by Dave From Leeds »
Tue Jan 27, 2009 9:22 am
Morris,
Your latest post has given me some ideas about the possible history of your daughter's heating system configuration. Given the lack of motorised valves and thermostats I suspect that originally it was a basic gravity hot water and pumped central CH system. In such a system, although the programmer has separate slide switches for the HW and CH, it is configured so that the CH cannot be on without the HW. Some programmers achieve this by a mechanical link between the two slide switches. The Honeywell ST699/799 programmers do it by means of internal wiring (in the base plate) that allows the boiler to fire up when CH only is selected. Without motorised valves a gravity fed hot water system will come on whenever the boiler is running whether or not the HW slide is set to be on. If you look on the Screwfix website (screwfix.com) and select Plumbing then Central Heating Controls, you will find your programmer listed. In its Instruction Manual (after all the wiring diagrams) it mentions putting a “Heating and Hot Water” sticker over the word “Heating” above the CH slide switch for this very reason.
I think that what may have happened is that when the CH was on, it took the lion's share of the heat from the boiler and the water was not getting hot enough. It could be therefore that installing the hot water pump got round this problem. Again referring to the programmer’s Instruction Manual, if you look at the “Basic System 1” wiring diagram the feed for the CH pump, and therefore your HW pump based on what you said about them being wired together, comes off the CH control..
Here’s what I suggest you do now.
First of all set the slide switches to HW only (CH off). If all the garbage above is correct, the HW pump will remain stopped but the water should warm up. If so, disconnect the hot water pump at the junction box then set both slide switches to their current settings. If with this arrangement the CH works but the water doesn't heat up enough, then interrupting the existing electrical supply to that pump via a cylinder stat will almost certainly sort the matter out for you. If the water still gets as hot as it does now you'll probably also need a motorised valve in the HW pipework controlled by the cylinder stat as I suggested once before. In that case you’d need to take the live feed for the cylinder stat from terminal 8 in your programmer then split the output from the stat to both the HW pump and the valve, otherwise the motorised valve would never open when HW only was selected on the programmer, consequently no hot water. This also means that the HW pump would run on demand from the cylinder stat whether or not the CH was in use.
Finally, you may need to remove the thermostatic valve from one of the radiators since, if all the thermostatic valves were to close off at the same time, you would potentially have the CH pump working against a closed system. This is unlikely I know, but as my former employer’s safety manager used to say: “If it can happen, it will!!!”
There, I’ve covered everything I can think of in this single post. Sorry it’s so long!!