D
Doctor Drivel
Anyone know the cheapest boiler available with weather compensation? Combi or system.
No, modulation range was the wrong choice of words for the on- off room stat. I was referring to the proportional bandwidth of the stat or the hysteresis between the on and off temps.Doctor Drivel said:NGBod said:Doctor Drivel said:In operation does it reduce boiler cycling? The exhaust must be pluming constantly .
Weather compensation is ideal for the UK with its changeable climate - warm one day cool the next.
It has reduced boiler cycling on my system, but fine tuning of which compensation curve is used should reduce it even more. IMO a well matched compensation curve should almost eliminate boiler cycling ie. when the CH flow temp is just sufficient to keep the room temp in the middle of the on- off room stats chosen modulation range.
Dave
An on-off stat modulates the burner?
Once the compensator dictates that the input is lower the what the burner can deliver, cycling is inevitable. I think it is around 9kW minimum delivery by this boiler.
NGBod said:No, modulation range was the wrong choice of words for the on- off room stat. I was referring to the proportional bandwidth of the stat or the hysteresis between the on and off temps.Doctor Drivel said:NGBod said:Doctor Drivel said:In operation does it reduce boiler cycling? The exhaust must be pluming constantly .
Weather compensation is ideal for the UK with its changeable climate - warm one day cool the next.
It has reduced boiler cycling on my system, but fine tuning of which compensation curve is used should reduce it even more. IMO a well matched compensation curve should almost eliminate boiler cycling ie. when the CH flow temp is just sufficient to keep the room temp in the middle of the on- off room stats chosen modulation range.
Dave
An on-off stat modulates the burner?
Once the compensator dictates that the input is lower the what the burner can deliver, cycling is inevitable. I think it is around 9kW minimum delivery by this boiler.
I have the boiler range rated to 13KW max useful output on the CH circuit.
I'm not sure what the minimum is as the tech spec gives 10.6KW as the minimum useful output yet the boiler can be range rated to give 10.6 KW max useful CH output according to the manual. Maybe this means the CH is disabled? I don't think so, but I'm not an expert so would like to know for sure if anyone knows.
blondini said:I'm thinking of experimenting with simple combination of indoor and outdoor sensors.
Doctor Drivel said:blondini said:I'm thinking of experimenting with simple combination of indoor and outdoor sensors.
The BIASI does not have the capability to have an inside sensor. An outside sensor can be fitted inside, however the correct control slope needs to be selected - and the BIASI may not be sophisticated enough to select a control slope for indoor use.
blondini said:Doctor Drivel said:blondini said:I'm thinking of experimenting with simple combination of indoor and outdoor sensors.
The BIASI does not have the capability to have an inside sensor. An outside sensor can be fitted inside, however the correct control slope needs to be selected - and the BIASI may not be sophisticated enough to select a control slope for indoor use.
I was thinking of two sensors wired together to the same input on the boiler so that indoor temp will also influence boiler output. The trouble is that wiring two standard sensors in series will increase the overall resistance presented compared to a single sensor, and wiring in parallel will reduce it. I just need to know some approximate resistance values for the standard sensor so that I can select some alternative values of cheap component thermistors to experiment with.
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