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Hi everyone. I'm not a plumber (but God knows I wished I took a plumbing apprenticeship rather than aerospace engineering).
Sorry about this novel - I hope that someone can be bothered to read it.
My latest gas bill was £400 for 2 months (don't laugh - we had it on 24/7 to keep cats warm ffs, due to one of 3 cats that is insistent on spraying every surface in the house). And no, we can't kill the cat - without me getting it too.
The house is a medium semi-bungalow, with dormer. It ain't a mansion.
I have installed a full combi central heating system in a very small bungalow (which I believe is a lot harder than in a large house personally - it's hard work routing pipework neatly, in a concrete floored box), which taught me one, very important lesson: I do overtime in the job I'm skilled at, and I pay a plumber to do the job that they are good at.
It was probably a good learning experience, but the gloss wears off after 2 months of knee-cap crumbling pipe-fitting. ;-)
Before I call in a plumber however, I need to know that what I want is possible (otherwise - my current system is what it is).
I'm logically certain that there must be a way of having any (and every) individual thermostatically controlled radiator - control the boiler.
E.g. Each and every radiator should be able to thermostatically switch on / off, which then sends a signal to the boiler.
If the boiler is on already - all is good, if not, it must react and switch itself on.
When the last radiator has switched itself off, then the boiler must 'know' this and stop.
I envisage a wireless system, and the house enables good wifi signal throughout (I've experimented with wifi forwarders etc. also, which work well).
I want to get rid of the current, central 'house' thermostat in the hall.(Waste of time and space).
I have 10 radiators, with plans for another in the conservatory (which I expect to be the one to be switching on/off most regularly) - where the cats will reside when we're not in, or at night time.
P.S. the cats can get in / out of the conservatory due to a cat-flap that recognises individual electronic cat-tags.
I'm not sure how my house is piped, but I am hoping it is one main 'ring', with all radiators spurring off that. (I need to test that and the only way I can think of doing that, without pulling up all hard-wood floors is switch em all off - opening one thermostat at a time).
The current combi-boiler seems to be 16 years old, no problems experienced so far.
Vaillant Turbomax Plus 824E with 'boiler interlock' provided (according to the commissioning / service record). I assume that 'boiler interlock' means that it can be switched automatically - by the hall thermostat?
It has an analog, 24 hour, circular dial-type timer setting.
Here are the radiators:
Front room = 2
Hallway = 1
Bed Down 1 = 1
Bed Down 2 = 1
Bathroom Down = 1
Kitchen = 1
Bed Up 1 = 1
Bed Up 2 = 1
Bathroom Up = 1
Conservatory = (to be installed)
So, so far, I've come across the following, and before getting too enthused about 'Z-Wave' - I would appreciate some expert / experienced opinions - if you would be so kind (and if you're in the Lancs / Fylde area - I'd be happy to meet you / receive a quote (some new radiators are also required, and, this new setup may require a different boiler being fitted - I don't know)).
Here's the link to the products I've been looking at: Boiler-Radiator_Multizone | Vesternet
I want to control all radiator settings wirelessly.
Up to now, I THINK I'll need:
For 2 radiator living room: 2 x Fibaro Radiator Heat Controller Z-Wave Fibaro Heat Controller
For all other radiators: 8 / 9 x Z-Wave StellaZ Radiator Thermostat Z-Wave StellaZ Radiator Thermostat
For central 'control': 1 x Hub/Controller Controllers | SmartThings | Platforms | Smart Home | Vesternet
(I have Amazon hub and echo dots if that is relevant).
Questions:
1) Can this analog timer wiring be intercepted with a digitally controlled 'hub controller'?
2) Do I need this specific 'hub', or does the Amazon 'ALEXA' hub have some capability?
My main criteria is: I want the boiler to switch on dependent on ANY radiator requiring it, and off when ALL radiators don't require it, with a pretty close second priority of: all radiator temperatures MUST be wifi controlled (even away from home).
Any ideas / suggestions welcome.
Red ;-)
Sorry about this novel - I hope that someone can be bothered to read it.
My latest gas bill was £400 for 2 months (don't laugh - we had it on 24/7 to keep cats warm ffs, due to one of 3 cats that is insistent on spraying every surface in the house). And no, we can't kill the cat - without me getting it too.
The house is a medium semi-bungalow, with dormer. It ain't a mansion.
I have installed a full combi central heating system in a very small bungalow (which I believe is a lot harder than in a large house personally - it's hard work routing pipework neatly, in a concrete floored box), which taught me one, very important lesson: I do overtime in the job I'm skilled at, and I pay a plumber to do the job that they are good at.
It was probably a good learning experience, but the gloss wears off after 2 months of knee-cap crumbling pipe-fitting. ;-)
Before I call in a plumber however, I need to know that what I want is possible (otherwise - my current system is what it is).
I'm logically certain that there must be a way of having any (and every) individual thermostatically controlled radiator - control the boiler.
E.g. Each and every radiator should be able to thermostatically switch on / off, which then sends a signal to the boiler.
If the boiler is on already - all is good, if not, it must react and switch itself on.
When the last radiator has switched itself off, then the boiler must 'know' this and stop.
I envisage a wireless system, and the house enables good wifi signal throughout (I've experimented with wifi forwarders etc. also, which work well).
I want to get rid of the current, central 'house' thermostat in the hall.(Waste of time and space).
I have 10 radiators, with plans for another in the conservatory (which I expect to be the one to be switching on/off most regularly) - where the cats will reside when we're not in, or at night time.
P.S. the cats can get in / out of the conservatory due to a cat-flap that recognises individual electronic cat-tags.
I'm not sure how my house is piped, but I am hoping it is one main 'ring', with all radiators spurring off that. (I need to test that and the only way I can think of doing that, without pulling up all hard-wood floors is switch em all off - opening one thermostat at a time).
The current combi-boiler seems to be 16 years old, no problems experienced so far.
Vaillant Turbomax Plus 824E with 'boiler interlock' provided (according to the commissioning / service record). I assume that 'boiler interlock' means that it can be switched automatically - by the hall thermostat?
It has an analog, 24 hour, circular dial-type timer setting.
Here are the radiators:
Front room = 2
Hallway = 1
Bed Down 1 = 1
Bed Down 2 = 1
Bathroom Down = 1
Kitchen = 1
Bed Up 1 = 1
Bed Up 2 = 1
Bathroom Up = 1
Conservatory = (to be installed)
So, so far, I've come across the following, and before getting too enthused about 'Z-Wave' - I would appreciate some expert / experienced opinions - if you would be so kind (and if you're in the Lancs / Fylde area - I'd be happy to meet you / receive a quote (some new radiators are also required, and, this new setup may require a different boiler being fitted - I don't know)).
Here's the link to the products I've been looking at: Boiler-Radiator_Multizone | Vesternet
I want to control all radiator settings wirelessly.
Up to now, I THINK I'll need:
For 2 radiator living room: 2 x Fibaro Radiator Heat Controller Z-Wave Fibaro Heat Controller
For all other radiators: 8 / 9 x Z-Wave StellaZ Radiator Thermostat Z-Wave StellaZ Radiator Thermostat
For central 'control': 1 x Hub/Controller Controllers | SmartThings | Platforms | Smart Home | Vesternet
(I have Amazon hub and echo dots if that is relevant).
Questions:
1) Can this analog timer wiring be intercepted with a digitally controlled 'hub controller'?
2) Do I need this specific 'hub', or does the Amazon 'ALEXA' hub have some capability?
My main criteria is: I want the boiler to switch on dependent on ANY radiator requiring it, and off when ALL radiators don't require it, with a pretty close second priority of: all radiator temperatures MUST be wifi controlled (even away from home).
Any ideas / suggestions welcome.
Red ;-)