New install of worcester bosch 4000 combi. Would there be any preference in using Hive, compared to worcester bosch easy control ?




Most room thermostats monitor one room, hence the name, it’s when you add “smart” controls such as a hub system like smart TRVs. Standard TRVs are just that, standard but have been working ok for the last 30+ years.I am an electrician, not a plumber, but last time I looked at the Bosch system it was only monitoring one room, where as Wiser, Tado, EvoHome, and Hive, link in some way to the TRV head, so monitor multi-rooms. I use Wiser, but much depends on the home's design, my last house was open plan, and one central thermostat was fine, this one I have four devices which can start the boiler.

I have a whole range of TRV heads. The flat are mechanical and just stop rooms over heating, the main house has 5 bluetooth heads, eQ-3, which are programmable, and can detect window open, but do not connect to any hub, the Energenie and Kasa heads are again programmable but connect to a hub, so can use geo-fencing, the Energenie can't be programmed without the hub and internet, but the Kasa can be manually set, however the Kasa batteries don't last too well. Then the is one odd one out, the Wiser head, this is the only head I would label as smart, as it is claimed to work out how long it takes to heat the room, and start heating it that much before the setting change for a higher room temperature, in theory all the heads which connect to a hub, could fire the boiler, but only the Wiser hub is connected to the boiler. So of the 10 programmable heads, only one would be considered as smart.Standard TRVs are just that, standard

Seems a lot do like itHive seems to be favoured by most installers?
Yes it isHive is completely wireless i think
Yes it may do as it'll probably run EMS, which is similar to ebus and opentherm, just their version I think, the Easy control seems, possibly to require a 2 core connection to the boiler, or, at least, mains power pack.

I did look some years ago, and the option seemed to be Bosch single thermostat for whole house, or third party thermostat for each room, in my old house a single thermostat would work fine (Open Plan) this house needs multi-thermostats. Be it wall or built into the radiator control does not really matter, but one thermostat for all would not work.Yes it may doas it'll probably run EMS, which is similar to ebus and opentherm, just their version I think

All wireless thermostats are wireless in the sense that you can move the thermostat around to wherever you want it to measure the temperature, but the receiver unit still needs wired into the boiler to tell it when to run.Ok thanks for the advice. Is it actually totally wireless?

The way I understand it, the boiler will modulate to maintain flow temp as well as possible but without a controller that tells it what flow temp to be, it'll always try to make whatever setpoint it's been set up for. The higher the temperature of your radiators, the higher the heat output - so if you're chucking 75 degrees water at it the room temperature is going to continue to rise unless it's very cold outside.I have the same question - getting a Worcester Bosch 4000 combi installed. I have an existing Drayton smart thermostat, which has worked well with the old (non-Opentherm) boiler.
Given the Bosch 4000 doesn't support OpenTherm either, hence no modulation from the smart thermostat - is this really a big deal, in terms of efficency/savings? This is for a flat with no radiator TRVs.
I also read that the boiler itself will still do some modulation, regardless of the smart thermostat?
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