civory said:
Yes I have a programmer - it's a Potterton with fairly simple settings of once, twice, 24 hours and off and can only be set for the same times every day.
Firstly, any work you do on the system should be with it isolated from the electrical supply. If the timer is plugged in, then uplug it. If it's on a fused spur then remove the fuse.
I believe that your timer is plain and simple - single-channel, and just a timer rather than a programmer. If so, then you don't have any system controls that act to maintain the temperature of either stored hot water or the living space.
You might be able to introduce both a cylinder stat and a room stat, break into the supply from timer to boiler, and wire the stats in parallel such that either acts to provide the demand to the boiler. I don't know which boiler you have, but be mindful of the possibility that the pump is controller by the boiler (rather than by the timer) for the purpose of an overrun feature, in which case you would need to be careful not to change that arrangement.
Whilst this would limit the temperature of the water, it would stilll be relatively crude because the water would continue to be heated whenever the central heating was on - definately not up to the Building Regulations' recommendations.
To introduce a 'proper' degree of control, you'd need to add a three port motorized zone valve (or two two port MZVs), so that CH and DHW are independant.
This is getting into the realms of upgrading the system, which is generally beyond the remit of this kind of posting - sorry to have to say it but this is a job for your plumber friend (or, perhaps, for him to show you how).
civory said:
While we're on - a plumber acquaintance of mine who admits no experience of the Venturi system, wondered whether the cylinder could be accidentally drained using one of these showers and what would happen?
The concept of a copper cylinder actually being drained by the shower isn't valid, since the hot water is taken from the top, not the bottom - either your friend didn't mean quite that, or he/she isn't actually a plumber (or is one but shouldn't be!).
However....
if the venturi shower starved the cold storage cistern of its cold feed,
AND
if the quantity of stored cold water is less than the quantity of hot water needed for a shower
(or if the cold cistern just couldn't fill quickly enough)
...then the hot water would cease mid-shower, giving you a bit of a surprise!
Does the hot water peter out when you draw a bath?