by ericmark »
Fri Jan 04, 2019 1:45 am
Timers are often called programmers, and there are two types of thermostats, simple off/on and modulating, I expect you are using simple off/on? The normal way is to fit the off/on thermostat in a room kept cool, so when summer arrives it will switch off the heating at say 18 deg C rather than 20 deg C used in say a living room. The room as you have worked out has to have no alternative heating or outside door and on ground floor, as heat rises. It is not designed to control the temperature of the house, the TRV heads do that, it is just there to turn off boiler when summer arrives, so wants to have no anti-hysteresis software.
With hard wired thermostats this is not a problem, any old thermostat will do, but with wireless the cheap thermostats with no anti hysteresis software also have no fail save, so if the battery fails it may continue heating.
So although the thermostat with anti hysteresis is not ideal, we often have to use them.
However in your case turn the thermostat up to max, and control rooms using the TRV heads until warm enough so not using the solid fuel fire, as the thermostat is only there to turn off system in summer, it is not intended to control the room temperature unless using a modulating thermostat, if you are using a modulating thermostat then only way to use wireless is with OpenTherm and it depends if your boiler is OpenTherm enabled.
Thermostats like Nest gen 3 can work with a wifi connected thermostat to the boilers bus, but thermostats like Wave have to be hard wired, so much depends on what boiler and control you already have.
It is so easy to jump in and give advice and not consider it may have a modulating thermostat, however they are not really that common.