Installing a central heating thermostat
Discussion
Any heating engineers about?
In their wisdom d the builders redoing my workplace ripped out the basic dial type thermostat from the gas heating. It looks like it was hooked up to the circulation pump which they've closed the circuit of.
Looking into things I see there are two ways of connecting a thermostat: either to the circulation pump or to a pair of purpose built contacts.
I have the wiring diagram for the heater and it shows the two contacts and says to remove the bridging cable in place to connect a thermostat.
This cable is still in place which confirms that the previous TS was connected to the circulation pump.
Sorry for the long post but what's best: connect a new TS to the pump or go for these ready made contacts?
In their wisdom d the builders redoing my workplace ripped out the basic dial type thermostat from the gas heating. It looks like it was hooked up to the circulation pump which they've closed the circuit of.
Looking into things I see there are two ways of connecting a thermostat: either to the circulation pump or to a pair of purpose built contacts.
I have the wiring diagram for the heater and it shows the two contacts and says to remove the bridging cable in place to connect a thermostat.
This cable is still in place which confirms that the previous TS was connected to the circulation pump.
Sorry for the long post but what's best: connect a new TS to the pump or go for these ready made contacts?
The two port valve would normally have five wires:
Earth
Blue - Neutral to motor
Brown - Live to motor
Grey & Orange - These are across a switch which is closed when the valve opens. Normally you would make Grey a permanent live and Orange would feed that live into the boiler to fire it.
Earth
Blue - Neutral to motor
Brown - Live to motor
Grey & Orange - These are across a switch which is closed when the valve opens. Normally you would make Grey a permanent live and Orange would feed that live into the boiler to fire it.
Ferg said:
The two port valve would normally have five wires:
Earth
Blue - Neutral to motor
Brown - Live to motor
Grey & Orange - These are across a switch which is closed when the valve opens. Normally you would make Grey a permanent live and Orange would feed that live into the boiler to fire it.
Earth
Blue - Neutral to motor
Brown - Live to motor
Grey & Orange - These are across a switch which is closed when the valve opens. Normally you would make Grey a permanent live and Orange would feed that live into the boiler to fire it.
Well there is only neutral, live and earth on the valve but there is a second cable running from the furnace (alongside the main power cable which has two wires in it. I'll go and have a closer look.
Yeah, sorry. Live from the supply (via a timer?) to the stat, then from there to the brown wire. Fire the burner with live from a similar source, I suppose. Thing is....if the valve is closed, but the burner fires, what happens? It has a vent and cold feed? I'm assuming the thermostat on the heater will cut it out.
Right couldn't sleep so went to check: pretty sure it's a pump in fact, it's rounded and it's connected two a three core cable in a junction box coming from the furnace.
There is a constant whirring noise coming from it so it seems to be on all the time.
The furnace also has a separate live feed from the mains.
What I don't understand is that in the furnace instructions it says to connect the thermostat to connections 1 and 20 on the furnace and remove the bridging connector but this is not how it was done: the bridging connector is still in place and it would seem that the old thermostat was connected to the circulation pump.
There is a constant whirring noise coming from it so it seems to be on all the time.
The furnace also has a separate live feed from the mains.
What I don't understand is that in the furnace instructions it says to connect the thermostat to connections 1 and 20 on the furnace and remove the bridging connector but this is not how it was done: the bridging connector is still in place and it would seem that the old thermostat was connected to the circulation pump.
Edited by Driller on Monday 14th January 03:42
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