Not quite. The CM927 is a single channel device consisting of the control unit and the receiver. The Y6630 thermostat is also a single channel device with a control unit and the receiver. You must realise that, if you do it that way, there is no independent control of the times of the upstairs heating. You cannot use the CM927 to control both downstairs and upstairs. The only way to have separate times is either to have a second CM927 or have a programmer and the Y6630B. Incidentally Honeywell recommend having a third receiver which co-ordinates the other two, so you don't get one receiver turning the boiler off and, at the same time, the other receiver is trying to turn the boiler on. You will need to contact Honeywell to find out how this is done as they don't publish any info!Would this work -
Honeywell CM 927 connected to three receivers, one each for up and down and a third for hot water. CM 927 would act as the downstairs thermostat and I was thinking of the Y6630 to act as the upstairs wireless thermostat?
The Hot water will not require a wireless thermostat as it will be in the cupboard with the HW tank and valves - you can use a wired thermostat and a single channel timer for that. If you decided to use a Y6630B upstairs you could have a two channel timer, one for the upstairs heating, the other for hot water.
You need to think carefully about what you need and cost the options.
Having everything in the one room makes wiring the valves, receivers and one/two channel timer much easier. Everything will be wired into a junction box aka wiring centre. All you will then need is a cable from the wiring centre to the boiler. Do you know which boiler you are having? Most modern boilers require a permanent electricity supply, so you need to know where the power is being obtained from. The whole heating/hot water system should be controlled by one fused spur or an un-switched plug and socket. This means that power can go to the boiler and then to the wiring centre; or the other way round. You should not have the boiler supplied from one source and the wiring centre from another.The valves and hot water tank are to be located in a separate room to the boiler. What would I need to fire the boiler up?
If the plumber knows what he is doing and is Part P qualified, then he should; if not use an electrician. The only problem is that many electricians have no idea about wiring up central heating systems - it's a Catch22 situation.Just a side question, who should be installing this, plumber or electrician?
