Sorry this is so long!
Situation: I'm often away from home for a week or more, and want to be able to switch the heating on before I return - but I don't want to go the full Nest/Hive etc or rely on a third-party service.
My last place had a combi gas boiler which fired on demand, if either hot water was requested, or if the central heating came on. No hot water tank. It had a built-in clock/programmer. I found a simple little device [1] that was an SMS-controlled switch, with temperature sensor: I wired it in parallel with the thermostat. So I would leave it with the central heating on permanently, the thermostat turned down to 11 or so - which was reassuring about not letting the pipes freeze. When I was coming home I could send it a text, and it would pretend to be the thermostat feeling chilly, heating came on, everything was great.
Now I've moved. This place also has a combi boiler [2] downstairs, but it also has a hot water tank upstairs; and the system is wired differently. There's a separate programmer [3], the kind that clips onto a back plate, which allows you to set times independently for when the hot water and the central heating come on. This means that you can set the central heating to come on, with the hot water off - but I think this is a mistake, i.e. I'm reasonably sure that in that case it would just pump water round the system without firing the boiler to ensure that water is hot. (And there's also a thermostat for the central heating.)
The previous set up was ideal: when I was away, nothing was active unless I sent it a message (or unless it got very cold indeed). But I can't use that here because - unless I've misunderstood - just overriding the thermostat to activate the central heating wouldn't work unless I also have the hot water coming on regularly.
There seem to be a lot of wifi-connected thermostat things - like Nest - but AFAICT these would have the same problem - and in any case I don't want anything that relies on a remote service (or ties me into Google/Amazon/etc).
The options I can see are:
- find a "local" WiFi programmer (not thermostat), designed to let you use a smartphone to control it in the house - and then figure out remote access into my home network. So far I've only found a "programmable thermostat" with this option[4], but not a two-channel programmer.
- use the same approach as I had before, so that I can effectively turn up the thermostat remotely by SMS. This would I think require to have the hot water switched on by the programmer at least some time every day while I'm away, so not a very efficient solution.
- use the same approach as I had before, but with two channels, so that I can control both the hot water and central heating by SMS. Ideally separate control of them; but failing that if I can switch both on at once remotely, that would work for me.
- find a miracle product that does most of what I want. E.g. I briefly thought the heatmiser range might be suitable, but they rely on a central cloud service. At work the office has a remote (RF) programmer - if one of these had an open protocol so that I could set up another controller that would work. Or using OpenTherm???
My questions:
1) Have I correctly understood that the system in this new (to me) house requires separate control of hot water and central heating - whereas all the new control stuff seems to assume that hot water will operate on demand from heating, and therefore it's only necessary to control the thermostat?
2) ... and is that the difference between a "programmable thermostat" and a "two channel programmer"?
3) Supposing I installed a separate SMS-controlled system. Is there a reason why I couldn't wire it in parallel with the existing programmer, so that it can on demand short out (that is, switch live to) HW and CH as required? Should this bother the programmer that might also do that?
4) ... and if I took that approach, is that 240V or something more like 24V (I need to make sure the relays are appropriate)?
5) On the other hand, has anyone come across a WiFi two-channel programmer (working locally not via a central server)?
Many thanks in advance for any light you can shed.
David
[1] https://store.open-electronics.org/GSM_Remote_Control_Temperature_Control
[2] Vaillant ecoTEC plus VU GB 624/5-5
[3] Horstmann Centaur Plus C21
[4] - e.g. http://www.esicontrols.co.uk/esrtp5wifi.html - also I think Heatmiser used to do a "PRT-TS WiFi" but it looks like this is discontinued
Situation: I'm often away from home for a week or more, and want to be able to switch the heating on before I return - but I don't want to go the full Nest/Hive etc or rely on a third-party service.
My last place had a combi gas boiler which fired on demand, if either hot water was requested, or if the central heating came on. No hot water tank. It had a built-in clock/programmer. I found a simple little device [1] that was an SMS-controlled switch, with temperature sensor: I wired it in parallel with the thermostat. So I would leave it with the central heating on permanently, the thermostat turned down to 11 or so - which was reassuring about not letting the pipes freeze. When I was coming home I could send it a text, and it would pretend to be the thermostat feeling chilly, heating came on, everything was great.
Now I've moved. This place also has a combi boiler [2] downstairs, but it also has a hot water tank upstairs; and the system is wired differently. There's a separate programmer [3], the kind that clips onto a back plate, which allows you to set times independently for when the hot water and the central heating come on. This means that you can set the central heating to come on, with the hot water off - but I think this is a mistake, i.e. I'm reasonably sure that in that case it would just pump water round the system without firing the boiler to ensure that water is hot. (And there's also a thermostat for the central heating.)
The previous set up was ideal: when I was away, nothing was active unless I sent it a message (or unless it got very cold indeed). But I can't use that here because - unless I've misunderstood - just overriding the thermostat to activate the central heating wouldn't work unless I also have the hot water coming on regularly.
There seem to be a lot of wifi-connected thermostat things - like Nest - but AFAICT these would have the same problem - and in any case I don't want anything that relies on a remote service (or ties me into Google/Amazon/etc).
The options I can see are:
- find a "local" WiFi programmer (not thermostat), designed to let you use a smartphone to control it in the house - and then figure out remote access into my home network. So far I've only found a "programmable thermostat" with this option[4], but not a two-channel programmer.
- use the same approach as I had before, so that I can effectively turn up the thermostat remotely by SMS. This would I think require to have the hot water switched on by the programmer at least some time every day while I'm away, so not a very efficient solution.
- use the same approach as I had before, but with two channels, so that I can control both the hot water and central heating by SMS. Ideally separate control of them; but failing that if I can switch both on at once remotely, that would work for me.
- find a miracle product that does most of what I want. E.g. I briefly thought the heatmiser range might be suitable, but they rely on a central cloud service. At work the office has a remote (RF) programmer - if one of these had an open protocol so that I could set up another controller that would work. Or using OpenTherm???
My questions:
1) Have I correctly understood that the system in this new (to me) house requires separate control of hot water and central heating - whereas all the new control stuff seems to assume that hot water will operate on demand from heating, and therefore it's only necessary to control the thermostat?
2) ... and is that the difference between a "programmable thermostat" and a "two channel programmer"?
3) Supposing I installed a separate SMS-controlled system. Is there a reason why I couldn't wire it in parallel with the existing programmer, so that it can on demand short out (that is, switch live to) HW and CH as required? Should this bother the programmer that might also do that?
4) ... and if I took that approach, is that 240V or something more like 24V (I need to make sure the relays are appropriate)?
5) On the other hand, has anyone come across a WiFi two-channel programmer (working locally not via a central server)?
Many thanks in advance for any light you can shed.
David
[1] https://store.open-electronics.org/GSM_Remote_Control_Temperature_Control
[2] Vaillant ecoTEC plus VU GB 624/5-5
[3] Horstmann Centaur Plus C21
[4] - e.g. http://www.esicontrols.co.uk/esrtp5wifi.html - also I think Heatmiser used to do a "PRT-TS WiFi" but it looks like this is discontinued