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Re: multi-zone central heating
Hi All,
Has anyone seen this kit ?
http://www.heatmiser.co.uk/<http://www.heatmiser.co.uk/>
http://www.heatmisershop.co.uk/Heatmiser_MC__Master_Keypad-p-16143.html<http://www.heatmisershop.co.uk/Heatmiser_MC__Master_Keypad-p-16143.html>
http://www.heatmisershop.co.uk/Heatmiser_DTN-p-16140.html<http://www.heatmisershop.co.uk/Heatmiser_DTN-p-16140.html>
Not too expensive - seems it could be computer controlled given the
forthcoming
http://www.heatmiser.co.uk/images/pc.gif<http://www.heatmiser.co.uk/images/pc.gif>
Looks like you could install this as stand alone. At 30 quid per thermostat
(sure you could get a discount) no too bad. Even has a telephone module.
Would imagine high WAF as your automation system could simply interact with
it.
Chris
----- Original Message -----
From: Rodney Hall<mailto:rmh@xxxxxxx>
To: ukha_d@xxxxxxx<mailto:ukha_d@xxxxxxx>
Sent: 13 January 2005 23:38
Subject: RE: [ukha_d] multi-zone central heating
> -----Original Message-----
> From: David Amphlett [mailto:dave_yahoo@xxxxxxx]
> Sent: Thursday, January 13, 2005 5:04 PM
> To: ukha_d@xxxxxxx<mailto:ukha_d@xxxxxxx>
> Subject: [ukha_d] multi-zone central heating
>
>
>
>
> Anyone used something like this motorised valve:
> http://www.danfoss-randall.co.uk/Site/downloads/226.PDF<http://www.danfoss-randall.co.uk/Site/downloads/226.PDF>
to
> control the water flow
> through each radiator individually?
>
> I'd like a thermostat in each room, and one of these for each
> radiator. I could then have the boiler switch on if ANY thermostat is
> triggered, and only have the valves open on the radiators in the
> rooms where the thermostats were triggered. (in other words, 1 zone
> per room).
>
> One thing I'm not clear on is whether I'd want to plumb these in
> under the floorboards or not - they seem to have a little metal
> slider which I assume is a manual switchover, which makes me think
> they should be visible.
>
> I think X10 is a reasonable control strategy for this sort of thing,
> and so assume I need a AW12 for each valve, but do AW12's respond to
> status requests to say whether they are currently on or off? (it
> seems like such a waste to have remote control, but have to do dead
> reckoning to figure out if stuff's on or not - status reporting
> should be mandatory on all X10 kit!)
>
> Any thoughts / experiences shared appreciated
>
> Dave
Yes, I have them throughout the house, just as you describe - Danfoss HPA2
series two port valves, each with their own room stat. I have them mounted
under floor, actuator upwards. You don't need to touch them in use - the
lever is for manual opening in case you need to for venting. I've never had
to do that because I use all skirting rads, which as far as the water is
concerned, is all copper and they self vent well. The DHW cylinder is on
the
same circuit, treated as a rad with its own thermostat and M/V. The boiler
and pump are switched by the M/V microswitches. I have a small rad in the
bathroom (behind the bath panel) permanently on to act as heat sink for
when
all rads shut down and the pump over-runs to dissipate heat after the
boiler
shuts down (two minute pump shutoff delay). The system works a treat and is
very economical, coupled with cavity wall insulation. The lot is controlled
by a timer/controller of my own make. This has been in operation for the
best part of 20 years.
--
Rodney Hall
Dum spiro spero
While I breathe, I hope
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
rmh@xxxxxxx<mailto:rmh@xxxxxxx>
http://rmhh.co.uk/<http://rmhh.co.uk/>
http://rmhh.org.uk/<http://rmhh.org.uk/>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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