Currently reading:
Two zone valves on a combi boiler

Discuss Two zone valves on a combi boiler in the Plumbing Zone area at PlumbersForums.net

Status
Not open for further replies.

Inverness

Plumbers Arms member
Plumber
Gas Engineer
Messages
710
i never seen this done until I saw it yesterday. There is two room stats on each level. But the rooms that ave the room stats the radiators aren't locksheilds Ey have trvs? I've always learned that this would conflict with each other and the house would never reach the temperature set on the room stat as the trv would always stop the flow to radiator before the room stat is satisfied. It is a twin channel programmer I don't understand if you have two zones on wen one is satisfied how does the other zone get chance when this would switch off boiler?
 
Surely the temperature set on max with the trv located nearer the floor level will cut the flow before it has time to satisfiy the room stat. the temperature set at 30 on the room stat and the trv set on five it will still conflict with each other surely?

I'm I correct that the room stat only closes the zone valve not the boiler? So what happens about the boiler interlock? Cheers
 
i never seen this done until I saw it yesterday.

Deleted my original answer because it overlooked the 'zone valves' mentioned in the title but not in the question.

What type of thermostats are they? Do they predate the combi?

The system described could work okay as long as the TRVs had higher setpoints than the thermostat in the same room. It wouldn't comply with current regulations, however. Might have been okay in the distant past when systems could be timeswitch controlled, have TRVs everywhere and a bypass.

Better to convert to something more conventional IMO.
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.

Reply to Two zone valves on a combi boiler in the Plumbing Zone area at PlumbersForums.net

Back
Top