I'm quite new to gas heating (grew up off grid) and trying to understand a combi-boiler gas central heating system, just installed to replace a simpler, gravity-fed system. It's been a shock to the system (old stone house and mine) with two radiators already burst due to higher pressure.
I'm particularly struggling to understand the point of the room thermostat and why I can't just control heating/limit costs at the radiator in each room. My own system had a "clock" dial type system linked to the boiler with times on it - and I could turn the boiler itself off/on at ignition.
My main aim has been to minimise spending on heating. I switch it on in winter as late as possible - usually mid-November - and off as soon as I can. Some winters I've more or less got by without. So I'm not looking for a house which is "heated to 18 degrees" etc. - didn't grow up with that and would actually find it uncomfortable! I'm used to indoor temperatures around 12-15.
In addition to that, my house has a back extension that I use very little and therefore only heat a tiny amount - basically to prevent pipes freezing/mould. I live in 2-3 rooms at the front.
Now I have this new boiler with TRVs on radiators. They've left the hallway radiator without a TRV and that's where they suggested I put the room thermostat. The hallway is central in the house but it's in a cold area that I never bothered to heat much in winter - I don't spend time there, and it's leaky due to windows - so I keep doors to it shut and heat other rooms.
My understanding of the logic behind the location that the hallway is a kind of central, average place in people's houses and so once the house "as a whole reaches" the temperature on the room thermostat, the boiler will cut out.
At any rate, I don't want the house "as a whole" heating that much. With no TRV on the hall radiator, it now has to keep on full blast until it reaches the temperature on the room thermostat. But if I set that really low - because I don't need to heat that area - it will then cut off heat to radiators I do want on in the rooms I'm using, surely?
Alternatively, if I set that hall room thermostat higher, to avoid it cutting off heat to rooms I do use, I'm having to heat the hall radiator due to lack of TRV on it.
Would it not be better to have a room thermostat in a room I want to heat?
Again, I understand that if you have a TRV in a room with a room thermostat, the two systems would compete. But if they are set to the same, desired, temperature for that room, I can't see that it matters.
Can anyone explain this clearly for a newcomer to gas?
I'm particularly struggling to understand the point of the room thermostat and why I can't just control heating/limit costs at the radiator in each room. My own system had a "clock" dial type system linked to the boiler with times on it - and I could turn the boiler itself off/on at ignition.
My main aim has been to minimise spending on heating. I switch it on in winter as late as possible - usually mid-November - and off as soon as I can. Some winters I've more or less got by without. So I'm not looking for a house which is "heated to 18 degrees" etc. - didn't grow up with that and would actually find it uncomfortable! I'm used to indoor temperatures around 12-15.
In addition to that, my house has a back extension that I use very little and therefore only heat a tiny amount - basically to prevent pipes freezing/mould. I live in 2-3 rooms at the front.
Now I have this new boiler with TRVs on radiators. They've left the hallway radiator without a TRV and that's where they suggested I put the room thermostat. The hallway is central in the house but it's in a cold area that I never bothered to heat much in winter - I don't spend time there, and it's leaky due to windows - so I keep doors to it shut and heat other rooms.
My understanding of the logic behind the location that the hallway is a kind of central, average place in people's houses and so once the house "as a whole reaches" the temperature on the room thermostat, the boiler will cut out.
At any rate, I don't want the house "as a whole" heating that much. With no TRV on the hall radiator, it now has to keep on full blast until it reaches the temperature on the room thermostat. But if I set that really low - because I don't need to heat that area - it will then cut off heat to radiators I do want on in the rooms I'm using, surely?
Alternatively, if I set that hall room thermostat higher, to avoid it cutting off heat to rooms I do use, I'm having to heat the hall radiator due to lack of TRV on it.
Would it not be better to have a room thermostat in a room I want to heat?
Again, I understand that if you have a TRV in a room with a room thermostat, the two systems would compete. But if they are set to the same, desired, temperature for that room, I can't see that it matters.
Can anyone explain this clearly for a newcomer to gas?
