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Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Question & Answer Forum
Remove redundant thermostat and power Smart Home Hub instead
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<blockquote data-quote="Geoff1946" data-source="post: 547734" data-attributes="member: 28452"><p>That's a lovely neat wiring centre; They usually resemble something built by a rodent. </p><p>Is it an underfloor system? The item half on the picture looks like a UFH manifold with control valves.</p><p></p><p>I'm a bit puzzled as to how you are controlling the system; my ignorance as I've never heard of Tado.</p><p>However, to focus on your question, everything you want is there. The programmer live and neutral are just that and would feed any low power item. The ON command is simply the two relevant wires being connected together, (one of which is probably the live supply). </p><p>The outstanding question is how you do it physically to look neat. It looks like the programmer is over a flush box, so a surface item could be fitted over it leaving all the redundant wires behind it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Geoff1946, post: 547734, member: 28452"] That's a lovely neat wiring centre; They usually resemble something built by a rodent. Is it an underfloor system? The item half on the picture looks like a UFH manifold with control valves. I'm a bit puzzled as to how you are controlling the system; my ignorance as I've never heard of Tado. However, to focus on your question, everything you want is there. The programmer live and neutral are just that and would feed any low power item. The ON command is simply the two relevant wires being connected together, (one of which is probably the live supply). The outstanding question is how you do it physically to look neat. It looks like the programmer is over a flush box, so a surface item could be fitted over it leaving all the redundant wires behind it. [/QUOTE]
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Remove redundant thermostat and power Smart Home Hub instead
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