Dibs-h
Established Member
I've read posts here of folk separating the heating at home into 2 (or more) zones. Say 1 for the rads upstairs and another for the downstairs. I can see the logic for this - why heat half the house when it's empty, etc. and given that our annual gas consumption is somewhat eye watering - I'm been meaning to look into this for a while.
Whilst surfing the web - looking at programmable room stats, wired vs wireless, etc., I came across the following article,
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/property/pro ... decay.html
which made me pause, especially the following paragraph,
Any thoughts\advice? I have come across similar mentions before.
Until this point - I was erring down the road of a 2 wireless programmable room stats and a pair of 2 port valves (or possibly getting away with a single 3 port valve that does mid-position). With the upstairs bathroom rad as the the bypass (i.e. on all the) as the bathroom is on the other side of the wall where the 22mm heating pipes drop down.
Cheers
Dibs
Whilst surfing the web - looking at programmable room stats, wired vs wireless, etc., I came across the following article,
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/property/pro ... decay.html
which made me pause, especially the following paragraph,
As with many energy-saving ideas, this one has been promoted by the Government in response to current “climate change” hysteria, without regard to the bigger picture. Repairing condensation-damaged decorations will consume far more money and energy than that saved by reduced fuel bills. In my opinion, it would better for your wallet and the environment for you to keep the whole house heated and therefore above dewpoint temperature.
Any thoughts\advice? I have come across similar mentions before.
Until this point - I was erring down the road of a 2 wireless programmable room stats and a pair of 2 port valves (or possibly getting away with a single 3 port valve that does mid-position). With the upstairs bathroom rad as the the bypass (i.e. on all the) as the bathroom is on the other side of the wall where the 22mm heating pipes drop down.
Cheers
Dibs