Have you put your heating on yet?

Have you put your heating on yet?

Author
Discussion

Mikey G

4,740 posts

243 months

Wednesday 12th June
quotequote all
My thermostat is set to 17 in the morning and hasnt tripped on since the end of the first week of May, just checked Hive this morning and it was close to coming on at 6am as indoor temp was exactly 17, has shot up to 18 since the sun has come round....

dhutch

14,474 posts

200 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Mikey G said:
My thermostat is set to 17 in the morning and hasnt tripped on since the end of the first week of May, just checked Hive this morning and it was close to coming on at 6am as indoor temp was exactly 17, has shot up to 18 since the sun has come round....
We had to tweek our setback from 17 to 16 a week ago to prevent a morning trip, but roll on 7 days and this past weekend has been lovely!

markiii

3,692 posts

197 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
I used to leave mine on setback all year. Then I realised it was coming on for a bit on cold mornings when in the real world it would have warmed in it's own an hour later.

And despite being colder felt just fine due to the sun

I turn it off completely in April now and it rarely goes back on til october

dhutch

14,474 posts

200 months

Wednesday 26th June
quotequote all
A lot of insurance policies require a minimum heating temp, all be it obviously intended for winter spells.

However we also have two dogs including an elderly greyhound cross, so if it actually is below 15-16c, some heating isnt stupid.

But yeah. also galling to have chuck £40 of gas at a problem which was always going to go away by 10am with the sun!

loafer123

15,527 posts

218 months

Wednesday 26th June
quotequote all

Modern boiler control systems have weather compensation and will adjust for this automatically.

Trustmeimadoctor

12,851 posts

158 months

Wednesday 26th June
quotequote all
Alot don't take forcast into account and just use the ntc to give outside temp, some of the smart controls tado evohomd etc kinda do it but from my experience not very well

gotoPzero

17,531 posts

192 months

Wednesday 26th June
quotequote all
24 in the hall way today, 26 outside.

By the weekend.... meant to be 15-16c again.. FFS.

The only good thing is it takes about 2 days for the slab to cool down (or heat up) so hopefully we will get a few days where the house stays warm.

Trustmeimadoctor

12,851 posts

158 months

Wednesday 26th June
quotequote all
We are ranging 23.8 - 28 and 26.5 outside I've eaten a box of mini milks frown

B'stard Child

28,721 posts

249 months

Wednesday 26th June
quotequote all
Trustmeimadoctor said:
We are ranging 23.8 - 28 and 26.5 outside I've eaten a box of mini milks frown
Lowest 23 - highest 26

It’s 27.5 outside

I’m waiting for Mrs BC to cook dinner (it’s her turn)

dhutch

14,474 posts

200 months

Wednesday 26th June
quotequote all
Trustmeimadoctor said:
Alot don't take forcast into account and just use the ntc to give outside temp, some of the smart controls tado evohomd etc kinda do it but from my experience not very well
Yeah, we don't have the weather comp thermistor for the vessmann boiler, but we do have Wiser heating control, which should know better, but basically doesn't.

Hoofy

76,802 posts

285 months

Wednesday 26th June
quotequote all
I think the only time you can't do anything about it is when the battery in the remote CH controller goes. I understand it will set the CH to max and switch it on 24/7. I get that in winter this is good but in summer, it will do the same.

Sheepshanks

33,323 posts

122 months

Thursday 27th June
quotequote all
Hoofy said:
I think the only time you can't do anything about it is when the battery in the remote CH controller goes. I understand it will set the CH to max and switch it on 24/7. I get that in winter this is good but in summer, it will do the same.
It would be astonishing if that's correct. Imagine you were away for a while?

dhutch

14,474 posts

200 months

Friday 28th June
quotequote all
Sheepshanks said:
It would be astonishing if that's correct. Imagine you were away for a while?
Ditto.

markiii

3,692 posts

197 months

Friday 28th June
quotequote all
dhutch said:
A lot of insurance policies require a minimum heating temp, all be it obviously intended for winter spells.

However we also have two dogs including an elderly greyhound cross, so if it actually is below 15-16c, some heating isnt stupid.

But yeah. also galling to have chuck £40 of gas at a problem which was always going to go away by 10am with the sun!
true, I should clarify when I say off, I just put the thermostats into off mode which still comers on if it drops passed the frostat setting

dhutch

14,474 posts

200 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
dhutch said:
Sheepshanks said:
Hoofy said:
I think the only time you can't do anything about it is when the battery in the remote CH controller goes. I understand it will set the CH to max and switch it on 24/7. I get that in winter this is good but in summer, it will do the same.
It would be astonishing if that's correct. Imagine you were away for a while?
Ditto.
Well in an amazing twist of coincidence, given the batteries last a few years, yesterday I got home to the Wiser thermostat flashing red for low battery, and this morning I woke up to a notification on my phone that it's gone offline.

And given last weeks heatwave is over, I can confirm that not heating fired up, and the house is brutally cold just like it was yesterday morning! 16.5deg in the living room.

skwdenyer

17,134 posts

243 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
dhutch said:
dhutch said:
Sheepshanks said:
Hoofy said:
I think the only time you can't do anything about it is when the battery in the remote CH controller goes. I understand it will set the CH to max and switch it on 24/7. I get that in winter this is good but in summer, it will do the same.
It would be astonishing if that's correct. Imagine you were away for a while?
Ditto.
Well in an amazing twist of coincidence, given the batteries last a few years, yesterday I got home to the Wiser thermostat flashing red for low battery, and this morning I woke up to a notification on my phone that it's gone offline.

And given last weeks heatwave is over, I can confirm that not heating fired up, and the house is brutally cold just like it was yesterday morning! 16.5deg in the living room.
I've been in London for 10 days, where I was absolutely sweltering doing building maintenance work. Now back in the Yorkshire Dales and the living room is 16 degrees and falling right now. We may have to light the stove! The forecast is for overnight lows of 7 degrees this week...

princeperch

7,965 posts

250 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Put the stove on today for 2 or 3 hrs as the living room just felt too cold, despite the room temperature being 20 degrees.

Not in the highlands of Scotland either, suburban east london.

cerb4.5lee

31,462 posts

183 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
princeperch said:
Put the stove on today for 2 or 3 hrs as the living room just felt too cold, despite the room temperature being 20 degrees.

Not in the highlands of Scotland either, suburban east london.
My missus was grumbling about being cold today, and the thermostats were saying 20 degrees as well. I was tempted to put the burner on earlier, but I did resist in the end though.

Our boiler comes on for an hour in the morning, and an hour in the evening to heat the water. However all the rads come on as well though, and usually that is a bit annoying in the summer, but with these low temps currently...its turned into a bit of a bonus to be fair!

Riley Blue

21,166 posts

229 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
It was 10.8 outside a couple of mornings ago when I came downstairs and a bit chilly inside. I went back upstairs and put a fleece on. Mission accomplished without a penny spent.

Crumpet

3,921 posts

183 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
I actually gave in to my wife yesterday and agreed to put the heating back on. Upstairs is fine at 18 but parts of the downstairs were 16 degrees.

I don’t recall ever having to have the heating on in July, yet I have absolutely no doubt that in a few weeks the BBC will be declaring this July as the warmest on record!