What it is, why it matters when you replace a boiler, and what the process involves — explained plainly.
Over time, the water inside a central heating system degrades. Iron particles from radiators and pipework oxidise to form magnetite — a fine black sludge that settles at the bottom of radiators and builds up inside heat exchangers. Limescale can form in hard water areas, coating the inside of pipework and boiler components.
The result is a system that works harder to deliver the same heat — running costs go up, radiators don't heat evenly, and components wear out faster. A boiler fitted onto a contaminated system can fail prematurely, and most manufacturers will not honour a warranty if there's evidence of sludge damage.
Power flushing is the process used to remove this contamination. A specialist pump forces a chemical cleaner through the system at high velocity, dislodging and suspending deposits so they can be flushed out entirely. Each radiator is treated individually until the water runs clear.
Boiler warranty note: Most manufacturers — including Worcester Bosch and Vaillant — require the system to be clean and treated with corrosion inhibitor at the time of installation. Fitting a new boiler onto a sludged system can void the warranty.
Once the system is clean, a corrosion inhibitor is added to the fresh water to prevent future build-up. The water quality is tested before completion and a power flushing certificate is issued confirming the work carried out.
Each stage is carried out methodically to ensure the system is thoroughly cleaned before a new boiler is commissioned.
A specialist Clearflow pump is connected into the heating system — typically at the boiler connections, the circulating pump position, or by breaking into the main pipework. The existing boiler or pump is temporarily bypassed so the Clearflow unit drives the flow.
FX2 chemical cleaner is added to the system water and circulated at high velocity. The pump reverses flow direction regularly to maximise agitation, loosening magnetite and sludge deposits from radiator bases, pipework, and the heat exchanger.
Each radiator is isolated and flushed one at a time, with flow reversed through it to dislodge settled sludge. The dirty water is dumped from the system until the water running through that radiator is clear. This is repeated for every radiator in the property.
Once all radiators have been flushed and the water runs clear throughout the system, neutralising crystals are added to the waste water before it is safely disposed of. The system is refilled with fresh, clean water.
A corrosion inhibitor — typically SystemSafe DM — is dosed into the clean system water. This creates a protective layer inside pipework and components, significantly slowing future oxidisation and sludge formation.
The system water is tested for pH level, turbidity (clarity), and total dissolved solids (TDS) to confirm it meets the required standard. Results are recorded and a power flushing certificate is issued. The new boiler can then be commissioned onto a clean system.
Not always, but often yes. If your existing system has been running for many years without treatment, there's a good chance sludge and magnetite have built up inside the pipework and radiators. Most boiler manufacturers require evidence of a clean system to honour a warranty, and fitting a new boiler onto a contaminated system reduces its efficiency and lifespan from day one.
For a typical three-bedroom house with six to eight radiators, allow a full day. Larger properties with more radiators, or systems with heavy contamination, can take longer. The process is thorough — each radiator is flushed individually until the water runs clear.
Common signs include radiators that are cold at the bottom but warm at the top, a boiler that's noisy or kettling, discoloured water when you bleed a radiator, or a system that takes a long time to heat up. A quick visual check of the system water is often enough to indicate contamination.
A specialist cleaner is circulated through the system to loosen and suspend sludge, magnetite, and limescale deposits. Once flushing is complete, neutralising crystals are used to make the waste water safe before disposal. Finally, a corrosion inhibitor is added to protect the clean system going forward.
Power flushing is safe for most systems in reasonable condition. If pipework is very old and already heavily corroded, or if a radiator has pinhole leaks, the flushing process can sometimes reveal existing weaknesses — which is useful to know before fitting a new boiler. Any concerns about system condition would be discussed before work starts.