if you have a voltmeter you can measure the input voltage in your room thermostat anything under 230 v = boiler timer/programmer is not supplying correct voltage.
dim heating neon light usually suggest timer/programmer is shot,i linked out my timer/programmer and just used the room thermostat to switch on/off the heating.
No. The point Dan was trying to make was that if the fuse was greater than 3 amp then it wouldn't have given the boiler electronics fast enough protection when your toaster spiked the mains.
A normal 3 amp fuse will do, but just replacing this won't cure your fault!
Is there a reset button that can be operated, probably with a pen nib or pin, before you replace the programmer?
The 3 amp fuses in the fso is to protect the cable tothe appliance from meltdown & not to protect the boiler in any way. The board will have its own protection in the way of 2 amp (to protect the 240v stuff running off the board) and a 200mamp to protect the electronics. The board fuses are usually fast blow - the 3 amp in the FSO is a very slow blow & will not be bothered about spikes ( otherwise all your 3 amp fuses will blow every time there is a surge) these fuses (BS1361 from memory) are designed to take much higher loads tfor short periods to stop them blowing.
These programmers will often give up the ghost after a power off and on, but can still be repaired.
It isn't that the mains has been 'spiked' but it is the programmers inability, after time, to stand being turned off and on.
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