyton where a boiler had been swapped recently by another firm. The customer’s words were basically: “It’s new… so why does it sound like a kettle in the pipes?”
Boiler was fine. The system wasn’t. No magnetic filter. Inhibitor wasn’t topped up properly. Radiators had years of sludge. The pump was working harder than it needed to and the flow was messy. Once we cleaned what needed cleaning and added proper protection, it calmed right down.
That’s why we don’t treat filters and inhibitor like optional extras. They’re the boring stuff that stops a “new boiler” turning into repeat callouts.
Brand-new system, new pipework, new radiators, properly cleaned on install, and treated from day one — that’s the dream scenario. In those cases, the filter still helps, but you’re not fighting years of muck.
If you’re unsure, you can send photos and we’ll give a straight steer: message the setup here.
The protection only works if it’s installed sensibly and maintained. A filter needs to be accessible, and it needs to be cleaned periodically (especially after installation / cleaning work). Inhibitor needs to be dosed correctly and checked when the system is drained or topped up.
We position it so it’s doing its job and can actually be serviced. We’ve seen filters installed where you basically need yoga training to open them. Looks neat… until someone needs to clean it.
On install day we explain what’s been fitted, why it matters, and what to watch for. You’re not left with a shiny boiler and zero clue.
If you’re planning the full install route, this is the hub: boiler installation in London.
If you drain radiators, swap valves, or have plumbing work that empties part of the system, inhibitor levels can change. Tell your engineer. It’s a small thing that prevents bigger problems.
If something’s already acting up, start with diagnosis: boiler repairs & fault finding.
Call +44 7727 154 746. If you’re in a terrace near Wanstead Flats, a flat around Stratford, or anywhere in North/East and you’ve got 2 minutes, tell us: boiler type now, radiator condition (cold spots or not), and whether you’ve been topping up pressure. We’ll tell you if protection is “must-have” or “nice-to-have”.
Prefer photos? Use: our contact form (boiler area + a radiator bleed point if you can).
Customers don’t ask for “the most technical install”. They want: clear explanations, honest quoting, and the job left tidy. That’s the stuff that keeps coming up.
“Worked without taking a break… fitted a new boiler and cleaned up when they finished.”
Alison Louis“Identified the issues immediately and fixed the problem. Very professional.”
Rachel Boston“Punctual, professional, and true to their quote — highly recommended.”
Elimelech HalberstamIn a lot of London systems, yes — because the debris already exists in the radiators and pipework. A filter is there to catch it before it ends up inside the new boiler. If your system water is clean and the system is new, it’s less critical, but still a good layer of protection.
Inhibitor helps slow corrosion and reduces new sludge forming. It doesn’t magically remove years of existing contamination. If the system is dirty, cleaning is the fix, then inhibitor helps keep it that way. This is the detailed guide: power flush vs chemical clean.
Not instantly every time — but it increases the risk. Debris can restrict flow, stress pumps and valves, and cause nuisance faults. You might be “fine” for a while, then you’re calling someone out in January.
Manufacturers expect correct installation and commissioning, and they generally want system protection and correct water treatment. Every warranty situation is case-by-case, but skipping protection can make any warranty conversation harder than it needs to be.
It depends on the system condition — a recently cleaned or new system may be low-maintenance, while an older system can load up quickly. After an install or cleaning work, it’s common to check it because it’s doing its job (catching debris). If you’re unsure, ask during servicing.
A few clues: radiators cold at the bottom, frequent topping up, noisy circulation, black water when bleeding a radiator, and slow heat-up. If you want a quick sanity check, send a couple of photos and a short note via our message form or call +44 7727 154 746.
Call +44 7727 154 746. Tell us the boiler type you’re fitting and what your current system is like (radiators, cold spots, pressure drops). We’ll tell you if a magnetic filter + inhibitor is essential for your setup — and what else to do to reduce breakdowns.