What “kettling” is — and why London gets it so much
Kettling is basically localised boiling inside the heat exchanger. Not because your boiler is trying to boil the whole system — but because heat isn’t transferring away cleanly. That creates tiny steam bubbles that collapse, and you hear it as rumbling/knocking.
London’s hard water makes this worse. Scale doesn’t politely sit on the side — it builds like chalk. It insulates the metal. The burner keeps firing. The heat stays concentrated. Then you get the sound.
A lot of people think “bang = cracked heat exchanger = replacement”. In real life, it’s often “bang = restricted flow + scale/sludge + a boiler that’s been coping for ages”.
Cause 1: Limescale in the heat exchanger (hard water)
Calcium carbonate deposits build up and act like an insulating blanket. The boiler then runs hotter to achieve the same output — and that’s where the kettling starts.
Cause 2: Sludge / magnetite restricting flow
Black sludge (magnetite) narrows the waterways. Flow slows down, water sits in the hot zone, and it starts to “boil” in pockets.
Cause 3: Pump speed / system resistance mismatch
Sounds boring, but it matters: if circulation is low (wrong pump setting, sticking pump, blocked filter), the boiler can’t move heat away fast enough.
Cause 4: Low pressure or airlocks creating poor flow
Low system pressure or air pockets reduce flow through key components. That can push a boiler into noisy, hot-running behaviour. This is where pressure problems inside the boiler (expansion vessel / PRV behaviour) can overlap with kettling symptoms.
The “repair is enough” truth (the bit most pages avoid)
Here’s the core rule we work by: this fault does not automatically mean boiler replacement. In fact, kettling is one of the best examples of a problem that looks scary, but often responds well to cleaning + flow correction.
It becomes a replacement conversation when you ignore it for ages, the boiler overheats repeatedly, and you end up damaging expensive parts that didn’t need to fail. That’s why we push early diagnosis. If the noise is getting louder, you’re seeing repeated shutdowns, or you just want it assessed properly, book emergency boiler repair in London.
What we actually do on a kettling diagnosis
Just so you know what you’re paying for — and so you can spot nonsense. A proper kettling visit isn’t “tap boiler, nod, quote replacement”. It’s boring, methodical, and it works.
- Listen properly (yes, really). Rumbling vs sharp bang vs whistle tells you where the issue lives.
- Check flow & temperature differential (is heat being moved away, or stuck in the exchanger).
- Inspect filters / strainers and any magnetic filter if fitted.
- Check pump behaviour (speed, sticking, noise, response).
- Look for signs of sludge in the system water and radiator performance.
- Decide the least invasive fix first — clean/flush/adjust before talking replacement.
If you’re also getting random shutdowns and error codes, don’t guess — start here: boiler lockout and error code reasons.