Richard_C
Established Member
I think its useful to decide of you want your radiator controllers to be able to turn the whole system and/or bits of it on and off, or just turn a radiator or two off at set times. You can achieve that last bit for a lot less money.
The next bit of explanation is basic - no need to read it if you already get all of this stuff.
In a conventional system, the timer/controller says 'hey, its time for some heat now, I've been told to turn it on at 5 pm'. That sends a signal to the room thermostat if you have one. The room thermostat says either 'no need, its warm enough already' or 'too right, its a bit chilly'. If the timer and room thermostat both call for heat, the motorised valve to the CH circuit opens (assuming you have 2 channels and a seperate one for the hot water, or a combi tankless system) the pump starts and cold water begins to flow through the radiators and boiler.
The boiler is at first sight a bit dumb: all it does is say 'well, I've been told to output water at 65 degrees, the water flowing in is only 40 so I had better fire up'. Its not quite that dumb, there is an anti cycling device. Imagine water comes in at 40, fires up. Water gets to 65, water keeps circulating because the timer and room thermostat are telling it to, but if it drops to 64 you don't want it to fire up again - it would be constantly and wastefully on/off with tiny changes in water temperature. So, its programmed with hysterisis - a gap - maybe 5 degrees drop before it will fire again.
So now we have hot water rushing around the CH system and in and out of radiators. If there were no radiator valves that would be it, all the rooms would heat up unitl the room thermostat said 'enough already' and stopped the pump. Room cools, off we go again. That's how it was in my parents house - no TRV's back then.
But with TRVs we can easily adjust room by room, but a TRV is a 'switching off' device not a switching on one. It's only relevant if the pump is running and hot water is circulating through the radiators. Set one to 16 in a bedroom, when it gets to that temperature it shuts that radiator off, saving energy.
You can of course go round and manually adjust the TRVs a couple of times a day in rooms you use intermitttently. That's what I do now. If you don't want to do that you can go full remote, as some here have done, or pick a cheaper middle option.
You can get a stand alone battery operated programmable head to replace the TRV head where it matters. One such is the terrier i-temp from pegler, about £20 although I 'm sure there are others. So if you don't want your bedroom using heat until say 9.30 in the evening you put the times in and tell it you want (say) 18 degrees from that time and nothing before. It won't call for heat if the pump is off like the super clever systems - what it does is turn off the circulation to that radiator so if the system is running anyway that room won't get hot until the time you have set. Saves you running about (or in my case, saves me remembering).
My plan (and its only just got cold enough to start using my recently installed replacement boiler) is to get 2 - one will turn the bedroom off after get-up time until late evening, the other will turn the sitting room off until later in the day so the morning cycle isn't wasting energy by warming a room we are not in.
I don't think £2k of smart full remote will deliver value for me, but £40 on 2 stand alone radiator controllers might repay itself.
The OP speaks of family who leave bedroom TRVs on all the time - this might be a simple solution.
The next bit of explanation is basic - no need to read it if you already get all of this stuff.
In a conventional system, the timer/controller says 'hey, its time for some heat now, I've been told to turn it on at 5 pm'. That sends a signal to the room thermostat if you have one. The room thermostat says either 'no need, its warm enough already' or 'too right, its a bit chilly'. If the timer and room thermostat both call for heat, the motorised valve to the CH circuit opens (assuming you have 2 channels and a seperate one for the hot water, or a combi tankless system) the pump starts and cold water begins to flow through the radiators and boiler.
The boiler is at first sight a bit dumb: all it does is say 'well, I've been told to output water at 65 degrees, the water flowing in is only 40 so I had better fire up'. Its not quite that dumb, there is an anti cycling device. Imagine water comes in at 40, fires up. Water gets to 65, water keeps circulating because the timer and room thermostat are telling it to, but if it drops to 64 you don't want it to fire up again - it would be constantly and wastefully on/off with tiny changes in water temperature. So, its programmed with hysterisis - a gap - maybe 5 degrees drop before it will fire again.
So now we have hot water rushing around the CH system and in and out of radiators. If there were no radiator valves that would be it, all the rooms would heat up unitl the room thermostat said 'enough already' and stopped the pump. Room cools, off we go again. That's how it was in my parents house - no TRV's back then.
But with TRVs we can easily adjust room by room, but a TRV is a 'switching off' device not a switching on one. It's only relevant if the pump is running and hot water is circulating through the radiators. Set one to 16 in a bedroom, when it gets to that temperature it shuts that radiator off, saving energy.
You can of course go round and manually adjust the TRVs a couple of times a day in rooms you use intermitttently. That's what I do now. If you don't want to do that you can go full remote, as some here have done, or pick a cheaper middle option.
You can get a stand alone battery operated programmable head to replace the TRV head where it matters. One such is the terrier i-temp from pegler, about £20 although I 'm sure there are others. So if you don't want your bedroom using heat until say 9.30 in the evening you put the times in and tell it you want (say) 18 degrees from that time and nothing before. It won't call for heat if the pump is off like the super clever systems - what it does is turn off the circulation to that radiator so if the system is running anyway that room won't get hot until the time you have set. Saves you running about (or in my case, saves me remembering).
My plan (and its only just got cold enough to start using my recently installed replacement boiler) is to get 2 - one will turn the bedroom off after get-up time until late evening, the other will turn the sitting room off until later in the day so the morning cycle isn't wasting energy by warming a room we are not in.
I don't think £2k of smart full remote will deliver value for me, but £40 on 2 stand alone radiator controllers might repay itself.
The OP speaks of family who leave bedroom TRVs on all the time - this might be a simple solution.