christy c wrote: » How do know if you have a gravity fed system? Says on Amazon that Drayton does not work with it. House is 25 years old
deezell wrote: » Then Drayton Kit 3 is perfect. It's gone back up in price though from that deal earlier. Now £204.
deezell wrote: » Here it is boiler fires for either HW or CH timed event, but pump only operates for CH.
NewClareman wrote: » Hi deezel, Im wondering if I could use 2 x the Drayton 2 kits instead. It would work out much cheaper, as the radiator valves are included. Ive given mote info in the thread I just posted. Is this possible?
maxamillius wrote: » Assume this is exactly how Tado works for gravity systems also?
deezell wrote: » I should add that you have a gravity HW system if the HW heats without the aid of the circulation pump which supplies the rads.
graememk wrote: » The Tado systems are on sale on amazon for prime day, as expected.
captainshamroc wrote: » From Drayton tech support If you have no motorised valves on the system it will be gravity, if you have it will be conventional pumped system. I had a big discussion with their TS over this. I have a 35 year old house and a a single zone boiler they stopped making in the 90's. The hub basically just fires the on switch for the boiler so why would the Drayton hub not work in a gravity fed system. They would never admit that it would work fine but did admit that the reason that gravity fed were not supported was health & safety not technical. From Drayton tech support Gravity Fed systems do not comply with part L of the building Legislation. In other words, do not meet the up-to-date building regulation requirements. i.e. they are not going to invest in testing something that won't go in a new house and if they haven't tested they are not going to say it works fine. I installed and it works fine.
dendof wrote: » Didn't want to clog the bargain thread so asking here if possible. I currently have Nest installed. Looking to make the switch to Tado while it's Prime Day. But I'm unsure should I get wired, or wireless version. I've attached my current setup and also wondering if I go for wired, is it a straight swap
christy c wrote: » Good to hear. Had pulled the trigger just before you posted!
deezell wrote: » You're missing the point slightly. A gravity HW system assumes you might want to heat just HW. The system described above is just a CH system with HW as a consequence of heating the rads, hardly practical in the middle of summer. Any stat will turn a boiler on and off. A 2 zone gravity system gives independent HW by virtue of muting the circulation pump giving HW only when the boiler is fired, and the signal logic for this is not available on the two outputs of a wiser CH/HW controller.
christy c wrote: » In the system above, if all the TRVs are off would that would heat water? Although possibly not very efficiently? The ability to turn on CH during the winter remotely, adjust room temperature, turn on single radiators is the appeal for me. If I cannot heat water on it's own during summer thats not a deal breaker by any means. I have never used my boiler for HW only as it does not have the ability at the moment.
maxamillius wrote: » I could be wrong but if the TRVs are closed, the circulation pump won’t run, boiler won’t fire and therefore you won’t be able to heat the hot water. You could only hear the hot water whilst you are heating the rest of the house.
christy c wrote: » As I have said, I am far from an expert on this, but would all TRVs closed not be the equivalent of turning off all radiators and turning on the boiler? How would the boiler/pump know?
deezell wrote: » The stat and reveiver/controller you are buying is the 2 zone device, HW and CH, it will have two live timed output terminals, HW On and CH On. The CH goes live whenever a TRV calls for heat, firing the boiler. The HW one goes live whenever a programmed timed HW event comes on. Simply connecting these two terminals together will ensure the boiler comes on for a HW event even if there are no TRV events, and all TRVs are closed. If you buy the single zone kit then you just have a CH timer/stat, no seperate relay to close for the app HW timer, so no way to fire the boiler while all TRVs are closed.
maxamillius wrote: » During the summer I usually leave the stay down and use gravity to heat the water. I suppose if you had TRVs in every room and these were off, the rooms wouldn’t heat and the water would thus removing the need for a Tado extension kit? Maybe not the correct way to do it but you would still achieve the same result wouldn’t you? Basically whenever the boiler is on for a ch timed event, the pump runs, if I have 6 rooms with TRVs and the temperature turned down on them, the rooms don’t heat but the water does. Am I on the right track?
christy c wrote: » Ta, so stick with what i have? Have 46 mins to decide
deezell wrote: » Not really, if the TRVs are turned down they won't call the boiler, so HW can't heat unless at least one TRV is on. The Tado ext kit supplies a seperate relay terminal which responds to a HW timed schedule. No ext kit, no timer schedule, no way to fire the boiler in either pumped or gravity mode for HW only.
maxamillius wrote: » Again this might be a stupid question, if I had Tado with extension kit, let’s say I don’t have timed events setup for the hot water, if I decide at say 7 pm that evening I want to put on the boiler for hot water, do I need to login and setup a timer or is there a way of just turning it on, like a boost button maybe? Also presumably if you were to install TRVs in every room, there is no need for the old wall stag in the hallway?