It shouldn’t do so if the circuits are balanced properly and zone controls operate. Once the floor slab gets up to temp it shouldn’t take much to keep these temps stable.Hear that underfloor costs a fortune
It shouldn’t do so if the circuits are balanced properly and zone controls operate. Once the floor slab gets up to temp it shouldn’t take much to keep these temps stable.Hear that underfloor costs a fortune
That doesn’t make a lot of sense Nan. 15 degrees is freezing, so I presume it’s never actually dropping to that? Any living space should be set at around 21-22 degrees but in a well insulated home it would never drop below 19 degrees with no heat at all on so you should only be making up 2-3 degrees. In that case the rooms set at 15 should never be calling for heat and the rooms at 20 would only need a small amount so something is wrong if you are getting big bills.Two temp switches, one in the kitchen, one in the main bedroom. I have the one in kitchen set at 15 and one in bedroom at 20
I leave them on that temp I do not switch off, although you can set them to go on and off ,I was told just to let them on.
I think you need someone to explain the system to you, there is a lot of kit with these things but ultimately they are very straight forward once you have it set up right as you just let it do it’s thing then. The only time I interact at all with my heating system is to put it on holiday mode if we are away, other than that it was set up about 4 years ago and I haven’t touched a button sinceThe kitchen does not drop as I have a solid fuel burner in the living room burning coal. With the door open it does all downstairs and also heats upstairs a bit. I will set the timer on the bedroom, I think that's the one that uses most, and also try and workout how to turn off the boiler. I looked in, it has a big tank, two expansion tanks and pipes running everywhere. A switch to turn off heating. I deffo need someone to look as it looks super complicated. One more thing, the insulation is great as when it gets warm it stays warm.
If you have a heat pump fitted it should be left on all of the time. It will operate on demand. One expansion tank is for the hot water and the other for the heating system.The kitchen does not drop as I have a solid fuel burner in the living room burning coal. With the door open it does all downstairs and also heats upstairs a bit. I will set the timer on the bedroom, I think that's the one that uses most, and also try and workout how to turn off the boiler. I looked in, it has a big tank, two expansion tanks and pipes running everywhere. A switch to turn off heating. I deffo need someone to look as it looks super complicated. One more thing, the insulation is great as when it gets warm it stays warm.
Effectively it's the 3rd Bright power left in January and Glow power aren't taking on new customers.Thats 2 suppliers that have left the market as of late. Going the same way as the banks.
It actually does kinda back it up alright.And here we have it, if the money was in it, these companies would not be pulling out of this country.