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Leak Detection Cheam

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

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

Local knowledge

Cheam housing, from a leak engineer's side

Cheam runs from the older village core around the church out to broad interwar streets of bay-fronted semis and detached family houses. The village has genuinely old fabric alongside 1920s and 1930s stock, most of it plumbed and re-plumbed in copper over the years. Hard chalk water scales that copper steadily, and on hot-water circuits the scale weakens soldered joints until they weep. With bathrooms often over heated floor voids and pipe runs chased into solid walls, a leak in Cheam usually hides in the structure and surfaces slowly as a stain, a warm patch or a quiet loss of system pressure rather than an obvious flood.

Engineer's note

Cheam's mix of village-core fabric and interwar semis means scaled hot-water joints in floor voids and chased walls are the usual find. I work the hot circuit first with thermal imaging, confirm which loop has failed by per-circuit pressure testing, and use acoustic listening under bathroom floors to pin the leak before a single tile comes up.

Covered in Cheam

  • 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 Cheam

01

Weeping hot joints in interwar semis

Cheam's 1920s and 1930s semis carry long copper runs that hard water has scaled from within for decades. On the hot-water side that scale thins and strains soldered joints tucked into floor voids and stud walls. The leak is warm and slow, so it soaks timber quietly and drops hot-water pressure before any drip appears. Thermal imaging and acoustic listening trace the failing joint precisely, keeping repairs to a single opening.

02

Under-floor bathroom leaks over heating runs

Upstairs bathrooms in Cheam frequently sit above heating pipes threaded through the floor. A pinhole in a hot run wets the screed and joists without pooling on the tiles, and the first sign is often a ceiling stain in the room below. Lifting the whole floor to hunt for it is disruptive and unnecessary. We locate the exact wet run with acoustic detection and thermal imaging, then agree a fixed fee before opening the floor.

03

Old pipework in the village core

Properties around the old village centre mix genuinely old fabric with later additions, and successive plumbing works leave a patchwork of pipe ages and materials. Joints between scaled older copper and newer sections are common failure points, weeping into solid walls where damp spreads before it shows. Non-invasive detection and moisture mapping separate a live leak from historic damp so works target the real fault.

04

Solid-wall pipe runs staining plaster

In many Cheam houses hot and cold feeds are chased into solid walls and plastered over. A slow leak inside the chase tracks down the wall and blooms as a damp, discoloured patch on the plaster, often some distance below the actual fault. Thermal imaging reads the temperature difference of a leaking hot pipe behind the plaster, so we open the wall at the source rather than chasing the stain.

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 Cheam — FAQs

How quickly can you attend a leak in Cheam?

Same-day appointments are usually available in Cheam and across Sutton, 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 Cheam?

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 Cheam properties?

Yes — Cheam runs from the older village core around the church out to broad interwar streets of bay-fronted semis and detached family houses. The village has genuinely old fabric alongside 1920s and 1930s stock, most of it plumbed and re-plumbed in copper over the years. Hard chalk water scales that copper steadily, and on hot-water circuits the scale weakens soldered joints until they weep. With bathrooms often over heated floor voids and pipe runs chased into solid walls, a leak in Cheam usually hides in the structure and surfaces slowly as a stain, a warm patch or a quiet loss of system pressure rather than an obvious flood.

Can you provide a report for my insurer?

Every Cheam 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

Cheam & Sutton

Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors.

Losing water in Cheam?

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

Book a detection visit
Leak Detection 24/7
020 7123 8560