I'm still trying to get my head around the best way to get a condensing boiler to condense as much as possible. Delta T of the boiler seems to be an important part of this. We have a Vaillant condensing boiler ready for fitting. At the same time, the plumber got me a Vaillant weather compensator, as we were originally going to use an unvented cylinder. Now we're going to use a thermal store (due to a planned woodburner with backboiler, possible solar when it gets cheaper, and as many other gas-bill avoidance plans as I can come up with including an extra jumper or three).
Do we still need a weather comp with a thermal store? Plumber says we don't.
Idea of thermal store with direct boiler connection (no coil) is the boiler runs long and hard, condensing as much as possible, whereas with a boiler just feeding rads and standard cylinder, the weather comp modulates the boiler down for the rads on a warm-ish day? Is this correct? Or does it blend the boiler flow or return to give cooler rads?
I have also read of having a blending valve on the boiler return - is this to keep the boiler return hot, cold, or close to the delta T of 50 degC for ideal condensing?
What is most efficient - flow very hot and return very cold, or warm-ish flow, 50 degC return - big temp difference, or 20 deg difference using a blending valve or using the weather comp on very cold days... or arrghh?
Should I get a blending valve for the return to the boiler if it's heating a thermal store, if so what would it do?
My head hurts. Ta in advance for any clarification!
Do we still need a weather comp with a thermal store? Plumber says we don't.
Idea of thermal store with direct boiler connection (no coil) is the boiler runs long and hard, condensing as much as possible, whereas with a boiler just feeding rads and standard cylinder, the weather comp modulates the boiler down for the rads on a warm-ish day? Is this correct? Or does it blend the boiler flow or return to give cooler rads?
I have also read of having a blending valve on the boiler return - is this to keep the boiler return hot, cold, or close to the delta T of 50 degC for ideal condensing?
What is most efficient - flow very hot and return very cold, or warm-ish flow, 50 degC return - big temp difference, or 20 deg difference using a blending valve or using the weather comp on very cold days... or arrghh?
Should I get a blending valve for the return to the boiler if it's heating a thermal store, if so what would it do?
My head hurts. Ta in advance for any clarification!