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Called to look at a new, almost completed house today. Neither the plumber or the original electrician can get the heating to work properly. I'm not surprised as it's been wired completely wrong. So it looks like I'm going to disconnect it all and start from scratch rewiring it.
I just want to run my proposal past you so I don't end up being the second electrician to fail to get it working:
It is plumbed with a "heat store" tank, heated by an oil fired boiler. If you have not come across these before, think of a conventional hot water cylinder "inside out". So the boiler directly heats the water in the tank, and that water just gets re circulated from the tank to the boiler directly. There is then a heat exchange coil (or two) to remove heat from the tank for hot water and heating.
This is quite a nice system as the tank is just low pressure fed from a built in header tank, so no pressurised vessels to worry about. But the hot water takes a mains pressure feed, into a heat exchange coil, so you get mains pressure hot water out of the other end.
So the plan is the boiler will heat the tank, controlled just by the tank thermostat. That will be a completely stand alone control loop, but I'll feed it from the "hot water" output of the programmer just to give a means of turning it off, though it would normally stay on 24/7. So that will continuously maintain the heat store at working temperature.
The under floor heating will be controlled in the normal way from it's controller and will be fed electrically from the heating output of the programmer. The only difference is when the UFH controller calls for heat, instead of turning on the boiler (as it does wrongly at the moment) it will just turn on the circulating pump to draw hot water from the tank to the UFH manifold.
The hot water needs no controls. Turn on a tap, water flows and removes heat from the heat store.
Does that all sound right?
The basic mistake the original electrician made was to follow the UFH instruction to the letter, so the boiler, and it's pump only turn on when the UFH is calling for heat. So as they have just found out, now the weather has warmed up, no UFH demand means the boiler never turns on, so no hot water as the heat store tank has gone cold.
I just want to run my proposal past you so I don't end up being the second electrician to fail to get it working:
It is plumbed with a "heat store" tank, heated by an oil fired boiler. If you have not come across these before, think of a conventional hot water cylinder "inside out". So the boiler directly heats the water in the tank, and that water just gets re circulated from the tank to the boiler directly. There is then a heat exchange coil (or two) to remove heat from the tank for hot water and heating.
This is quite a nice system as the tank is just low pressure fed from a built in header tank, so no pressurised vessels to worry about. But the hot water takes a mains pressure feed, into a heat exchange coil, so you get mains pressure hot water out of the other end.
So the plan is the boiler will heat the tank, controlled just by the tank thermostat. That will be a completely stand alone control loop, but I'll feed it from the "hot water" output of the programmer just to give a means of turning it off, though it would normally stay on 24/7. So that will continuously maintain the heat store at working temperature.
The under floor heating will be controlled in the normal way from it's controller and will be fed electrically from the heating output of the programmer. The only difference is when the UFH controller calls for heat, instead of turning on the boiler (as it does wrongly at the moment) it will just turn on the circulating pump to draw hot water from the tank to the UFH manifold.
The hot water needs no controls. Turn on a tap, water flows and removes heat from the heat store.
Does that all sound right?
The basic mistake the original electrician made was to follow the UFH instruction to the letter, so the boiler, and it's pump only turn on when the UFH is calling for heat. So as they have just found out, now the weather has warmed up, no UFH demand means the boiler never turns on, so no hot water as the heat store tank has gone cold.
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