We are a few months into our Viessmann Vitodens 100-W 19KW Heat Only boiler and it is working fine.
We replaced an old 1999 Baxi. Our house is a 2 bathroom 4 bed detatched, built 1999.
The engineer did not really know the Viessmann boiler and I am not convinced his approach of “turn everything up” was the right one! I have experimented with flow temp and pump flow rates and have a reasonable feel for that now.
Anyway, I am after some advice on weather compensation. It is clear that when it is colder (like when we had the cold snap), I have to up the flow temps into the 70 degree area... then when it is milder (like now today on Christmas Eve) I can be at 65 degs. Maybe lower... I see flow returns of around 12 degrees below the send temp. 65 degs send definitely buys me a circa 50 degree return.
Of course I am trying to keep flow temps as low as possible for efficiency and I do monitor send and return temps using little probes at the boiler.
We are using the Honeywell T6R-HW to programme room temp schedule and geofencing. This also does the DHW schedule.
Remember this is a Heat only version of the boiler. It does not support Opentherm.
So
1. If I fitted the outside weather compensation sensor and changed the boiler mode to weather compensation (having chosen a suitable heating curve and level)… How would we schedule central heating on/off with the Honeywell T6R? Can we do that? Would there be confusion? The T6R wants to cycle the command for heat based on room temperature and in weather compensation, the boiler is trying to follow a curve. How do you actually programme alternative heat targets for day and night as we do now? How would you turn the heating off when everyone is away as we do now with geofencing. Can the T6R and WC co-exist?
2. How does the DHW switching work in WC? Is it the same? … IE will the existing schedule for DHW in the T6R still work? Can a higher hot water priority flow temperature be set when we are calling for hot water?
It is really hard to find explanations of this stuff in the Viessmann manuals and I have read them all!
Thanks in advance
I hope you can help.
Mark
We replaced an old 1999 Baxi. Our house is a 2 bathroom 4 bed detatched, built 1999.
The engineer did not really know the Viessmann boiler and I am not convinced his approach of “turn everything up” was the right one! I have experimented with flow temp and pump flow rates and have a reasonable feel for that now.
Anyway, I am after some advice on weather compensation. It is clear that when it is colder (like when we had the cold snap), I have to up the flow temps into the 70 degree area... then when it is milder (like now today on Christmas Eve) I can be at 65 degs. Maybe lower... I see flow returns of around 12 degrees below the send temp. 65 degs send definitely buys me a circa 50 degree return.
Of course I am trying to keep flow temps as low as possible for efficiency and I do monitor send and return temps using little probes at the boiler.
We are using the Honeywell T6R-HW to programme room temp schedule and geofencing. This also does the DHW schedule.
Remember this is a Heat only version of the boiler. It does not support Opentherm.
So
1. If I fitted the outside weather compensation sensor and changed the boiler mode to weather compensation (having chosen a suitable heating curve and level)… How would we schedule central heating on/off with the Honeywell T6R? Can we do that? Would there be confusion? The T6R wants to cycle the command for heat based on room temperature and in weather compensation, the boiler is trying to follow a curve. How do you actually programme alternative heat targets for day and night as we do now? How would you turn the heating off when everyone is away as we do now with geofencing. Can the T6R and WC co-exist?
2. How does the DHW switching work in WC? Is it the same? … IE will the existing schedule for DHW in the T6R still work? Can a higher hot water priority flow temperature be set when we are calling for hot water?
It is really hard to find explanations of this stuff in the Viessmann manuals and I have read them all!
Thanks in advance
I hope you can help.
Mark