I wasn't aware the NEST had a power cord with a plug on the end. I thought that was just for the optional stand. For wall-mounting the wires should be hidden behind it in the wall I would've thought.
Regarding the wiring for the Nest, they recommend using wires in the wall if they are already there, but not for a new install (see below):
http://support-assets.nest.com/images/tpzimages/nest-stand-ill.png[/IM][/QUOTE]
They want their thermostat in the living room and not the hallway (where most are currently located).
The running the cable down the wall must be a joke surely.
The running the cable down the wall must be a joke surely.
It only got external wire if you need/want the stand. Otherwise it uses the power supply your existing thermostat uses.
The wire down the wall does seem a joke, but it appears to be real! They surely win an award on how to make something good-looking appear ugly.
It needs 240V power supply. Standard UK thermostats use that, so if you not putting it where the old one is you need to provide an external power supply. Hence, the cable.
The screen should last much longer than 2-4 years imo.I had the CMT927 at my previous house for a couple of years and was very happy with it. At £75, it is significantly cheaper than Nest, and doesn't have the wiring issue, as it runs on batteries (didn't need to change batteries in the 2 years I had the last one). The one star ratings all seem to be due to issue of the screen fading.
Prices dropping will require more companies making products with similar or better features and at a similar/lower price point. Right now they have a premium offering which few come close to matching in functionality outside of a bespoke system which is no cheaper. Progress in this sector seems quite slow but in 3-5 years that could change I guess.In 3-5 years, I think the like of the Evohome will become more mainstream, and the prices will drop significantly. I used the planner on their website, and it said my install would be £1000!!! I'm happy to drop £75 now, and then get a system like the Evohome for £300 in 5 years time (wishful thinking?).
Regarding the wiring for the Nest, they recommend using wires in the wall if they are already there, but not for a new install (see below):
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Then pay someone to hide the cable. I'm not sure what you expect them to do. It needs a power supply and you don't have one. What would you suggest![]()
The problem I have is I don't have an existing wired thermostat and I don't want the power cable to be visible for it, does anyone know if this could it be wired to a fused spur with the power cable put in the wall?
No batteries in the Nest... has to be plugged in.
It's not going to be neat as it will want 12v so there will be a power brick. I'd be looking at having a power cable installed from the 'heat link' converter box on its 12v supply.