I recently had a Glow Worm Ultracom 30cxi combi installed. My installer said that there is an exernal temp sensor availble for this model and it would be worth fitting one. What are the advantages of this? (and where could I purchase the sensor)
I'm curious to know why you didn't your installer that question.Rog200455 said:I recently had a Glow Worm Ultracom 30cxi combi installed. My installer said that there is an exernal temp sensor availble for this model and it would be worth fitting one. What are the advantages of this?
I'm curious to know why you don't get it from your installer.(and where could I purchase the sensor)
Softus said:I'm curious to know why you didn't your installer that question.Rog200455 said:I recently had a Glow Worm Ultracom 30cxi combi installed. My installer said that there is an exernal temp sensor availble for this model and it would be worth fitting one. What are the advantages of this?
I'm curious to know why you don't get it from your installer.(and where could I purchase the sensor)
ChrisR said:WC is a means of making up in part for a crude control system on a boiler. If your room thermostat is a simple on-off one there's more to gain than if it tells the boiler what the temperature in the house IS.
Don't let anyone tell you they replace internal temperature measurement.
Agile said:There is a seperate feature called optimal start which uses an external sensor to determine how early to start the heating.
Thats a bit old fashioned now and was mostly applicable to non modulating boilers.
With a modulating boiler with weather compensation there is little need to alter the start up temperature as the changed flow temperatures will put more power into the heating to make it heat up faster anyway.
Tony
Doctor Drivel said:If a boiler is fitted with optimisation or compensation it is crassly foolish not to fit the outside temperature sensor - the installer is negligent.
ChrisR said:WC is a means of making up in part for a crude control system on a boiler. If your room thermostat is a simple on-off one there's more to gain than if it tells the boiler what the temperature in the house IS.
Don't let anyone tell you they replace internal temperature measurement.
Agile said:However at the end of the day many customers dont want to pay the considerable extra cost to supply and fit the external sensor which is usually grossly overpriced by the manufacturer.
Tony
NGBod said:Agile said:However at the end of the day many customers dont want to pay the considerable extra cost to supply and fit the external sensor which is usually grossly overpriced by the manufacturer.
Tony
I fitted an external WC sensor to my Biasi M110 combi.
I couldn't locate a Biasi sensor and rang Biasi technical who at first told me Biasi's didn't support this feature and asked why I wanted to use it. They then said weather compensation is only of use in countries like Sweden.
Later I noticed in the manual that the resistance curve for the weather comp sensor was the same as the heat exchanger NTC's on the Biasi so used one of them. (Cheap)
So far it is working well. I chose a fairly steep compensation curve due to having an old house with poorly insulated solid walls. With an outside temp of 15 degC the boiler sends water to the rads at about 30 degC but with an outside temp of 5 degC it sends the water out at about 60 degC.
Dave
Doctor Drivel said:NTC's What does this mean?
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