Hi @MurthyBruit, @wcavanagh and @Petar57 - I'm hoping to pick your collective brains so I can explain to our electrician (or find an electrician who has installed an ecobee who they can talk too).
My husband did all the research and insisted on getting an ecobee - our electrician has said he can't/won't install it - so I need to find someone else who will.
Martyn - you said you have an electrician who works out of Stoke that understands this - I'm not unfortunately near stoke but if you were able to give me a number so I could talk to them (and then get my electrician to talk to them too - hopefully we can learn from all the hard work you have all been doing!)
Keeping fingers and toes crossed you are still around on the forum and can help us as I've hit a dead end.
@VCDubs1 - this thread is 7 years old and might not be relevant to your situation. Best creating your own thread to get relevant answers. There’s an electrics sub-forum who sometimes dip into this on too. Do you have the exact same boiler and setup?
My husband did all the research and insisted on getting an ecobee - our electrician has said he can't/won't install it - so I need to find someone else who will.
Is quite a neat solution - from a mains input, it provides a 24V supply to the EcoBee, and takes the switched 24V output and converts it to a switched live to control a UK boiler.
An electrician should be able to figure out how to connect it (the time taken will undoubtedly increase their cost!), but it will need a suitable enclosure (again at a cost!).
...and just for clarity, here's a slightly simpler diagram for an electrician :
This is for use with an RC840T-240 and a boiler with a switched live call for heat.
The mains voltage connections to the RC840T-240 should be made within a suitable enclosure.
Its power supply should be fed from the same source as the boiler, i.e. the boilers FCU - although all the relevant connections may be available from an existing thermostat.
Beware, the RC840T-240 is built by a reputable manufacturer, but is not intended for use in this country; hence non-standard use of a black wire for the Live connection. As such it does not appear to have a CE mark (neither does the EcoBee!) - although it does also seem to be marketed under the Honeywell brand and is compatible with 230V AC @ 50Hz.
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