Hi,
We had an Ecotec 831 installed around 4 years ago, to replace an ancient wall mounted boiler. The improvement in efficiency (and much reduced gas bill) was welcome, but the thing has been very unreliable, with the dreaded F75 fault being a very regular occurrence each winter, and seemingly unfixable by those who've tried - all the engineers who've looked at it have said that sometimes these boilers just do this.
The boiler developed leaks from the rubber hoses shortly after installation (fixed under warranty by fitting new hose clips), the diverter valve started leaking a year ago and was replaced (the shaft seal had failed) and now the boiler has developed another fault that keeps the heating on all the time.
At this point I'm wondering whether to call the engineer in yet again, or scrap the boiler and get something that will work reliably (absolutely not another one from Vaillant!), as I get the feeling I'm now throwing good money after bad.
The symptoms of the latest fault are that, usually after a power interruption (we get occasional power cuts here), the boiler will get stuck into running the central heating all the time, even if the room programmable thermostat is physically disconnected (I can unplug it from the wall). The hot water still operates normally, with the boiler switching between heating and hot water as normal, the boiler displays no fault codes and the information display confirms that there is no heating demand from the room thermostat. The heating flow temperature is being controlled correctly - I can turn it down (it's normally set for 48 deg C) and the boiler responds correctly.
Even with no heating demand from the room thermostat the boiler keeps running the heating, unless I turn the heating flow temperature dial to zero (although as mentioned above, the display confirms that there is no heating demand, showing S.0 or S.30 ). Resetting the boiler (which is often needed to overcome the frequent F75 faults) seems to have no effect, but if I turn the boiler power off, leave it for a while to cool right down, then power it on again it will sometimes fix the problem and all will be OK for a while.
I suspect that there may be a (probably very expensive) fault with the main circuit board now. If so, then given the probable cost of replacing this I really should think about scrapping this 4 year old boiler and getting one that won't need constant repair and attention.
My question is, does my diagnosis of an expensive circuit board fault seem likely, or is there a chance that this problem could be caused by another, potentially less expensive to fix, problem? I'm reluctant to get the engineer around yet again, as the fault can be difficult to reproduce once the boiler is working OK, and I suspect I'll just be into another round of very expensive "suck it and see" parts replacements.
So far the boiler has cost around double the original installation cost in repairs and failed in some way around 50 to 60 times, so it's not exactly on my list of reliable appliances!
We had an Ecotec 831 installed around 4 years ago, to replace an ancient wall mounted boiler. The improvement in efficiency (and much reduced gas bill) was welcome, but the thing has been very unreliable, with the dreaded F75 fault being a very regular occurrence each winter, and seemingly unfixable by those who've tried - all the engineers who've looked at it have said that sometimes these boilers just do this.
The boiler developed leaks from the rubber hoses shortly after installation (fixed under warranty by fitting new hose clips), the diverter valve started leaking a year ago and was replaced (the shaft seal had failed) and now the boiler has developed another fault that keeps the heating on all the time.
At this point I'm wondering whether to call the engineer in yet again, or scrap the boiler and get something that will work reliably (absolutely not another one from Vaillant!), as I get the feeling I'm now throwing good money after bad.
The symptoms of the latest fault are that, usually after a power interruption (we get occasional power cuts here), the boiler will get stuck into running the central heating all the time, even if the room programmable thermostat is physically disconnected (I can unplug it from the wall). The hot water still operates normally, with the boiler switching between heating and hot water as normal, the boiler displays no fault codes and the information display confirms that there is no heating demand from the room thermostat. The heating flow temperature is being controlled correctly - I can turn it down (it's normally set for 48 deg C) and the boiler responds correctly.
Even with no heating demand from the room thermostat the boiler keeps running the heating, unless I turn the heating flow temperature dial to zero (although as mentioned above, the display confirms that there is no heating demand, showing S.0 or S.30 ). Resetting the boiler (which is often needed to overcome the frequent F75 faults) seems to have no effect, but if I turn the boiler power off, leave it for a while to cool right down, then power it on again it will sometimes fix the problem and all will be OK for a while.
I suspect that there may be a (probably very expensive) fault with the main circuit board now. If so, then given the probable cost of replacing this I really should think about scrapping this 4 year old boiler and getting one that won't need constant repair and attention.
My question is, does my diagnosis of an expensive circuit board fault seem likely, or is there a chance that this problem could be caused by another, potentially less expensive to fix, problem? I'm reluctant to get the engineer around yet again, as the fault can be difficult to reproduce once the boiler is working OK, and I suspect I'll just be into another round of very expensive "suck it and see" parts replacements.
So far the boiler has cost around double the original installation cost in repairs and failed in some way around 50 to 60 times, so it's not exactly on my list of reliable appliances!