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| Dalemac |
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 Dalemac World Chat Champion

Joined: 15 Oct 2006 Karma :  
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 Posted: 19:07 - 07 Oct 2014 Post subject: I'm confused by my central heating... |
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Right. We have a combi boiler, a single channel timer and a thermostat.
Currently, when the thermostat is turned up, it clicks, the central heating comes on regardless of whatever program the single channel timer is on (on, off, auto, all day - it doesn't matter).
What's the point in having a single channel timer if as it doesn't actually do anything? I was under the impression that you set the thermostat to the desired temperature, and then when the single channel timer program kicks in, it brings the house up to temp accordingly. Likewise, when the program times out, the central heating is turned off. Thermostat stays where it is.
It's annoying because it means we have to either have the thermostat set constantly (basically always on) or get up and adjust the thermostat to get warm in the mornings.
I'd just like to add that the single channel timer was replaced over summer as the (very) old one died. I wired it up, but the behavior I mentioned above was identical under for the old single channel timer too.
What do I need to do the get this setup how I want? ____________________
YBR125 -> GPZ500S -> SL1000 |
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| andy_uk |
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 andy_uk World Chat Champion

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| Dalemac |
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 Dalemac World Chat Champion

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| dydey90 |
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 dydey90 World Chat Champion

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| Fowlersrs |
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 Fowlersrs World Chat Champion

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| Dalemac |
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 Dalemac World Chat Champion

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| Fowlersrs |
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 Fowlersrs World Chat Champion

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| Dalemac |
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 Dalemac World Chat Champion

Joined: 15 Oct 2006 Karma :  
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 Posted: 21:36 - 07 Oct 2014 Post subject: |
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My mistake. Multimeter 'malfunction' *cough*.
Yeah, neutral to live shows 242 volts permanently.
Now that i think about it, there was a piece of wire that was going from one terminal directly to another when i installed the new timer. Could have been bypassing the live. The old timer, if i remember correctly, didn't have an 'all day' setting so that might have been a hack to have the heating on constantly and have it controlled by the thermostat. When i replaced the timer, I didn't question it at the time and wired it up as it was previously.
I'll whip the timer off again tomorrow after work and post back the results. Don't fancy poking it anymore while i am tired.
Thanks for the help  ____________________
YBR125 -> GPZ500S -> SL1000 |
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| Fowlersrs |
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 Fowlersrs World Chat Champion

Joined: 30 Mar 2012 Karma :  
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 Posted: 21:50 - 07 Oct 2014 Post subject: |
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| Dale_Mckeown wrote: | My mistake. Multimeter 'malfunction' *cough*.
Yeah, neutral to live shows 242 volts permanently.
Now that i think about it, there was a piece of wire that was going from one terminal directly to another when i installed the new timer. Could have been bypassing the live. The old timer, if i remember correctly, didn't have an 'all day' setting so that might have been a hack to have the heating on constantly and have it controlled by the thermostat. When i replaced the timer, I didn't question it at the time and wired it up as it was previously.
I'll whip the timer off again tomorrow after work and post back the results. Don't fancy poking it anymore while i am tired.
Thanks for the help  |
Sounds about right, that'll be a link between the permanent supply coming in and the one going out, so in theory your programmer isn't doing anything as it's that that is suppose to make the connection and then forward that to the room stat and then providing your room stat completes the circuit by u turning it up itl bring the boiler on. |
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| thx1138 |
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 thx1138 World Chat Champion

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| rideslikean00... |
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 rideslikean00... Nearly there...

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| Raffles |
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 Raffles World Chat Champion
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| Dalemac |
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 Dalemac World Chat Champion

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| Clanger |
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 Clanger Stirrer

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| Fowlersrs |
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 Fowlersrs World Chat Champion

Joined: 30 Mar 2012 Karma :  
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 Posted: 21:26 - 08 Oct 2014 Post subject: |
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| Dale_Mckeown wrote: | Whipped off the timer and thermostat again tonight and it's very odd.
As you can see from the attachment, for the timer there is a neutral wire (n), live wire (l) and a second live, which is fed into the '3' pin. From the 3rd pin, there is a little wire loop which also makes the '1' pin constantly live. As far as I can work out, the connections between pin 1 and 3 are pointless, as is the second live into pin 3.
On the thermostat, N and L are constantly live.
It doesn't appear that the timer is connected to the thermostat in any way. There is an inline fuse box which kills the power to both the timer and thermostat so would the next step be to look at the wiring at this fuse? I'm no electrician but this whole setup seems crazy to me!
Any more suggestions? |
This is wired wrong, really wrong lol..
Right first the programmer, what needs to happen...
The L & N should be fed directly from the fuse spur, this is basically a feed for the electronics inside the programmer, so the programmer always has power basically.
You need to remove the black link completely, what u need to establish then is where the cable coming out of pin 3 and dissapearing goes, it should go to the L port of the room stat..
Once you've removed the black link test to see if u have any power at the room stat L & 3 (the brown and blue wires) test with both to earth so put the red probe on L the the black probe on Earth and the same for port 3 and tell me if u get 240v on either? |
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| Fowlersrs |
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 Fowlersrs World Chat Champion

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| Dalemac |
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 Dalemac World Chat Champion

Joined: 15 Oct 2006 Karma :  
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 Posted: 21:50 - 08 Oct 2014 Post subject: |
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| Fowlersrs wrote: | Right first the programmer, what needs to happen...
The L & N should be fed directly from the fuse spur, this is basically a feed for the electronics inside the programmer, so the programmer always has power basically.
You need to remove the black link completely, what u need to establish then is where the cable coming out of pin 3 and dissapearing goes, it should go to the L port of the room stat.. |
Apologies, the shadow makes it look like there is a black cable. In reality, there is a blue wire for neutral, brown wire into live, another brown wire into pin 3, and a small brown loop wire from pin 3 into pin 1.
The brown wire going into pin 3 has 240v. As this loops into pin 1 also, that has 240v.
I get that the (n) and (l) pins are 240v and that would be normal. I don't understand why the brown wire into pin 3 would be live. As you said, theoretically that pin would be connected to the live on the thermostat (which without the timer actually being connected, should be impossible).
The more I think about this, the more it seems likely that the live from the fuse is feeding both the timer and thermostat over seperate bits of wire.
| Fowlersrs wrote: | Once you've removed the black link test to see if u have any power at the room stat L & 3 (the brown and blue wires) test with both to earth so put the red probe on L the the black probe on Earth and the same for port 3 and tell me if u get 240v on either? |
With the timer off the wall (wires still in the pins), the thermostat (n) and (l) read 240v. The (n) and (3) pins were 0v. ____________________
YBR125 -> GPZ500S -> SL1000 |
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| Fowlersrs |
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 Fowlersrs World Chat Champion

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| bladerunner |
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 bladerunner World Chat Champion
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| Dalemac |
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 Dalemac World Chat Champion

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| N cee thirty |
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 N cee thirty Banned

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| Al |
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 Al World Chat Champion

Joined: 26 Feb 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 19:56 - 09 Oct 2014 Post subject: |
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It completely depends on the house and the boiler, a modern boiler heats up very quickly but an old system with a cast iron heat exchanger and large bore pipework can take a while.
An old terrace house with no insulation will need the boiler running continuously at full pelt and probably never achieve the 21c or whatever the stats set to, while a highly insulated modern apartment with underfloor heating would stay heated 24/7 with the boiler just ticking over using next to no gas. ____________________ Yamaha FZR400RR 3tj
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 11 years, 187 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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