Boiler stability

Joined
14 Sep 2004
Messages
207
Reaction score
6
Country
United Kingdom
I have a Worcester Highflow 440CDi and have added some temp sensors to the flow/return pipes for monitoring purposes (or geeky interest - whichever :D). Here is a graph from last night...

Dark blue - flow, light blue - return
heating_graph.png



It is currently set to 60C flow temp which it holds very well until there is a disturbance in the system like a tado TRV opening up a radiator. It seems to initially handle that but then leads to the flow temp going over the 60C and the boiler turns off. When it comes back on a few minutes later, the flow temp rises but sometimes cycles on and off a few times before stabilising. I'm wondering if this is down to the lag in the system - it takes a while for the return to start rising after the boiler fires, is the boiler looking for that rise in return and giving up too soon? Are there any parameters that can be tweaked? {edit: looking at the service manual there doesn't seem to be any return temp sensor so it must control off the flow temperature)
 
Last edited:
Sponsored Links
Is it possible that your TRV requesting heat is the only one? The boiler will have difficulty modulating the output for such a small heat demand.

Try the same thing but with the whole system requesting heat.
 
good point, there are a few rads without TRVs - towel rails, one in the room with a wall stat, but those are all quite small radiators. I'll see what effect having more radiators on has
 
What are you using to log the temps out of interest?
 
Sponsored Links
Check each radiator glow and return and adjust the preset valve to attain the differential of 15 degrees
You could aim for 20 even
You will probably find the towel rails have hardly any drop between flow and return

The boiler will be looking at the flow temperature and modulating the flame. Overshoot may cause the burner to shut down and stay off for predetermined period
 
What are you using to log the temps out of interest?
I have a microcontroller (ESP32) that has a couple of temp probes connected to it and attached to the flow and return pipes (as well as a pressure sensor on the flow pipe, and also a connection to a current transformer so I can measure electrical power usage). It sends the data over wifi (by MQTT) which ends up in node-red which displays them in a pretty graph.
 
Check each radiator glow and return and adjust the preset valve to attain the differential of 15 degrees
You could aim for 20 even
You will probably find the towel rails have hardly any drop between flow and return

The boiler will be looking at the flow temperature and modulating the flame. Overshoot may cause the burner to shut down and stay off for predetermined period

yeah I might have another round of balancing. I went around last year trying to get about 15 drop but it was really hard to get a big drop while still actually getting flow through the radiator, and as rads turn on and off that all goes to cock anyway :D
 
I'm having a similar issue with my vaillant 831 and it cycles as it doesn't like smaller loads - I am trying to run a loop of UFH without the rads connected.
Can you turn down the cycling time on the bosch? It may also be possible to work out your radiator load and tell the boiler what it is...
 

DIYnot Local

Staff member

If you need to find a tradesperson to get your job done, please try our local search below, or if you are doing it yourself you can find suppliers local to you.

Select the supplier or trade you require, enter your location to begin your search.


Are you a trade or supplier? You can create your listing free at DIYnot Local

 
Sponsored Links
Back
Top