Hi, hoping there's someone here who can help!
Background:
I have recently moved and inherited a Worcester Bosch HeatSlave 20/25 oil combi. It played up within 2 weeks of moving in, and I've had an engineer out to fix it - about 6 times! Several things were replaced, and the heating system has been fully flushed out. Items replaced were:
- Expansion tank
- Diverter head X 2
- Motherboard
Current situation (2 months later):
1 - There is hot water on demand
2 - Central heating, when it does work, is fine
The problem:
3 - The diverter is not moving to the CH position when there is heating demand - it remains in the HW position.
Note:
I can move it manually using a long screwdriver on the lever and hold it in the CH position, then the radiators heat up as expected. When I let go of the diverter lever at any point it slowly (3 seconds) returns straight back to HW position.
- The CH is definitely on demand
- Happens for all these scenarios: HW on demand, HW on with no demand, HW heating the boiler tank, HW off.
- Tested over a suitable period of time to ensure HW demand/tank heating cycles aren't the issue.
- The diverter head was recently replaced with an original Honeywell part (V4044F1125)
Some peculiarities:
4 - The fan is permanently on. It used to work as a pre and post burner purge for about 5 seconds, but since the engineer changed the motherboard and looked at it the fan remains on.
5 - Having said point 4 above, the 'fan remaining' on was not always the case. Prior to this the fan would pre and post purge as normal, but the relays on the motherboard would chatter. This would happen when the HW demand ceased and it was trying to switch back to CH - the engineer told me this was a 'known thing' with the Heatslave 20/25, and was probably because the diverter valve was taking too long to go back to heating and/or the diverter head was not communicating properly with the motherboard.
QUESTION:
- Does anyone have any useful suggestions? I want to avoid having to buy a new boiler outright unnecessarily. The engineer, who is pretty experienced, doesn't have any more suggestions.
Many thanks for your help!
Background:
I have recently moved and inherited a Worcester Bosch HeatSlave 20/25 oil combi. It played up within 2 weeks of moving in, and I've had an engineer out to fix it - about 6 times! Several things were replaced, and the heating system has been fully flushed out. Items replaced were:
- Expansion tank
- Diverter head X 2
- Motherboard
Current situation (2 months later):
1 - There is hot water on demand
2 - Central heating, when it does work, is fine
The problem:
3 - The diverter is not moving to the CH position when there is heating demand - it remains in the HW position.
Note:
I can move it manually using a long screwdriver on the lever and hold it in the CH position, then the radiators heat up as expected. When I let go of the diverter lever at any point it slowly (3 seconds) returns straight back to HW position.
- The CH is definitely on demand
- Happens for all these scenarios: HW on demand, HW on with no demand, HW heating the boiler tank, HW off.
- Tested over a suitable period of time to ensure HW demand/tank heating cycles aren't the issue.
- The diverter head was recently replaced with an original Honeywell part (V4044F1125)
Some peculiarities:
4 - The fan is permanently on. It used to work as a pre and post burner purge for about 5 seconds, but since the engineer changed the motherboard and looked at it the fan remains on.
5 - Having said point 4 above, the 'fan remaining' on was not always the case. Prior to this the fan would pre and post purge as normal, but the relays on the motherboard would chatter. This would happen when the HW demand ceased and it was trying to switch back to CH - the engineer told me this was a 'known thing' with the Heatslave 20/25, and was probably because the diverter valve was taking too long to go back to heating and/or the diverter head was not communicating properly with the motherboard.
QUESTION:
- Does anyone have any useful suggestions? I want to avoid having to buy a new boiler outright unnecessarily. The engineer, who is pretty experienced, doesn't have any more suggestions.
Many thanks for your help!