Perhaps some kind experts can help with a diagnosis
I have gas central heating with a conventional open vent boiler.
Heating and hot water are controlled via an old UP1 British Gas timer unit.
The heating side is left on continuous, and the roomstat is replaced by a Honeywell 4 period thermostat set at 19C during the day at 16C at night.
Every three or four days, the central heating stops circulating. Then a day or so later
it spontaneously restarts. Assume that both controllers are set correctly, and both are telling the system to "fire" at the ambient temperate (which falls to 10 degrees..... until I get out the old electric blowing heaters). The hot water side is fine. No amount of fiddling with the two controllers will get it to restart (heating off/on etc).
It was hard for the engineer to figure it out the first time because it was working at the time.
I am fairly ignorant, but I'm I am guessing it could be any of
a) A sticking pump
b) A sticking valve
c) The relay (or something else) in the Honeywell
d) the relay (or something else) in the old UP1 which is on continuous.
What I have now figured out is that when it is not working, if I switch off the MAIN power switch on the wall near the UP1 (I am not sure what that serves, but it at least it serves the UP1) wait a minute and then switch it back on then heating circulation is restored.... Does that help locate the cause? If it is just one of the controllers that is faulty I can probably replace that myself.
I have gas central heating with a conventional open vent boiler.
Heating and hot water are controlled via an old UP1 British Gas timer unit.
The heating side is left on continuous, and the roomstat is replaced by a Honeywell 4 period thermostat set at 19C during the day at 16C at night.
Every three or four days, the central heating stops circulating. Then a day or so later
it spontaneously restarts. Assume that both controllers are set correctly, and both are telling the system to "fire" at the ambient temperate (which falls to 10 degrees..... until I get out the old electric blowing heaters). The hot water side is fine. No amount of fiddling with the two controllers will get it to restart (heating off/on etc).
It was hard for the engineer to figure it out the first time because it was working at the time.
I am fairly ignorant, but I'm I am guessing it could be any of
a) A sticking pump
b) A sticking valve
c) The relay (or something else) in the Honeywell
d) the relay (or something else) in the old UP1 which is on continuous.
What I have now figured out is that when it is not working, if I switch off the MAIN power switch on the wall near the UP1 (I am not sure what that serves, but it at least it serves the UP1) wait a minute and then switch it back on then heating circulation is restored.... Does that help locate the cause? If it is just one of the controllers that is faulty I can probably replace that myself.