Ai explanation..and did it fully heat the radiators, to a hot temperature?
You need to put your heating system through some stress, to ensure it is working as it should first, before worrying about the controls.
If the boiler is still burning gas even after the room has surpassed your "Optimum" target temperature, it usually comes down to how the CT200 handles Modulation versus a simple "Off" command.
Here are the three specific reasons why it’s still firing:
1. The "Approaching Target" Logic (PID Control)
The CT200 doesn't just cut the power at 20^\circ\text{C} if that's your target. It uses an algorithm to decide how much power is needed to maintain that heat.
- The Glitch: Because it’s new, it thinks it needs a "high fire" to reach the target.
- The Result: Even when it hits the target, the software might still be requesting a low level of heat from the boiler to "stabilize" the temperature, mistakenly thinking the room is still losing heat rapidly.
2. Maintenance Cycles (Calibration)
In the first 48 hours, the thermostat often runs the boiler longer than necessary to measure the "Upper Thermal Limit" of the room. It needs to see exactly how high the temperature climbs for a specific amount of gas burned. It "over-fires" once or twice so it can mathematically "map" your home's insulation levels. Once it has that data point, it will start cutting the gas before it hits the target next time.
3. Flow Temperature & Weather Compensation
If your CT200 is using Weather Compensation (either via an outside sensor or internet data), it might be telling the boiler: "It’s cold outside, keep the water in the radiators at 65°C."
- If the room is already at your target but the "Flow Temperature" hasn't been reached yet, the boiler will keep burning gas to heat the water inside the pipes, even if the air in the room is already warm enough.
How to stop the "Runaway" Heat:
- Check the "Influence of Room Temperature" setting: In the app (Settings > Heating > Control Strategy), ensure this is set to High. If it's set to "Low" or "None," the thermostat cares more about the outside weather than the actual temperature in your lounge, which causes it to keep burning gas indefinitely.
- Verify the "Maximum Flow Temperature": If this is set too high (e.g., 80^\circ\text{C}), the boiler will work much harder and longer than a smart thermostat needs it to. Reducing this to 60^\circ\text{C}–65^\circ\text{C} often stops the overshoot.
Is your boiler a Bosch Greenstar or a different brand? Knowing the brand helps determine if the thermostat is communicating via "OpenTherm" or just a basic "On/Off" signal.
