Good question. Either a Gas Safe engineer who understands how heating systems are wired (not all do) or an electrician that understands how heating systems work (not all do)
Basically the frost thermostat should by-pass the heating time control and the room thermostat, thus directly controlling the motorised valve. The motorised valve will then operate the boiler as it does in normal operation.
The Frost thermostat should ideally be wired in series with a pipe thermostat set at about 30 degrees C on the return pipe to the boiler. This keeps the pipes warm to stop freezing but also stops the property from overheating. You don't mention whether you have a pipe stat or not, but they usually come as a kit.
Basically the frost thermostat should by-pass the heating time control and the room thermostat, thus directly controlling the motorised valve. The motorised valve will then operate the boiler as it does in normal operation.
The Frost thermostat should ideally be wired in series with a pipe thermostat set at about 30 degrees C on the return pipe to the boiler. This keeps the pipes warm to stop freezing but also stops the property from overheating. You don't mention whether you have a pipe stat or not, but they usually come as a kit.