Our room thermostat might be misbehaving so I've been having a look at it with a view to replacing it. And I've found something I don't understand.
It seems like a standard indirect S-plan system. Boiler, pump, dual channel timer and a valve each for CH and HW. The thermostat is a fairly old Honeywell mechanical dial with an anticipator heating resistor. But the thing that's puzzling me is that return core from the heater doesn't connect to the common neutral in the wiring box; it goes to the CH-OFF terminal on the timer. So when the timer puts the heating on, there's no return path and when the timer puts the heating off, there's 240V on the wrong side of the anticipator.
What explanation could there be for this? Is it an error by whoever wired it up in the first place or is it some variation of the standard setup?