Plasmaduck
New member
Hopefully someone can shed some light on this issue.
I went to a clients house, he claimed that since an electrical storm, his heating timer and operation was intermittent with the display not always coming on and displaying info.
As the obvious choice and the only part with static sensitive parts was the timer (Smartfit 7 day with built in thermostat), I ordered a new unit and all was fine for a week. He called me today to say that today it was set at 21 degrees, but was still keeping the CH on at 24 degrees and climbing.
My first thought is perhaps the power source is arcing and therefore not always supplying hence the blank display and possible corruption with power spikes. Second is that maybe voltage is feeding back through the two wires at back of the timer, possibly from the boiler? Last would be that the new timer is also faulty?
Whilst typing this out, it doesn't seem possible that there are only two wires to the unit, although between the timer and its backplate, there are only two prongs that connect the two together. There must be hidden wires as at least two would be needed to power the timer, and at least another two to switch a signal to the boiler.
Any thoughts would be appreciated
I went to a clients house, he claimed that since an electrical storm, his heating timer and operation was intermittent with the display not always coming on and displaying info.
As the obvious choice and the only part with static sensitive parts was the timer (Smartfit 7 day with built in thermostat), I ordered a new unit and all was fine for a week. He called me today to say that today it was set at 21 degrees, but was still keeping the CH on at 24 degrees and climbing.
My first thought is perhaps the power source is arcing and therefore not always supplying hence the blank display and possible corruption with power spikes. Second is that maybe voltage is feeding back through the two wires at back of the timer, possibly from the boiler? Last would be that the new timer is also faulty?
Whilst typing this out, it doesn't seem possible that there are only two wires to the unit, although between the timer and its backplate, there are only two prongs that connect the two together. There must be hidden wires as at least two would be needed to power the timer, and at least another two to switch a signal to the boiler.
Any thoughts would be appreciated