PlumbMate · Gas

Glossary of Terms & Acronyms

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Study & revision only. This material supports ACS reassessment preparation and does not qualify you to work on gas. Only Gas Safe registered engineers may legally work on gas appliances and installations.Smell gas or suspect carbon monoxide? Make the area safe and call the National Gas Emergency Service on 0800 111 999.

ACS

Acronym

Accredited Certification Scheme

The certification route by which gas operatives prove ongoing competence; reassessment is normally every five years.

Action level

Term
CPA1

The CO/CO₂ ratio at which you must act. Where no manufacturer's figure applies, BS 7967 sets it at 0.0040 for flued appliances (0.008 for flueless). At or below the level combustion is acceptable; above it the appliance is not safe to leave in normal use.

Action level (CO/CO₂)

Term
CPA1

The CO/CO₂ ratio above which combustion is unacceptable. Where no manufacturer figure applies, BS 7967 sets it at 0.0040 for a flued appliance (0.0080 for a flueless one); above it, make safe and classify under GIUSP.

Adventitious ventilation

Term
CCN1HTR1

Natural air infiltration through the building fabric. Taken as about 35 cm², assumed to cover the first 7 kW net of an open-flued appliance.

AECV

Term
CCN1

Additional Emergency Control Valve

Fitted where the ECV is remote from the building, at the point the supply enters, so the occupier can isolate quickly.

Aeration (pre- / post-aerated)

Term
CCN1CKR1

How a burner gets its combustion air. A pre-aerated (aerated) burner mixes primary air with the gas before the flame, giving a crisp blue flame; a post-aerated burner takes all of its air (secondary air) at the flame itself, giving a softer, luminous flame as on many cookers and live-fuel-effect fires.

Air break (condensate)

Term

A visible gap where the condensate pipe joins an external drain or downpipe, preventing sewage or water backing up into the boiler if the drain freezes, blocks or floods — unless the boiler trap already has the specified seal.

Air-pressure switch

Term
CCN1

A safety switch on a fanned-flue appliance that confirms the fan is producing flow. The safety circuit proves the switch is open (at rest) before start-up, so a switch stuck closed cannot let the appliance fire without proven draught.

Air/gas ratio valve

Term
CENWAT

A valve on many modern modulating boilers that keeps the air-to-gas ratio correct across the firing range. Adjust it only per the MIs and with a calibrated analyser — never by guesswork — and confirm the result by combustion analysis.

Annual gas safety check

Term
CCN1

The landlord's legal duty under GSIUR to have every gas appliance and flue they provide checked for safety at least every 12 months by a Gas Safe registered engineer. It confirms operating pressure or heat input, combustion-air (ventilation) provision, flue effectiveness and safe operation, and is recorded on a Landlord Gas Safety Record (LGSR).

Annular space

Term
HTR1

The gap between a flexible flue liner and the old chimney around it. At the base it must be sealed; an unsealed annulus lets cold air chill the liner and stall the draught, causing spillage.

Anti-tamper

Term
CCN1

A protective mechanism in electronic token, smart-prepayment or Quantum meters. Dropping the pressure during a test can trip it and lock off the supply until the energy supplier resets it, so plan tightness tests on these meters carefully.

Approved Code of Practice (ACOP)

Term
CCN1

HSE-approved guidance that supports a set of regulations. For GSIUR the ACOP and guidance is published as L56. Following an ACOP is not itself compulsory, but if you are prosecuted a court can treat a failure to follow it as evidence that you breached the regulation.

AR

Term
CCN1CENWAT1HTR1

At Risk

Unsafe-situation classification under IGEM/G/11 where one or more faults could be a danger; turned off with permission and labelled.

Asbestos

Term
CCN1HTR1

A hazardous fibrous material found in some older building fabric and flue components. If you suspect it (for example in old flue pipework), keep it intact, double-bag it in heavy-duty plastic, use the right PPE and dispose of it through a licensed route — never break or sand it.

ASD

Acronym
HTR1

Atmosphere Sensing Device

Also called an oxygen-depletion device; shuts an appliance down before combustion products build up in the room.

ASD / ODS

Acronym

Atmospheric Sensing Device / Oxygen Depletion System

A safety device that shuts an open-flued appliance down if the room's oxygen falls (the air vitiates); required for an open-flued appliance under 14 kW installed in a bedroom or bath/shower room.

Asphyxiant

Term
CPA1

A gas that harms by displacing oxygen rather than by poisoning. Carbon dioxide (CO₂) acts mainly as an asphyxiant in quantity; in CPA1 it serves as the reference against which CO (a toxic product of incomplete combustion) is judged.

Atmosphere analysis

Term
CPA1

Checking the air in a dwelling for CO/CO₂ — for example after a CO alarm activates or fumes are reported. Wear a personal audible CO alarm, check the air is safe before other work, sample at breathing height (about 1.5–2 m), and run a sweep test for at least two minutes.

Automatic bypass valve

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

A valve that keeps a minimum water flow when TRVs and zone valves close, protecting the pump and heat exchanger; fitted where the MIs require it.

Back boiler unit (BBU)

Term

A boiler fitted behind a gas fire within a builder's opening, historically providing heating and hot water (BS 5871-1, fire/back boilers). Now largely obsolete but still found during HTR1 work.

Balanced compartment

Term
HTR1

A sealed housing that lets an open-flued appliance behave like a room-sealed one. It takes its combustion air from a point adjacent to the chimney terminal through an air duct of at least 7.5 cm²/kW net, behind a draught-proofed, self-closing door interlocked with the appliance (with a 'keep shut' notice). Where a compartment side is within 75 mm of the appliance's hot surfaces, fire protection gives a half-hour delay.

Balanced flue

Term
CCN1

A natural-draught room-sealed (Type C) flue whose air inlet and products outlet sit in the same pressure zone at one terminal, so wind affects both equally.

Bayonet connector

Term
CCN1CKR1

A self-sealing push-and-twist connector for a cooker flexible hose; its valve seals automatically when the cooker is unplugged. It must lock fully home.

Benchmark

Term
CENWAT1

The commissioning checklist / log book completed and signed at boiler commissioning and left with the customer; supports the warranty.

Boiler interlock

Term
CENWAT1

A control-wiring arrangement (room/cylinder thermostats and motorised valves) that stops the boiler firing with no heat demand. TRVs alone do not provide it.

Boiler Plus

Standard

An England Building Regulations standard (from 2018) setting minimum efficiency and controls for domestic boiler installs — e.g. a combi must have time and temperature control plus one efficiency measure (such as weather or load compensation, flue gas heat recovery, or smart controls). Confirm current requirements.

BS 5440-1 / -2

Standard
CCN1CENWAT1CKR1HTR1

Flueing / Ventilation standard

Part 1 covers flueing and Part 2 ventilation for gas appliances of rated input not exceeding 70 kW net.

BS 5871

Standard
HTR1

Gas fires & space heaters standard

Installation of fires, convector heaters, fire/back boilers and heating stoves (-1), ILFE (-2) and DFE (-3) appliances.

BS 6172

Standard
CKR1

Cooker installation standard

Installation, servicing and maintenance of domestic gas cooking appliances.

BS 6644

Standard
CENWAT

The standard for larger/commercial gas installations. A single domestic boiler up to 70 kW net is covered by BS 6798, but a cascade of boilers whose aggregate input exceeds 70 kW falls under BS 6644, even if each individual boiler is domestic-sized.

BS 669-1

Standard
CKR1

Cooker hose & socket standard

The primary standard for domestic flexible hoses, end fittings and self-sealing (bayonet) sockets connecting a movable appliance such as a cooker; BS EN 14800 covers the corrugated stainless-steel safety hose variant.

BS 6798

Standard
CENWAT1

Boiler installation standard

Installation of gas-fired hot water boilers of net input not exceeding 70 kW.

BS 6891

Standard
CCN1

Installation pipework standard

Covers low-pressure gas installation pipework of up to 35 mm in domestic premises.

BS 7593

Standard
CENWAT1

Water treatment standard

Cleaning, flushing and dosing of heating-system water with a corrosion inhibitor.

BS 7967

Standard
CENWAT1CPA1

Combustion analysis standard

Use of combustion gas analysers and the CO/CO₂ ratio for assessing domestic appliances; basis of CPA1.

BS EN 14800

Term
CKR1

The standard for domestic corrugated stainless-steel safety hose assemblies connecting a movable appliance such as a cooker. The rubber flexible hose and self-sealing bayonet socket are covered by BS 669-1.

BS EN 50291

Standard
CPA1

CO alarm standard

The performance standard for domestic CO alarms; at 100 ppm an alarm should sound between 10 and 40 minutes.

BS EN 50379-3

Standard
CPA1

The European standard that an electronic combustion gas analyser (ECGA) used for CPA1 work should conform to. It specifies the performance of portable instruments measuring CO and CO₂ in flue gas.

Burner pressure

Term

The gas pressure at the burner test point, set to the appliance data-plate figure. On its own it does not prove the correct volume is burning — a blocked or wrong injector can change the rate without changing the pressure — so it is cross-checked by gas rating.

Calibration

Term
CPA1

Comparing an analyser against certified reference gas of known concentration and correcting any drift. Required at least annually (and per the manufacturer); a reading from an out-of-calibration analyser is not valid.

Capillary joint

Term
CCN1

soldered joint

A copper joint made by capillary action drawing solder into the fitting. It is permanent, so unlike a compression joint it may be concealed — but you never solder close to a meter without isolating it first.

Cassette fire

Term

A type of inset live fuel-effect (ILFE) gas fire with an outer firebox built into a purpose-made opening, normally fitted to a lined chimney. Some accept an optional flue kit specified by the manufacturer.

Catalytic heater

Term
HTR1

A flueless space heater that burns gas at low temperature on a catalyst pad; needs room ventilation and an atmosphere-sensing device (ASD).

Catchment space

Term
CCN1HTR1

A debris-collection space of specified volume below a fire fitted to a chimney, so falling debris cannot block the appliance.

Charge pressure

Term
CENWAT

The air pre-charge on the dry side of a diaphragm expansion vessel, set to match the system's cold fill pressure. If a sealed system's pressure relief valve lifts every time the boiler heats, the usual cause is an expansion vessel that has lost its charge or is undersized — re-pressurise or resize it rather than blaming the valve.

Chimney plate

Term
HTR1

A permanent plate fixed in an accessible position recording a chimney's size, construction and lining, so its suitability for a gas fire can be checked later. Asbestos-cement must not be used for a new chimney, and raw poured-in-situ concrete is not a recognised lining.

Class 1 / Class 2 chimney

Term
CCN1

A classification of masonry or lined chimneys by size. A Class 1 chimney is a full-size traditional chimney (around 175 mm / 7 in diameter); a Class 2 chimney is a smaller lined or precast flue (around 125 mm / 5 in). Open-flued fires such as DFEs must be matched to a suitable chimney class with adequate catchment.

Clearance to combustibles

Term
CKR1HTR1

The minimum gap that must be kept between a cooker's burners/hot surfaces and any combustible material, set by BS 6172 and the manufacturer's instructions. Typically there must be adequate clearance above a hob to a combustible surface or cooker hood (commonly at least 650 mm — verify the current standard and MIs), and a hob must not be fitted hard against a combustible side wall without the required side clearance.

Closure / register plate

Term
CCN1HTR1

A sealed plate closing a builder's opening behind a fire, providing the flue connection and any specified relief opening.

CO

Term
CCN1CENWAT1CKR1CPA1HTR1

Carbon monoxide

Toxic, colourless, odourless product of incomplete combustion; binds to haemoglobin and gives no sensory warning.

CO alarm

Term
CPA1

A household electrical carbon monoxide alarm to BS EN 50291. It must give an audible warning — at 100 ppm it is designed to sound within 10–40 minutes (faster at higher levels). It is not the engineer's analyser, and a passive colour-change indicator card is not a substitute and is unsuitable for sleeping areas.

CO void monitor

Term
CENWAT

A carbon monoxide sensor in a concealed flue void wired to shut off the boiler if it detects CO. It is the recognised safeguard where a concealed room-sealed flue cannot be given inspection access.

CO/CO₂ ratio

Term
CPA1

Combustion performance ratio

The key indicator of combustion quality; action level 0.0040 in BS 7967 where no manufacturer's figure applies. Largely unaffected by air dilution.

Combi (combination) boiler

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

Provides both central heating and instantaneous domestic hot water from one unit, usually mains-fed with no storage cylinder.

Combustion air

Term
CCN1CENWAT

The fresh air an appliance needs to burn its fuel completely. It is supplied by purpose-provided ventilation (and, up to small inputs, by adventitious air). Too little combustion air causes incomplete combustion and carbon monoxide, and it must not be drawn from a bathroom.

Communal flue (CFS)

Term
CCN1CENWAT

A shared flue serving several dwellings. CFS(NV) is naturally ventilated; CFS(PP) is a fan-assisted positive-pressure manifold. A loose or uncapped connection is Immediately Dangerous.

Compartment ventilation

Term
CCN1CENWAT

Where an appliance is enclosed (e.g. an airing cupboard), the compartment needs a low-level vent for combustion air and a high-level vent to remove heat, sized to BS 5440-2 (larger when venting to a room than direct to outside).

Compression joint

Term
CCN1

A pipe joint sealed by a nut compressing an olive (ring) onto the tube. Because it can be re-tightened, a compression joint may be used only where it stays accessible; it is not permitted in a protected escape route.

Concealed flue

Term
CENWAT

A room-sealed flue that runs through a ceiling void, riser or other concealed space. It needs inspection hatches so the joints can be checked; where access is impossible, a CO void-monitoring shut-off is the recognised alternative.

Condensate

Term
CENWAT1

Slightly acidic (pH ≈ 3–6) water from condensing flue gas. Drained in corrosion-resistant plastic, never copper or steel; external runs short, insulated, ≥32 mm.

Condensate pump

Term

A small automatic pump that collects condensate and lifts it to the drain where gravity discharge isn't possible (e.g. a basement boiler with the drain above it).

Condensate trap

Term

A water seal built into a condensing boiler's condensate outlet that stops flue gases escaping down the drain pipe. Must hold the condensate seal specified by the manufacturer.

Condensing boiler

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

A boiler that cools the flue products below their dew point (around 55 C) so the water vapour condenses, recovering its latent heat. Now required for most new and replacement domestic boilers; produces an acidic condensate that must be drained.

Cooling air

Term
CCN1

Air provided to keep an appliance or its compartment within safe temperature limits, separate from combustion air. A room-sealed appliance in a compartment needs cooling air only; an open-flued one needs both cooling and combustion air.

CORGI

Acronym
CCN1CENWAT

Council for Registered Gas Installers

The former gas registration body for Great Britain, replaced by the Gas Safe Register on 1 April 2009. Training material that still refers to CORGI is out of date and should be read with that in mind.

Corrosion inhibitor

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

A chemical dosed into a heating system (to BS 7593) after cleaning and flushing, to prevent internal corrosion and sludge (magnetite).

CO₂

Term
CCN1CPA1

Carbon dioxide

Product of complete combustion; an asphyxiant in quantity. Used as the reference in the CO/CO₂ combustion ratio.

CPA1 / CPA

Acronym

Combustion Performance Analysis

The category covering use of a flue gas analyser to assess combustion, to BS 7967.

CPSU

Acronym

Combined Primary Storage Unit

A boiler type with a large internal thermal store providing both heating and mains-pressure hot water.

Cross-sensitivity

Term
CPA1

The tendency of a CO sensor (or indicator card) to respond to other substances — aerosol sprays and solvent vapours can cross-sensitise the sensor and give a false reading. Clear the air and re-check; these are not themselves CO sources.

CSST / PLT

Acronym

Corrugated Stainless Steel Tube / Pliable corrugated tube

Flexible gas tube permitted internally when installed to its standard, bonded and mechanically protected through walls/floors.

CV

Term
CCN1HTR1

Calorific Value

The heat released per unit of gas. Gross CV includes the latent heat of the water vapour; net CV excludes it.

Cylinder thermostat

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

Controls stored hot-water temperature, set to about 60 C — hot enough to limit Legionella but not so hot as to scald.

Damper

Term
CCN1HTR1

A movable plate that can restrict a flue. Any manually operated damper in the flue of a gas appliance must be removed or permanently fixed in the open position, so the flue cannot be accidentally closed off while the appliance runs.

Data plate

Term
CCN1CENWATCKR1

The appliance rating plate, giving make/model, gas type, heat input (gross and/or net), burner pressure and other data needed to commission and check the appliance.

Depressurisation

Term
CCN1

A drop in room pressure — typically caused by an extract fan — that can pull the products of combustion back down an open flue and make the appliance spill. The usual cure is extra air-vent free area (often around 100 cm²) to break the depressurisation; it is checked by the spillage test with all fans running.

Dew point

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

The temperature at which water vapour in the flue products begins to condense (around 55 C for natural gas). A condensing boiler runs the return below this to recover latent heat.

DFE

Acronym
CCN1HTR1

Decorative Fuel-Effect appliance

An open-flued gas fire of input ≤20 kW covered by BS 5871-3; burns deliberately yellow and needs a suitable chimney with catchment space.

DHW

Acronym
CENWAT1

Domestic Hot Water

The hot water supply to taps and outlets, as opposed to the central-heating circuit.

Dilution

Term
CPA1

The mixing of flue products with excess air or room air, which lowers both CO and CO₂ together. Because it affects them equally, the CO/CO₂ ratio is largely unaffected — which is why the ratio, not the raw CO, is used to judge combustion.

Discharge pipe (D1/D2)

Term

The safe discharge route from an unvented cylinder's safety valves. D1 runs from the valve to the tundish; D2 runs from the tundish to a safe, visible termination and is at least one pipe size larger than D1.

Distribution main

Term
CCN1

The gas pipe running along the street/network from which individual properties are supplied. Gas reaches a property from the distribution main through a service pipe to the meter.

Diversity

Term

The recognition that not all appliances run at full demand at once, so the simultaneous load can be less than the simple sum. Applied with care in pipe sizing, never as an excuse to undersize.

Draught diverter

Term
CCN1CPA1

An open-flue feature that breaks downdraught; the usual combustion sampling point on an open-flued (Type B) appliance.

Draught-proofing

Term
CCN1

Sealing gaps around doors, windows and floors to reduce uncontrolled (adventitious) air leakage. Because it cuts natural infiltration, a well-draught-proofed room may need a larger purpose-provided air vent to keep enough combustion air.

Dry-lining

Term
CCN1

Plasterboard fixed to a wall on battens or dabs, leaving a void behind. Gas pipe behind dry-lining must be encased in building material so that a leak cannot track unseen behind the board.

ECGA / FGA

Acronym
CENWAT1CPA1

Electronic Combustion Gas Analyser / Flue Gas Analyser

The instrument used for CPA; should conform to BS EN 50379-3, zeroed in fresh air before use.

ECV

Term
CCN1

Emergency Control Valve

The consumer's means of shutting off the gas supply in an emergency; must be accessible and have a permanent notice nearby.

Electricity at Work Regulations

Standard
CCN1

EAWR

The regulations governing electrical safety at work. Regulation 4 requires electrical systems to be constructed and maintained to prevent danger; Regulation 16 forbids working beyond your competence unless properly supervised.

Electrochemical sensor

Term

The cell type used in most analysers for CO and O2. It reacts chemically with the gas to give a small electrical signal, and ages/drifts over a few years whether used or not — hence periodic calibration.

Equivalent length

Term

The measured pipe length plus an allowance for each fitting (elbows, tees, valves) expressed as extra metres of pipe. Used with the BS 6891 tables to check the pressure drop stays within 1 mbar.

ErP / SEDBUK

Term

ErP (Energy-related Products) energy labelling rates and labels boiler efficiency; it replaced the older SEDBUK (Seasonal Efficiency of Domestic Boilers in the UK) rating.

Excess air / dilution

Term
CPA1

Extra air, or room air leaking into a sample, that lowers CO and CO₂ together. The CO/CO₂ ratio is used because it largely cancels this dilution.

Expansion vessel

Term
CENWAT1

A diaphragm vessel that absorbs water expansion in a sealed heating system (BS 7074).

F&E cistern

Acronym
CENWAT1

Feed and Expansion cistern

On an open-vented system, the cistern at the highest point that tops up the system and takes up expansion.

Fan-assisted (fanned) flue

Term
CCN1CENWAT1

A room-sealed flue in which a fan moves the combustion products, allowing longer flue runs and (per the MIs) smaller terminal clearances than a natural-draught flue.

FGA

Acronym
CPA1

x

Filling loop

Term

A flexible connector with a double-check valve used to add mains water to a sealed heating system and bring it up to pressure. It is closed (and ideally disconnected) after filling.

Filling point

Term
CENWAT

The connection used to top up a sealed heating system with mains water, commonly to around 1 bar cold (verify against the MIs). It must prevent backflow into the mains and is typically removed or disconnected after filling.

Fire-stopping

Term
CCN1

Sealing the gap where a pipe penetrates a fire-rated wall or floor with an approved material, so the penetration does not reduce the building's fire resistance or let fire and smoke spread between compartments.

Flame chilling

Term
CCN1

Flame cooled below its ignition temperature (by a cold surface or excess air), causing incomplete combustion.

Flame impingement

Term
CCN1

Flame striking a surface (e.g. a cold heat exchanger) before combustion completes, causing CO and soot.

Flame lift

Term

A combustion fault where the flame lifts off the burner ports because gas velocity or aeration is too high, making the flame unstable and risking flame loss.

Flame lift-off

Term
CCN1

A fault where the flame lifts away from the burner ports and may go out — caused by too high a burner pressure (high gas velocity) or excess primary air. The opposite fault is light-back.

Flame picture

Term
CKR1HTR1

The appearance of the burner flame, judged against the MIs. DFE and ILFE fires are designed to burn yellow and luminous, unlike most appliances where yellow tipping warns of incomplete combustion.

Flame rectification

Term
CCN1CENWAT

An electronic flame-detection method used in many modern appliances: a flame conducts a small one-way (rectified) current via a probe, which the controls sense to keep the gas valve open. Faster to respond than a thermocouple.

Flame retention

Term
CCN1

A burner feature (retention ports/pilot tabs) that anchors the flame and stops it lifting off at higher rates or in draughts.

Flexible hose (cooker)

Term
CKR1

The flexible connection between a movable cooker and its bayonet point. It must be the correct type (BS 669-1, or a corrugated safety hose to BS EN 14800), in date, undamaged, and routed in a loop that keeps it clear of the oven flue and hot surfaces while letting the cooker be pulled out without strain. An old, kinked or perished hose restricts flow and is a leak and fire risk.

Flue box (BS 715)

Term
HTR1

A sheet-metal box to BS 715 used to flue an open-flued gas fire where there is no existing chimney; the fire connects to it and a flue pipe carries the products to a terminal.

Flue flow test

Term
CCN1CENWAT1HTR1

A smoke pellet proves the empty flue draws correctly and is unobstructed along its length, before the appliance is connected.

Flue liner

Term
CCN1HTR1

A flexible or rigid liner inserted into a masonry chimney to give a sound, correctly sized passage for an appliance's products.

Flue terminal

Term
CCN1CENWAT1HTR1

The external fitting where a flue discharges products (and, on a room-sealed appliance, draws in air). Its position must meet BS 5440-1 clearances.

Flue type codes (B/C)

Term
CENWAT

The European classification of appliance flue types. Type B (e.g. B11) is open-flued, drawing combustion air from the room — B11 is natural-draught with a draught diverter. Type C (e.g. C11 natural-draught, C32 fanned vertical, C7/VERTEX) is room-sealed, taking air from and discharging to outside through a sealed system.

Flue-gas sampling point

Term
CPA1

A purpose-made point for inserting the analyser probe. On a room-sealed (Type C) appliance use the integral flue-gas sampling point or sample as the MIs direct; on an open-flued (Type B) appliance the usual point is the draught diverter.

Flue/fan interlock

Term
CCN1CENWATHTR1

A safety interlock used where a fan sits in the secondary flue of an open-flued system: it proves the fan is actually moving the products before the appliance is allowed to fire. Distinct from a boiler/ventilation interlock.

Flueless (Type A)

Term
CCN1CKR1CPA1HTR1

Discharges products into the room (e.g. a cooker); relies on room-volume ventilation and, on heaters, an ASD.

Flushing

Term
CENWAT

Cleaning a heating system to clear installation debris, flux and existing sludge before a new boiler is fired and the inhibitor is dosed. Power-flushing uses a pumped machine; it protects the new heat exchanger from blockage.

Free area

Term
CCN1HTR1

The actual unobstructed open area of a ventilator that air can pass through (less than its overall size). Ventilation requirements in BS 5440-2 are stated as a free area in cm².

Fresh-air purge

Term

Running an analyser in clean air — on power-up to zero the sensors, and before switching off to clear flue gas from them. Protects sensor life and sets the baseline.

Frost protection

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

A frost thermostat (often with a pipe thermostat) wired to bring on the boiler and pump in freezing conditions regardless of the programmer or room thermostat.

FSD

Acronym
CCN1CKR1HTR1

Flame Supervision Device

Holds the gas valve open only while it senses the flame; shuts the gas off on flame loss. Often thermocouple-based.

Fuel bed (ceramics/coals)

Term

The artificial coals, pebbles, logs or ceramic radiants of a DFE or ILFE fire. They must be positioned exactly to the manufacturer's layout — incorrect placement disturbs combustion and can cause CO.

G20 (second-family gas)

Term
CKR1

natural gas

The reference natural gas for UK domestic appliances — second-family gas G20, supplied at a nominal 21 mbar. Appliances are set up and tested against G20 figures in the manufacturer's instructions (LPG is third-family gas).

G3

Acronym
CENWAT1

The competency required to install unvented hot-water storage systems under the Building Regulations — separate from gas registration.

G3 (unvented competency)

Term
CENWAT

The Building Regulations competency required to install an unvented (mains-pressure) hot-water storage cylinder. It is a separate competency from the gas work itself, reflecting the stored-energy hazard of mains-pressure hot water.

Gas family

Term

Fuel gases are grouped into families: 1st family (manufactured gases), 2nd family (natural gas) and 3rd family (LPG — propane and butane). UK domestic work is mostly 2nd and 3rd family.

Gas rate

Term
CCN1CENWAT1CKR1CPA1HTR1

Volume of gas used over time. Rate (m³/h) = (volume ÷ time in seconds) × 3600. Gross kW = m³/h × CV ÷ 3.6.

Gas Safe Register

Term
CCN1CENWAT

The official gas registration body for Great Britain, the Isle of Man and Guernsey. It replaced CORGI on 1 April 2009. Under GSIUR, anyone carrying out gas work for reward must be registered, and the public can check an engineer's registration and the appliance categories they hold.

Gas transporter

Term
CCN1

The organisation that conveys gas through the network of pipes to a property (and runs the national gas emergency service). When a transporter first supplies gas to premises that contain an appliance which has not been commissioned, it must commission the appliance or seal it off.

GIUSP

Standard
CCN1CENWAT1CPA1HTR1

Gas Industry Unsafe Situations Procedure

The procedure (IGEM/G/11) for classifying and acting on unsafe situations: ID and AR only.

Gross / Net CV

Term
CCN1HTR1

Gross vs net calorific value

Gross counts the latent heat of water vapour in the products; net excludes it (vapour leaves as steam in a non-condensing appliance). For NG, net ≈ gross × 0.901.

GS38

Standard
CCN1

The HSE guidance note for electrical test equipment. GS38-compliant test leads and probes are fused and finger-guarded with only a minimal exposed metal tip, to protect you when testing on or near live mains.

GSIUR

Standard
CCN1CENWAT1CPA1HTR1

Gas Safety (Installation and Use) Regulations 1998

The principal law governing gas fittings and appliances in Great Britain, supported by the Approved Code of Practice and guidance L56.

Hearth

Term
HTR1

A non-combustible base of defined size beneath a gas fire that protects the floor and combustibles from heat and debris (MIs / BS 5871).

Heat exchanger

Term
CENWAT1CPA1

The component that transfers heat from the burner products to the water; in a combi a plate heat exchanger heats the domestic hot water. Vulnerable to scale and sludge.

Heat input

Term
CCN1

The energy entering an appliance per unit time (kW), found by gas rating: kW gross = gas rate (m³/h) × CV (MJ/m³) ÷ 3.6. Modern data plates usually quote net input; for NG, net ≈ gross × 0.901.

Hotplate (lid) cut-off

Term
CKR1

A device fitted to some cookers that shuts off the gas to the hob burners when the lid is closed, so gas cannot be left running under a closed lid.

HSE

Acronym
CCN1

Health and Safety Executive

The regulator that approves the gas registration body (currently Gas Safe Register) as the recognised 'class of persons'.

HSWA

Standard

Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974

The enabling Act sitting above GSIUR; gas-specific duties flow from it.

ID

Term
CCN1CENWAT1HTR1

Immediately Dangerous

Unsafe-situation classification under IGEM/G/11 for an installation that is, or could soon be, a danger to life or property.

IGEM

Acronym
CCN1CENWAT1CPA1HTR1

Institution of Gas Engineers and Managers

Publishes key gas standards such as IGEM/UP/1B (tightness/purging) and IGEM/G/11 (unsafe situations).

IGEM/G/11

Standard
CCN1CENWAT1CPA1HTR1

Unsafe situations procedure

The current edition uses two classifications only — Immediately Dangerous (ID) and At Risk (AR).

IGEM/UP/1A

Standard
CCN1

The IGEM tightness-testing procedure for larger installations — used once the pipe exceeds 35 mm copper / DN32 steel or the installation volume exceeds 0.035 m³. Smaller domestic work uses IGEM/UP/1B.

IGEM/UP/1B

Standard
CCN1

Tightness testing & direct purging procedure

The procedure for tightness testing and purging small domestic-sized installations. Edition 4 sets permissible drop by Installation Volume (IV) and is mandatory from 1 October 2026 (Edition 3 withdrawn 30 September 2026).

ILFE

Acronym
HTR1

Inset Live-Fuel-Effect fire

A gas fire covered by BS 5871-2; also designed to burn with a luminous decorative flame.

Incomplete combustion

Term
CCN1CKR1CPA1

Combustion with too little air, or where the flame is disturbed, producing carbon monoxide (CO) along with soot and water. The three classic causes are lack of air (including vitiated, oxygen-depleted air), flame chilling and flame impingement. Complete combustion, by contrast, produces only carbon dioxide, water vapour, nitrogen and heat.

Injector

Term
CCN1CKR1

The precisely-sized orifice (jet) that meters the flow of gas into a burner. On a pre-aerated burner the gas jet leaving the injector also draws in primary air as it enters the mixing tube.

Injector (burner jet)

Term

The drilled orifice that meters gas into the burner. Its size sets the gas rate at a given pressure; a partially blocked or incorrect injector changes the rate even when the burner pressure still reads correctly.

Installation Volume (IV)

Term
CCN1

The volume of the pipework under test; used in IGEM/UP/1B Edition 4 to determine the permissible pressure drop.

Instantaneous water heater

Term

A water heater that heats water on demand as it flows through, with no storage vessel (e.g. a combi's hot water, or a single-point/multipoint heater).

Latent heat

Term
CCN1CENWATCENWAT1

The heat released when water vapour condenses back to liquid. Recovering it is what makes a condensing boiler more efficient.

LDF

Acronym
CENWAT

Leak Detection Fluid

An approved bubble fluid brushed onto joints to reveal escaping gas; used with the gas on across the ECV-to-regulator joints after a medium-pressure tightness test.

LDF

Acronym
CENWAT

x

Legionella

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

Bacteria that can grow in stored water below about 60 C and cause Legionnaires disease; the reason hot-water cylinders are stored around 60 C.

LEL / UEL

Term
CCN1

Lower / Upper Explosive Limit

The flammable range of gas in air. For natural gas, roughly 5% (LEL) to 15% (UEL) gas in air. Also called LFL/UFL.

Let-by test

Term
CCN1

Checks the isolation valve/ECV is not passing gas into the test section; the only acceptable result is no rise in pressure.

LGSR

Acronym
CCN1

Landlord Gas Safety Record

The annual safety-check record a landlord must complete and give to tenants (within 28 days / before occupation).

Light-back

Term
CCN1

flashback

A fault where the flame burns back inside the burner towards the injector — caused by too low a burner pressure, blocked or damaged burner ports, or a flame speed higher than the gas velocity. It often gives a roaring or popping flame. The opposite fault is flame lift-off.

Light-back (flashback)

Term

A combustion fault where the flame burns back inside the burner toward the injector — often from too low a gas rate or damaged ports — heard as a roar and able to damage the burner.

LPG

Term
CCN1

Liquefied Petroleum Gas

Propane or butane, supplied from a storage vessel; heavier than air, so it sinks into low points and drains.

Magnetic system filter

Term

An in-line filter on the heating return that captures magnetite (iron-oxide) sludge to protect the boiler and maintain efficiency. Recommended at installation under BS 7593.

Magnetite

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

Black iron-oxide sludge formed by internal corrosion; it blocks heat exchangers and radiators. Removed by flushing and prevented by an inhibitor.

Main / equipotential bonding

Term
CCN1

Earthing the consumer's internal pipe within 600 mm of the meter outlet, before any branch (BS 6891 / BS 7671).

Manometer

Term
CCN1CPA1

An instrument that measures gas pressure (e.g. operating or burner pressure), calibrated at least every 12 months. It measures pressure, not combustion — that is the analyser job.

mbar

Acronym
CCN1CKR1

Millibar

Pressure unit used in gas work. NG nominal at the meter ≈ 21 mbar; permissible installation drop to the appliance ≈ 1 mbar.

MCB

Acronym
CCN1

miniature circuit breaker

A resettable protective device that trips on overload or short circuit, replacing a rewireable fuse. It does not protect against electric shock the way an RCD does.

Means of isolation

Term
CCN1

A valve or other device that lets the gas supply to an appliance be turned off. Every appliance should, where practicable, have a means of isolation at its inlet; a remote outdoor appliance needs an accessible control where the pipe leaves the building.

Methane

Term
CCN1

CH₄

The main constituent of natural gas (chemical formula CH₄). It is lighter than air (relative density about 0.6) so it rises and collects high up, and its flammability limits in air are roughly 5–15%.

MI(s)

Acronym
CCN1CENWAT1CKR1CPA1HTR1

Manufacturer's Instructions

The maker's installation/servicing instructions; always take precedence over the British Standard fall-back.

MIV

Acronym

Medium-Pressure Isolation Valve

An isolation valve fitted upstream of the regulator on a medium-pressure meter installation.

Modulation (modulating burner)

Term

The ability of a boiler to vary its output up and down to match demand, rather than simply cycling full-on/full-off. Improves comfort and efficiency and keeps the boiler condensing for longer.

MOP

Acronym

Maximum Operating Pressure

The highest pressure at which a system is designed to run continuously; above about 75 mbar a domestic supply is treated as medium pressure.

Motorised (zone) valve

Term
CENWAT

A valve driven by a small motor that opens or closes a heating zone (or the hot-water circuit) on a signal from a thermostat or programmer. In S-plan and Y-plan systems these valves are part of the boiler-interlock wiring that stops the boiler firing with no demand.

Motorised valve (zone valve)

Term

An electrically operated 2-port or 3-port valve that opens or closes a heating/hot-water circuit on demand from a thermostat or programmer — a key part of achieving boiler interlock.

MP / LP

Acronym
CCN1CKR1

Medium Pressure / Low Pressure

Medium pressure is above 75 mbar; a regulator reduces it to the domestic operating pressure of about 21 mbar.

Multifunctional valve (MFV)

Term
CCN1

A single valve body that combines several controls — typically a governor (regulator), a flame supervision device and a solenoid — used on many modern appliances.

Multipoint water heater

Term

An instantaneous gas water heater that supplies hot water to several outlets from one unit, as opposed to a single-point heater serving one tap.

National Gas Emergency Service

Term
CCN1CENWATHTR1

The free, 24-hour line to report a gas escape, a suspected carbon monoxide problem or a gas emergency in Great Britain: 0800 111 999. The operator can send an emergency engineer who has legal powers to make the situation safe, including disconnecting the supply.

NCS

Term
CCN1CENWAT1HTR1

Not to Current Standards

A former category withdrawn in 2015; non-compliances are still advised to the customer but NCS is no longer a formal class.

NDIR

Acronym
CPA1

Non-Dispersive InfraRed

A sensor type required for measuring ambient room CO₂ — calculated-CO₂ flue analysers are not suitable for ambient air.

NG

Term
CCN1CKR1

Natural Gas

Mains gas, mainly methane (CH₄), lighter than air. Nominal operating pressure ≈ 21 mbar at the meter.

Non-contact voltage detector

Term
CCN1

voltage stick

A 'voltage stick' that indicates the presence of mains voltage without contact. Use it to prove an appliance's metalwork or pipework is not live before you touch it, because a fault elsewhere can make exposed metal live. It is a presence indicator, not a substitute for a GS38 test when working on live mains.

Non-return valve

Term
CENWAT

A valve that allows flow in one direction only. On a positive-pressure communal flue (CFS(PP)), every appliance exhaust needs a non-return valve so products cannot be pushed back into other dwellings when that appliance is off.

NOₓ

Term

Oxides of nitrogen

Formed at high flame temperatures; a small part of the flue products alongside CO₂, water vapour and nitrogen.

Observation period

Term
CCN1

tightness observation period

The timed part of a tightness test during which the gauge is watched for any drop (commonly about two minutes for a domestic natural-gas installation — confirm against the current IGEM/UP/1B). 'No perceptible movement' is taken as about 0.25 mbar on a water gauge or 0.2 mbar on an electronic gauge.

Open vent (safety) pipe

Term
CENWAT

The pipe in an open-vented system that rises from the system and discharges over the feed-and-expansion cistern, giving heat and pressure a permanent safe escape path. It must never be valved or blocked.

Open-flued (Type B)

Term
CCN1CENWAT1CPA1HTR1

Takes combustion air from the room and discharges via a flue; needs room ventilation and a spillage test.

Open-vented system

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

A heating system that takes up expansion through a feed-and-expansion cistern at the high point plus an open vent (safety) pipe. It admits air, so is more corrosion-prone than a sealed system.

Openable window

Term
CKR1

An opening window or door to outside required in any room with a flueless appliance such as a cooker, so combustion products can clear. The requirement scales with room volume — over 10 m³ generally needs only the openable window, while smaller kitchens also need a permanent air vent (verify against the current BS 5440-2).

Operating pressure (working pressure)

Term

The standing gas pressure supplied to the appliance — nominally 21 mbar at the meter for NG (acceptable about 19–23 mbar). BS 6891 limits the drop from meter to appliance to 1 mbar (2.5 mbar for LPG).

Oxygen (O₂)

Term
CPA1

O₂

The gas (20.9% of fresh air) whose depletion in the flue stream most analysers measure in order to calculate CO₂. When positioning the probe you seek the highest steady CO₂, equivalently the lowest steady O₂, to confirm you are in the well-mixed products.

Particulate filter

Term

The filter that removes soot and dust from the flue-gas sample before it reaches the analyser's sensors. Replaced when dirty; the instrument must never be run without it.

Passive stack ventilation (PSV)

Term
HTR1

A natural (fan-free) ventilation duct that uses stack effect to extract stale air. Keep a PSV outlet clear of an open-flue chimney outlet so the two don't set up a pressure gradient that pulls products back down the flue.

PE

Acronym
CCN1

Polyethylene

The material used for underground (buried) gas service/installation pipe; not used above ground inside buildings.

Perceptible movement

Term

Gauge readable movement (GRM)

Edition 4's numerical definition of gauge movement: up to 0.25 mbar on a water (fluid) gauge, or 0.2 mbar on a high-resolution electronic gauge, counts as 'no perceptible movement'. Above this on the pipework-only retest is a fail.

Permissible pressure drop

Term
CCN1

The largest pressure fall a tightness test may show and still pass. Under IGEM/UP/1B Edition 4 the figure (with appliances connected) is tied to the installation volume (IV) rather than a single fixed number; pipework alone must show no perceptible movement.

Pipework-only retest

Term

An IGEM/UP/1B Edition 4 step: after a test with appliances connected passes within the permissible drop, the appliances are isolated and the pipework alone is retested — it must show no perceptible movement, or it fails.

Plate heat exchanger

Term
CENWAT

A compact stack of thin plates in a combi boiler that transfers heat from the central-heating water to the incoming mains water to make instantaneous hot water. Vulnerable to scaling in hard-water areas, so scale reduction may be needed.

Plume management

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

A kit that redirects the visible condensate plume from a condensing flue terminal away from where it would cause a nuisance (BS 5440-1 / MIs).

PME (TN-C-S)

Acronym
CCN1

Protective Multiple Earth

The common UK earthing arrangement where the supplier's combined neutral-and-earth (PEN) conductor splits into separate neutral and earth at the service head. Because earth and neutral share a conductor up to that point, correct main protective bonding of metal services is essential.

ppm

Term
CKR1CPA1

Parts per million

Concentration unit. 1% = 10,000 ppm, so to convert a CO reading in ppm to a percentage, divide by 10,000.

Pre-cast flue block

Term

A flue formed from concrete or clay blocks built into a wall, common with back boilers and inset fires. Requires careful inspection for cross-leakage, correct route and a suitable terminal.

Precast flue block

Term
CCN1HTR1

A flue built into a wall from purpose-made concrete or clay blocks, common with inset and decorative fuel-effect fires. It must be confirmed suitable for the specific appliance, with adequate catchment space, before use.

Press-fit joint

Term

Press-fit (crimped) joint

A mechanical pipe joint made by crimping a gas-rated fitting; its yellow identification bands must remain visible after pressing.

Primary air

Term
CCN1

Air mixed with the gas before the burner ports (pre-aerated burner), giving a crisp blue flame.

Primary flue

Term
CCN1

On an open-flued appliance, the flue between the appliance outlet and the draught diverter.

Products of combustion (POC)

Term

The gases produced when gas burns — mainly carbon dioxide, water vapour and nitrogen when combustion is complete, plus carbon monoxide when it is not. A flue's job is to carry the POC safely outside.

Programmer (time control)

Term

The time control that switches heating and hot water on and off to a schedule. Part of a compliant control system and a contributor to boiler interlock.

Programmer / time switch

Term
CENWAT

A control that sets the hours during which heating and hot water are available. A programmer can set heating and hot water independently; a time switch is a simpler single-channel version. Part of the boiler-interlock control arrangement.

Protected escape route

Term
CCN1

A circulation route (such as a communal hallway or stairwell) that must stay usable in a fire. Gas pipe there may use only screwed or welded steel joints — no compression, capillary or push-fit — and any duct is vented high and low to outside.

PRV

Acronym
CENWAT1

Pressure Relief Valve (safety valve)

On a sealed system, typically set at 3 bar; discharges via a pipe to a safe, visible external point.

Purge volume

Term

Purge Volume (PV)

The volume moved when purging an installation of air or gas; commonly taken as 1.5 × the Installation Volume (IV).

Purging

Term
CCN1CPA1

Displacing air with gas (or gas with air on decommissioning) so no flammable mixture is left in the pipework. Volume set by Installation Volume in UP/1B Ed 4.

Purpose-provided air vent

Term
CKR1

A permanent, non-closable opening built through the structure specifically to supply combustion air — the only ventilation that counts toward an appliance's air requirement.

Purpose-provided air vent

Term
CKR1

x

Radiant / convector fire

Term
HTR1

A gas fire that heats by radiation (glowing elements) and/or convection (warmed air). Covered by BS 5871-1.

Range-rating

Term
CPA1

Adjusting an appliance's heat input within the manufacturer's permitted range. For combustion testing, run a range-rated appliance at its maximum designed heat input (the worst case), then return the operating pressure to the user's as-found setting and re-test.

RCD

Acronym
CCN1

residual current device

A protective device that trips in milliseconds when it detects an earth-fault imbalance between live and neutral currents, guarding against electric shock. Distinct from an MCB (overload/short circuit) and a fuse (sacrificial).

RD

Term
CCN1

Relative Density

Density relative to air. Natural gas ≈ 0.6 (rises); LPG ≈ 1.5+ (sinks). This changes how you search for and ventilate an escape.

Reg 26(9)

Term
CCN1CKR1

The GSIUR duty to examine an appliance immediately after working on it. You must check the effectiveness of any flue, the supply of combustion air, the operating pressure or heat input (or both), and that the appliance operates safely. These checks do not apply when an appliance is being permanently removed.

Reg 35

Term
CCN1

The GSIUR duty on an employer or self-employed person to keep gas fittings, pipework and flues in a safe condition in any workplace under their control. (The landlord's equivalent duty for let homes is set out separately in the Regulations.)

Reg 5

Term
CCN1

The GSIUR requirement that gas fittings be of good construction and sound material and installed properly. Lead and lead alloys must not be used for gas pipes or fittings.

Regular (heat-only) boiler

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

A boiler that only heats water and relies on an external pump and a separate cylinder; used on open-vented or sealed systems.

Regulator

Term
CCN1

governor

A device that holds gas pressure roughly constant despite changes in flow. The primary meter regulator holds domestic supply at about 21 mbar and should droop slightly with flow (about 22 mbar at low flow to 20 mbar at full load). Gas escaping from its breather hole usually means a ruptured diaphragm. Its seal may be broken only by the gas transporter or an authorised person — being Gas Safe registered is not enough.

Regulator (governor)

Term

A device that controls and stabilises gas pressure. The meter regulator reduces the incoming service to the nominal working pressure (about 21 mbar for natural gas); appliance regulators set burner pressure. CCN1 covers checking and setting the meter regulator.

Responsible person

Term
CCN1CPA1

Under GSIUR, the person who occupies or is in control of premises (for example the occupier, or the owner where premises are unoccupied). You seek the responsible person's permission before disconnecting or turning off an unsafe appliance, and warning notices are issued to them.

RIDDOR

Acronym
CCN1

Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regs

The separate reporting regime for certain gas incidents; distinct from the immediate make-safe duty.

Room thermostat

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

Controls air temperature in a reference room and forms part of the boiler interlock; the room containing it should not have a TRV.

Room volume

Term
CCN1CKR1

The size of a room in m³ (length × width × height), used to size ventilation for flueless appliances and cookers, which keep their products in the room. For example a cooker in under 5 m³ needs an openable window plus about 100 cm²; over 10 m³ needs only an openable window.

Room-sealed (Type C)

Term
CCN1CENWAT1CPA1HTR1

Takes combustion air from, and discharges products to, outside through a sealed circuit; needs no combustion ventilation to the room.

S-plan / Y-plan

Term

Common heating layouts. S-plan uses separate 2-port zone valves for heating and hot water; Y-plan uses a single 3-port mid-position valve. Both give full interlock when correctly wired.

Sampling probe

Term
CPA1

The analyser's flue probe. Insert it about 200 mm into the well-mixed core of the products stream; too shallow (20–50 mm) sits in the dilution zone near the edge and reads low. Fine-tune its position for the highest steady CO₂ (lowest steady O₂).

Scale reduction

Term
CENWAT

Treating hard cold water feeding a combi's hot-water side (by scale-reducing or softening, per the MIs and BS 7593) to protect the plate heat exchanger. Excessive scale insulates a heat exchanger, making it overheat and ultimately fail.

SE-duct / U-duct

Term
CCN1HTR1

Shared vertical flue/air systems for room-sealed appliances in multi-storey buildings; appliances draw air from and discharge into the common duct.

Sealed system

Term
CCN1CENWATCENWAT1

A pressurised heating system with no cistern; expansion is absorbed by a diaphragm expansion vessel and protected by a pressure relief valve (typically 3 bar), a gauge and a filling point.

Secondary air

Term
CCN1

Air supplied at or after the flame (post-aerated burner), as on a flueless cooker hob.

Secondary flue

Term
CCN1CENWATCENWAT1HTR1

On an open-flued appliance, the flue between the draught diverter and the terminal.

Service pipe

Term
CCN1

The pipe that carries gas from the gas main in the street to the meter and ECV at a property (compare the distribution main, which runs along the street). A building or extension constructed over a live gas service pipe is normally classed At Risk and referred to the gas transporter.

Single-point water heater

Term

An instantaneous gas water heater serving one outlet only (e.g. an over-sink heater), as opposed to a multipoint serving several.

Sleeping accommodation

Term
HTR1

A room used for sleeping, which carries a special GSIUR rule: an open-flued gas fire is allowed up to 14 kW net only if it is room-sealed or fitted with a suitable atmosphere-sensing device; over 14 kW net it must be room-sealed. A sleeping occupant cannot react to a build-up of products, so the appliance must protect itself.

Sleeve

Term
CCN1

A continuous tube protecting pipe through a wall or cavity, sealed at the inner face with a flexible fire-resistant compound.

Smoke pellet / smoke match

Term
CCN1HTR1

Smoke-producing aids for flue testing: a smoke pellet for the flue flow test (to show the empty flue draws and is clear) and a smoke match held at the draught diverter for the spillage test.

Soakaway

Term

A purpose-designed below-ground pit that disperses condensate into the ground, used as an external termination where no drain is available. Designed per BS 6798 / the boiler manufacturer's instructions.

Spillage test

Term
CCN1CENWAT1HTR1

A smoke match at the appliance proves combustion products clear into the flue and don't spill into the room. Carried out with extract fans running.

Stabilisation

Term

A short settling period before the tightness test is timed, letting gas temperature and pressure settle so a small temperature change is not mistaken for a leak.

Stabilisation period

Term
CCN1

A short settling time at the start of a tightness test (about one minute for domestic natural gas to IGEM/UP/1B Edition 4) that lets the gas temperature and pressure steady before the let-by check and the timed test begin.

Stability device

Term
CKR1

A chain or bracket securing a freestanding cooker so it cannot tip when a load is applied to an open oven door or hotplate (BS 6172 / MIs).

Standing pressure

Term

The gas pressure measured with no gas flowing (all appliances off). Compared with the working pressure (appliances running) to check the regulator and the size of any pressure drop along the installation.

Stoichiometric

Term
CCN1

The exact air-to-gas ratio for complete combustion. Natural gas needs about 10 m³ of air (≈2 m³ oxygen) per 1 m³ of gas.

Storage water heater

Term

A water heater that heats and stores a volume of hot water ready for use, kept at temperature (around 60 °C) to limit Legionella.

Sweep test

Term
CPA1

Part of atmosphere analysis: moving the analyser slowly around, above and below an appliance for at least two minutes so small leaks around casings and draught diverters show up. Wear a personal audible CO alarm and confirm the air is safe before any other work.

System boiler

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

A boiler with the circulating pump and expansion vessel built into its casing, used on a sealed system with a separate hot-water cylinder.

System flush (cleanse)

Term

Cleaning a heating system (e.g. a dynamic flush or power flush) to remove installation debris and sludge before commissioning, after which inhibitor is dosed, per BS 7593.

Temperature & pressure relief valve (TPRV)

Term

The last-line safety valve on an unvented hot water cylinder, releasing water if temperature or pressure rises too far (typically around 90–95 °C or about 7 bar). Discharges via the tundish and discharge pipe to a safe place. A G3 requirement.

Temperature/pressure relief valve

Term
CENWAT

A safety valve on an unvented hot-water cylinder that releases water if temperature or pressure rises too high, discharging safely through a tundish and pipe. It is one of the layered controls (with a control thermostat and a non-self-resetting high-limit energy cut-out) that make an unvented cylinder safe.

Temporary continuity bond

Term
CCN1

A bonding lead clamped across a pipe before you break into it, so electrical continuity is maintained and you are not relying on the gas pipe to carry current while it is parted. It is removed after the joint is remade, and is different from permanent main protective bonding.

Terminal guard

Term
CCN1HTR1

A cage fitted over a flue terminal that is low or vulnerable, protecting it from damage and keeping it clear.

Thermal cut-out (energy cut-out)

Term

A high-limit safety device on an unvented or storage system that cuts the heat source if the cylinder thermostat fails and the water overheats — a second layer of temperature protection.

Thermocouple

Term
CCN1CKR1

A sensor used in many flame supervision devices. Heated by the flame it generates a small voltage (millivolts) that energises an electromagnet holding the gas valve open; when the flame goes out it cools, the voltage falls and the valve shuts (drops out).

Thermostatic mixing valve (TMV)

Term

A valve that blends stored hot water with cold to limit the temperature at the outlet (e.g. about 48 °C at baths) for scald protection, while the cylinder stays stored hot (≥60 °C) for Legionella control.

Tightness test

Term
CCN1CKR1HTR1

Proves the installation holds pressure with no perceptible drop. For domestic NG: stabilise, 1-minute let-by, then a 2-minute test.

Transfer vent

Term
CCN1

series vent

An air vent in an internal wall that transfers combustion air from one room to another. It is sited low (not more than 450 mm above the floor), and where air passes through two or more internal walls the vents are increased by 50% (×1.5).

Trickle ventilator

Term

An adjustable background-ventilation opening, often in a window frame; because it can be closed it cannot be counted as combustion-air provision.

TRV

Acronym

Thermostatic Radiator Valve

Gives local radiator control; fitted everywhere except the room with the controlling room thermostat. Does not by itself provide boiler interlock.

Tundish

Term
CENWATCENWAT1

An open air-break in the discharge pipe of an unvented cylinder safety valve, giving a visible discharge to a safe point.

Unvented hot water

Term
CENWAT1

Mains-pressure stored hot water; needs layered temperature/pressure safety controls and a competent (G3) installer under Building Regs Part G.

UPSO

Acronym

Under-Pressure Shut-Off

A safety device that closes if gas pressure falls below a set value; it must be reset by hand once the cause is cleared.

VERTEX flue (C7/C72)

Term
CENWAT

A room-sealed flue arrangement that takes combustion air high up in outside air, with the draught break at least 300 mm above any insulation. Coded C7/C72.

Vitiation

Term
HTR1

Air whose oxygen content has been depleted, usually by recirculated combustion products; promotes incomplete combustion and CO.

Warning notice

Term
CCN1

A label attached to an appliance turned off under the GIUSP, stating it must not be used. A copy is left with the customer and the action recorded.

Water trap

Term

The chamber on an analyser sample line that removes condensate from the flue-gas sample so moisture can't reach and damage the sensors.

Weather/load compensation

Term

Boiler controls that adjust the flow temperature to outside (weather) or room (load) conditions, keeping the boiler modulating and condensing for efficiency. Recognised Boiler Plus efficiency measures.

Wobbe number

Term

A measure of the heat a gas delivers through a given injector — calorific value divided by the square root of relative density. Gases with the same Wobbe number behave similarly through the same appliance, which is why supply quality is controlled within limits.

Working pressure

Term
CCN1

operating pressure

The gas pressure measured at the appliance while it is running (about 21 mbar nominal for domestic natural gas). Low working pressure comes from undersized or blocked pipe or a faulty regulator — never from over-sized pipe. A step-change in pressure between two adjacent test points points to a local restriction or blockage there.

Yellow tipping

Term

Yellow tips on an otherwise blue flame, indicating incomplete combustion (usually too little primary air) on most appliances. Note: DFE and ILFE fires are designed to burn yellow, so this does not apply to them.

Zeroing (purging)

Term
CPA1

Switching the analyser on and letting it set its baseline in fresh air, away from the appliance, before sampling. Zeroing in the flue or in the products would set a false baseline and corrupt every reading that follows.