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roadrun8727 Jan 2017 09:11Hello everyone,
This year we are renovating a house, which will have underfloor heating on both the ground floor and first floor. However, this can only be integrated into the home automation system next year, which will also enable the adaptive heating control (ERR).
I don’t want to install thermostats from the heating system manufacturer in every room. Is it possible to control the heating valves in such a way that we can manage a proper ERR during one winter?
Or do you have a good idea for a temporary solution?
This year we are renovating a house, which will have underfloor heating on both the ground floor and first floor. However, this can only be integrated into the home automation system next year, which will also enable the adaptive heating control (ERR).
I don’t want to install thermostats from the heating system manufacturer in every room. Is it possible to control the heating valves in such a way that we can manage a proper ERR during one winter?
Or do you have a good idea for a temporary solution?
roadrun87 schrieb:
I don’t want to install thermostats from the heating manufacturer in every room. Is it possible to control the heating at the actuators so that we can get through a winter properly with just that?I have set it up so that we can manage like this all year round.
Only recently, after the heating specialist made some changes during maintenance, did I have to readjust.
I’m also not quite sure what you would want to change in a floor heating system as part of home automation. It’s far too slow to respond for any quick adjustments.
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roadrun8727 Jan 2017 09:44So you don’t have any room thermostats, and the heating is controlled solely by the outdoor temperature sensor?
Do you then adjust the flow rate at the valve, for example, to keep the bedrooms a bit cooler than the bathroom?
Do you then adjust the flow rate at the valve, for example, to keep the bedrooms a bit cooler than the bathroom?
I have now removed the actuators from the thermostats and turned the thermostats down to 0, because the actuators consume power when set to "open."
In the bedroom and guest room, I have left the actuators in place as a precaution and kept the thermostats operational, but I have already significantly reduced the flow rate there as well.
Everything else I control via the flow rate and the heating curve.
In the bedroom and guest room, I have left the actuators in place as a precaution and kept the thermostats operational, but I have already significantly reduced the flow rate there as well.
Everything else I control via the flow rate and the heating curve.
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