M
ma701ss
Hi,
I read somewhere today that the temperature on the front of the boiler, which I thought was just the temperature for the water supplied to the rads, is actually the temperature of the water that is supplied to the coil in the cylinder. Therefore, apparently if the cylinder thermostat is set to 60 degrees but the boiler temperature is set to 50 degrees, then the cylinder will never reach 60 degrees and so the boiler will always be on trying to heat the cylinder to 60 degrees but of course will never get there. This was from a CH engineer I believe but is this correct?
ma701ss
I read somewhere today that the temperature on the front of the boiler, which I thought was just the temperature for the water supplied to the rads, is actually the temperature of the water that is supplied to the coil in the cylinder. Therefore, apparently if the cylinder thermostat is set to 60 degrees but the boiler temperature is set to 50 degrees, then the cylinder will never reach 60 degrees and so the boiler will always be on trying to heat the cylinder to 60 degrees but of course will never get there. This was from a CH engineer I believe but is this correct?
ma701ss