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Leak Detection West Drayton

Hidden water leaks in West Drayton pinpointed without opening floors or walls — acoustic, thermal imaging and tracer gas detection with no find, no fee, from engineers who know West Drayton buildings.

No find, no fee Same-day in West Drayton Insurer-ready reports

Local knowledge

West Drayton housing, from a leak engineer's side

West Drayton, on the borough's western edge near the Colne Valley and just north of Heathrow, is largely post-war: 1950s and 1960s semis and terraces alongside newer estates and apartment blocks built around the station since the Elizabeth line arrived. Most houses sit on solid concrete ground floors with heating originally laid in the screed, while the modern flats use manifold-fed buried circuits. Both make leaks hard to find, as escaping water disappears into concrete instead of pooling. Ageing pipework in the older homes and rerouted plumbing under extensions add hidden joints. The usual signs are a warm patch on the floor, a boiler that keeps losing pressure and a faint musty smell rather than any visible drip.

Engineer's note

West Drayton is mostly solid floors, from post-war semis to new station-area flats, so I start by working out the floor construction and where the heating runs. I isolate the heating from the mains, pressure test each separately, then charge the heating with tracer gas so it rises through the concrete at the fault. Thermal imaging maps the warm circuit first, and you receive a full insurer-ready trace and access report.

Covered in West Drayton

  • Hidden leaks under floors and in walls
  • Underground supply pipe leaks
  • Central heating and boiler pressure loss
  • Underfloor heating loop leaks
  • Flat-to-flat leak origin investigations
  • Trace & access reports for insurance claims

What fails here

Common leak problems in West Drayton

01

Screed heating leak in a post-war semi

West Drayton's 1950s and 1960s houses often have heating pipes cast into the concrete ground floor, so a pinhole leaks continuously into the slab with nothing showing above. The boiler loses pressure and a strip of floor feels warm. We drain and charge the heating with tracer gas, which permeates up through the concrete at the exact fault, letting us reach the leak by lifting a single tile rather than breaking out the whole floor.

02

Manifold circuit leak in station-area apartments

The newer flats built around West Drayton station run buried heating loops fed from a central manifold. When one loop fails the system bleeds pressure while the water soaks into the screed. We close each loop at the manifold and pressure test them individually to find the losing circuit, then trace it with tracer gas so any lifting is confined to a small patch of a finished apartment floor.

03

Extension joint leaking under newer screed

Rear extensions on West Drayton homes typically bury rerouted heating and water pipes in fresh screed teed off the original runs. These transition joints fail more often than any other point, and damp appears where the old house meets the new floor. We pressure test the extension circuit alone, then use tracer gas to surface the leak through the screed at the failed joint.

04

Underground mains leak near the incoming supply

The water main serving a West Drayton property runs beneath the front garden or drive and can leak underground without ever showing indoors. The signs are a meter that never stops, a permanently soggy patch of ground and weak pressure at the taps. We use acoustic ground microphones and correlation to pinpoint the buried leak, so excavation is limited to the exact fault rather than the whole run.

Three methods, one marked point

Acoustic survey

Ground microphones and correlators follow the sound of escaping water through floors and ground.

Thermal imaging

Infrared cameras reveal wet patches and buried heating runs through the floor surface.

Tracer gas

A safe hydrogen mix escapes through the exact failure point and rises to our surface detector.

Leak detection in West Drayton — FAQs

How quickly can you attend a leak in West Drayton?

Same-day appointments are usually available in West Drayton and across Hillingdon, and next-day almost always. If water is actively escaping, say so when you book — live leaks are prioritised and we can talk you through isolating the supply while the engineer travels.

What does leak detection cost in West Drayton?

A fixed fee agreed at booking — typically £250–£450 for a domestic detection visit — covered by no find, no fee. That includes pressure testing per circuit, thermal imaging, acoustic survey and moisture mapping. Repairs are quoted separately before any work starts.

Do you know West Drayton properties?

Yes — West Drayton, on the borough's western edge near the Colne Valley and just north of Heathrow, is largely post-war: 1950s and 1960s semis and terraces alongside newer estates and apartment blocks built around the station since the Elizabeth line arrived. Most houses sit on solid concrete ground floors with heating originally laid in the screed, while the modern flats use manifold-fed buried circuits. Both make leaks hard to find, as escaping water disappears into concrete instead of pooling. Ageing pipework in the older homes and rerouted plumbing under extensions add hidden joints. The usual signs are a warm patch on the floor, a boiler that keeps losing pressure and a faint musty smell rather than any visible drip.

Can you provide a report for my insurer?

Every West Drayton detection visit can produce an insurer-ready trace and access report — cause, precise origin, methods used, moisture map and photos — typically within 48 hours.

Where we work

West Drayton & Hillingdon

Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors.

Losing water in West Drayton?

Tell us the symptoms and your postcode. Fixed detection fee, agreed arrival window, no find no fee — confirmed before you book.

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020 7123 8560