Discuss Potential systems without a room stat in the USA area at PlumbersForums.net

Messages
8
I would love some phrases or sentences from an expert to describe central heating boiler configurations with just feedback from TRVs (no room stat in the design).

If there are some configurations, manufacturers or combinations which work better for TRV-only it would be great to hear those ideas too.

I want to brief some UK, Europe installers who are coming to survey and quote for a new boiler. I just don't know the right words or reference hardware to mention so I don't end up with a conventional system and yet another bloomin' room stat.

BACKGROUND

I'm fed up with dealing with a room stat as an interlock to turn off the boiler. I've given up trying to explain to the family how the thing works and the song-and-dance of finding the wireless stat, checking its battery, checking it's in range, moving it into the right room, moving it back when the room isn't occupied or the TRV is turned down, with the feedback loop (or the missing feedback loop) routinely turning the house into an oven or an ice-box.

It's tempting to fall back on setting it to max and pinning it in the hall making it effectively always on, but given the existence of a bypass radiator which kicks out so much heat, this is simply a waste, and it doesn't even work properly as it'll take a while before a newly-opened TRV ever gets heat if the room-stat in the hall is already baking.

I am completely replacing my boiler now as the previous one got rain-damaged from a faulty flue installation. Now is my chance to ask the installer for a modern system which can use feedback from a fully-TRV system. Then to make a room hot, you just open the TRV, and people can expect the radiator to heat that room to that temperature fairly quickly.

The problem is that I don't know the right words for systems which operate this way. I've heard of some all-in-one systems which are designed to work this way. Welcome everyone's thoughts.
 
Problem is it’s very inefficient as it will be on all the time when you set the program on the timer

Your better off binning the trvs and just going for lockshield valves and designing the system to run at 30-35 dc which will mean upgrading your rads
 
Thanks for your help, Shaun.

The systems I'm aiming for would shut down the pump and the boiler when the TRVs aren't flowing, which I thought would ensure efficiency. Then it would only reactivate when flow is detected through one of the TRVs opening. Or are you already anticipating this kind of system and saying that it's inefficient? Where does the inefficiency come from?

I'm not sure I understand "going for lockshield valves and designing the system to run at 30-35 dc". I tried to search for 30-35 dc on google but I couldn't get a match.
 
Here's some of the references I dug up about it, but still pretty vague on the proper wording I need to dig out from these specs, and whether there are different variations on how to deploy without a room stat...

Conservation of fuel & power in Approved Document L1 Design & Construction on page 16 paragraph 1.41 (b) 'Boiler control interlocks' indicates that a flow switch is enough interlock for regs.

"The Baxi HE Plus boi[l]ers and the Potterton Promax has integral flow switches so that TRVs can be fitted on all rads. When TRVs are all closed the boiler switches off via the flowswitch. The boiler periodically tests the to see if the TRVs have opened up."

"The interlock for the CH circuit can be provided by
either a Room Thermostat or a fully TRV’d system with
the pump wired back to the boiler without a bypass.
Connection diagrams for both options for Y and S plan
systems are shown"

"This boiler does not require a bypass.
This boiler does not require a permanent live.
These diagrams only refer to pump protection for fully TRV’d systems"
 
I'm not sure I understand "going for lockshield valves and designing the system to run at 30-35 dc". I tried to search for 30-35 dc on google but I couldn't get a match.

OK thinking about your reply I think you mean given the inefficiency I may as well leave all the radiators in free-flow on all the time at 30-35 degrees Centigrade is that right?
 
What's the occupancy of the dwelling going to be? Are you at work all day and just want one or two rooms warm when home? Or are you at home all day?
 
Flow switch is for safety eg no flow of water eg no water in the system the boiler won’t fire it’s not for when the trvs shut

And it’s well know for the baxi ones to fail and melt the heat exchanger
 
What's the occupancy of the dwelling going to be? Are you at work all day and just want one or two rooms warm when home? Or are you at home all day?

It has varied wildly. A lot of the week it's just me occupying one room all day, (work from home in one of the bedrooms), but when my 9 year old is staying (half the time) she's all over depending where she's playing, or doing homework or project work in the workshop. It's nice to be able to choose which rooms we are using. Probably 50% of the rooms are unused any one particular day. Not long ago we had all 4 bedrooms occupied, with a Russian visitor and her son who were always battling with the heating when they arrived home and I wasn't in. Ending up baking some part while another was tepid or frozen. I tried my best to explain how the 'turner-offer' worked and how you had to be sure it was in the right place both to keep the heating on, but also to make sure it didn't overrun. Not much luck. It's destined to fail and pretty complicated to think about. People just want to be able to say 'this room should be normal please' without playing chess with the room stat. I'd love to be able to tell people - just put the Radiator to 2 and it'll heat up in 10 minutes. It's an old victorian house so the rooms in the roof take a lot more than others given their level of insulation. I'm working on fixing that.
 
And it’s well know for the baxi ones to fail and melt the heat exchanger

Thanks, Shaun. That's just the kind of thing it's worth knowing - if the systems that CLAIM to be able to do this are just plain dangerous maybe I should opt back into the room stat systems. I'd love not to have to deal with another two decades of room stat shenanigans if there are legit systems which do this properly. I'm not just after the cheapest there is, so if there's a more mature system that can do this properly I'd be willing to invest.
 
Evo home with there trv heads ? You can control each room individually
 

Reply to Potential systems without a room stat in the USA area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

Hi, I just moved into a new house and it has a Glow Worm Compact 24c combi boiler and a ESI ESRTP4RF+ programmable room thermostat and I am...
Replies
6
Views
570
I have a home with an oil boiler in a garage turned into a flat, heating both flat and main house, running c plan with two pumps, two motorised...
Replies
0
Views
410
E
I reckon if I did a survey of 100 heating engineers, asking what would they recommend for heating a granny annexe being built onto the side of my...
Replies
0
Views
258
eco-heating options
E
I have a heating system comprised of skirting radiators that form part of a loop from the boiler, round the house and back. Some rooms get...
Replies
1
Views
151
Would like some help please as my Drayton Wiser system is a mess. I had 2 TRVs in the lounge, one in the main bedroom, the rest of the house - 6...
Replies
3
Views
456
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock