Hi everyone,
since the weather is going to get quite warm in the next few days, I’m thinking about turning off or lowering the controls for the individual room heating zones. Ultimately, the air-to-water heat pump regulates itself using the outdoor sensor, but why not save on heating costs a couple of weeks earlier?
Basically, the south-facing windows contribute a lot of heat to the house, and I could light the fireplace in the evening, but it only provides moderate heating to the upper floor.
How do you handle this? When do you turn off the heating?
since the weather is going to get quite warm in the next few days, I’m thinking about turning off or lowering the controls for the individual room heating zones. Ultimately, the air-to-water heat pump regulates itself using the outdoor sensor, but why not save on heating costs a couple of weeks earlier?
Basically, the south-facing windows contribute a lot of heat to the house, and I could light the fireplace in the evening, but it only provides moderate heating to the upper floor.
How do you handle this? When do you turn off the heating?
D
Deliverer12 Mar 2020 08:47If your room temperature rises above the setpoint temperature, the water stops transferring heat to the room, the return temperature increases, and the heating system reduces output or switches off. You do not need to adjust anything manually.
We do not have an ERR in operation, and the heating limit is set to 13°C (55°F) outside temperature. However, I cannot yet say if 13°C (55°F) is appropriate or too low/high.
Our heating usually turns off quite reliably at 9-11°C (48-52°F) outside temperature. Otherwise, it generally runs continuously for days or weeks, modulating as needed.
Our heating usually turns off quite reliably at 9-11°C (48-52°F) outside temperature. Otherwise, it generally runs continuously for days or weeks, modulating as needed.
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