M’aidez

Will a freshly baked loaf of cranberry and pecan sourdough suffice?
My wife prefers the wholemeal sourdough, but I’m not into brown bread, no matter how much healthier it is alleged to be.
I WILL locate the model number, even if I have to climb into the airing cupboard with the torch app on my phone, strike that, even if I have to steady the step ladder, while SHE climbs into the cupboard.

If that's all you have and want the issue sorted sooner I suppose it will have to suffice...
 
i know on mine if i turn the stat down the central heating pump will still circulate the water but obviously the burner is not on untill theres a call from the stat so using electric for the pump rather than oil in my case

If your pump is circulating beyond one or two minutes after the boiler has shut down, something's wrong.
 
If your pump is circulating beyond one or two minutes after the boiler has shut down, something's wrong.
dunno i put a new syncro motor in the diverter valve when heating went down . assumed when the micro switch is on ie call from heating stat ,motor tyrns actuator thats it ,pump on ,
 
How has this thread not yet been answered definitively?

A heating boiler which works should heat the system it is connected to until the point when the thermostat controlling it says the space it is heating is at the temperature it has instructed.

After that point it will have a rest.

Until it acquires the taste for human blood. Then all bets are off.
 
Burning gas generates heat.
If the boiler is generating heat, that heat energy must be constantly transferred to something or else the boiler would quickly fail/catch on fire/explode.
If that heat energy is not being transferred inside your house, it must be being transferred outside of your house.

Your wife is arguing that the boiler is burning gas to generate heat and then continuously dumping that heat outside. Why does she think the boiler is built to routinely work that way in normal circumstances?

Unless something is badly wrong with your central heating or the central heating manufacturer is illegally conspiring with the gas provider to hugely inflate bills, when the boiler is switched on and working it will burn gas only as and when required to maintain the temperature set by the thermostat. The green light will be showing that the boiler is available to use, not that it's currently burning gas. If it's x degrees where the thermosensor is and you set the desired temp to <x degrees, nothing will happen. The boiler will not burn gas because there's no need for additional heat.

If you stand next to the boiler while it's burning gas and someone turns the thermostat temp down below the current temp, what you should hear is this:

1) A short delay (probably just seconds) while the new required temperature is sensed and the system confirms that the current temp is above the required temp.
2) The gas stops burning.
3) The water pump continues functioning for a short period of time, circulating hot water around the system for a while. Probably a minute or two.

This happens all the time unless your central heating system is incapable of heating your house to the desired temperature. That's the only situation in which it would be constantly burning gas when the central heating system is on.

You could also confirm this by looking at the gas meter (listening to it would probably work as well). Gas being used...thermostat turned down below current temp...a few seconds later the gas stops being used.

EDIT: My central heating system is on almost every second of the year. It's only off during power cuts and maybe during part of the annual servicing. Most of the time it uses no gas at all because the master thermostat is set to 8C and my house is above 8C. Or maybe it's 5C, I'm not sure. It's a "just in case" thing to prevent water pipes freezing.

EDIT: Strictly speaking having the central heating on but not supplying heat (because you've turned the thermostat below the current temperature) does increase your bills - it increases your electricity consumption by the amount required to run the boiler control systems. A quick look online shows consumption around 6 ro 7W, which sounds right to me. It's a simple little board. That would increase your electricity bill by about 15p a week. Oh noes!
 
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Burning gas generates heat.
If the boiler is generating heat, that heat energy must be constantly transferred to something or else the boiler would quickly fail/catch on fire/explode.
If that heat energy is not being transferred inside your house, it must be being transferred outside of your house.

Your wife is arguing that the boiler is burning gas to generate heat and then continuously dumping that heat outside. Why does she think the boiler is built to routinely work that way in normal circumstances?

Unless something is badly wrong with your central heating or the central heating manufacturer is illegally conspiring with the gas provider to hugely inflate bills, when the boiler is switched on and working it will burn gas only as and when required to maintain the temperature set by the thermostat. The green light will be showing that the boiler is available to use, not that it's currently burning gas. If it's x degrees where the thermosensor is and you set the desired temp to <x degrees, nothing will happen. The boiler will not burn gas because there's no need for additional heat.

If you stand next to the boiler while it's burning gas and someone turns the thermostat temp down below the current temp, what you should hear is this:

1) A short delay (probably just seconds) while the new required temperature is sensed and the system confirms that the current temp is above the required temp.
2) The gas stops burning.
3) The water pump continues functioning for a short period of time, circulating hot water around the system for a while. Probably a minute or two.

This happens all the time unless your central heating system is incapable of heating your house to the desired temperature. That's the only situation in which it would be constantly burning gas when the central heating system is on.

You could also confirm this by looking at the gas meter (listening to it would probably work as well). Gas being used...thermostat turned down below current temp...a few seconds later the gas stops being used.

EDIT: My central heating system is on almost every second of the year. It's only off during power cuts and maybe during part of the annual servicing. Most of the time it uses no gas at all because the master thermostat is set to 8C and my house is above 8C. Or maybe it's 5C, I'm not sure. It's a "just in case" thing to prevent water pipes freezing.

EDIT: Strictly speaking having the central heating on but not supplying heat (because you've turned the thermostat below the current temperature) does increase your bills - it increases your electricity consumption by the amount required to run the boiler control systems. A quick look online shows consumption around 6 ro 7W, which sounds right to me. It's a simple little board. That would increase your electricity bill by about 15p a week. Oh noes!


mine definitely dosnt do this ,if my ch green light is om ,thats it the pump is running unless thered demans from hot water ,turn off the ch on the switch and it will stop ,
its quite an old lump of an oil boiler though woscter bosc heatslave and the stats are built into the boiler casing ,
 
Burning gas generates heat.
If the boiler is generating heat, that heat energy must be constantly transferred to something or else the boiler would quickly fail/catch on fire/explode.
If that heat energy is not being transferred inside your house, it must be being transferred outside of your house.

Your wife is arguing that the boiler is burning gas to generate heat and then continuously dumping that heat outside. Why does she think the boiler is built to routinely work that way in normal circumstances?

Unless something is badly wrong with your central heating or the central heating manufacturer is illegally conspiring with the gas provider to hugely inflate bills, when the boiler is switched on and working it will burn gas only as and when required to maintain the temperature set by the thermostat. The green light will be showing that the boiler is available to use, not that it's currently burning gas. If it's x degrees where the thermosensor is and you set the desired temp to <x degrees, nothing will happen. The boiler will not burn gas because there's no need for additional heat.

If you stand next to the boiler while it's burning gas and someone turns the thermostat temp down below the current temp, what you should hear is this:

1) A short delay (probably just seconds) while the new required temperature is sensed and the system confirms that the current temp is above the required temp.
2) The gas stops burning.
3) The water pump continues functioning for a short period of time, circulating hot water around the system for a while. Probably a minute or two.

This happens all the time unless your central heating system is incapable of heating your house to the desired temperature. That's the only situation in which it would be constantly burning gas when the central heating system is on.

You could also confirm this by looking at the gas meter (listening to it would probably work as well). Gas being used...thermostat turned down below current temp...a few seconds later the gas stops being used.

EDIT: My central heating system is on almost every second of the year. It's only off during power cuts and maybe during part of the annual servicing. Most of the time it uses no gas at all because the master thermostat is set to 8C and my house is above 8C. Or maybe it's 5C, I'm not sure. It's a "just in case" thing to prevent water pipes freezing.

EDIT: Strictly speaking having the central heating on but not supplying heat (because you've turned the thermostat below the current temperature) does increase your bills - it increases your electricity consumption by the amount required to run the boiler control systems. A quick look online shows consumption around 6 ro 7W, which sounds right to me. It's a simple little board. That would increase your electricity bill by about 15p a week. Oh noes!

Thanks Angilion,
To paraphrase Matthew Modine's character, in "Memphis Belle", "You have dropped it straight into the pickle barrel", and succinctly summed it up.
The only part I would take issue with, and then only very, very slightly, is when you said that my wife was arguing that the boiler was burning gas, "and then dumping it outside."
She wasn't saying that per se, but that construction could have been put on it, she was saying, that to her, the fact that the green light was on, was an indication that the boiler was heating gas.
With the benefit of hindsight, and armed with your input, I should have asked her, "If the boiler is generating heat, where is that heat going?"
An uneasy peace reigns chez nous right now, but it met initial resistance, when i handed her the iPad, to read the first batch of replies, backing up my theory, that if the rads had cold water, then no heat was being generated by the boiler, she read maybe 4 or 5, then cast the iPad unceremoniously aside, saying, "I'm not interested, this stuff bores me, I have no inclination to read your puerile Forums, I have more pressing things to do, like check my Facebook page."
I think that a line of posts, proving her theory wrong, had pushed her over the edge, so she had crept back to where a lot of women appear to seek solace, her Facebook pages, pausing only to lash out at my "obsession", looking at Forum pages for perhaps 35-40 minutes per day.
 
would still like to know if anybody elses pump runs when burner not operating or after more than a couple of mins ,i tend to do repairs myself and them have the things i cant do done by a heating pro such as my pump pressure and co2 levels
so im not just sat there googling how ch works
ive a new timer i put in salvaged from a newer scrap boiler {its in properly now ,ive refabricated the panel) if ive a fault ive a spare circuit board i can put in

8y5gmq.jpg
 
@moon man the pump will run until a thermostat (not a room stat) tells it to stop. This is done to dissipate the heat from the system. This is also why there should always be a radiator that doesn't have a thermostatic valve, usually the hall radiator.
 
@moon man the pump will run until a thermostat (not a room stat) tells it to stop. This is done to dissipate the heat from the system. This is also why there should always be a radiator that doesn't have a thermostatic valve, usually the hall radiator.
makes sense ,will have to check that my pump seem to kick in before the burner is on ,theres a single contact in the diverter valve head and i think this is running the pump as soon as the water is diverted
 
@moon man the pump will run until a thermostat (not a room stat) tells it to stop. This is done to dissipate the heat from the system. This is also why there should always be a radiator that doesn't have a thermostatic valve, usually the hall radiator.

Interesting, good to know (on the TRVs), all mine have tado smart valves but thankfully the bathroom one doesn't. I didn't know that, thanks for the tip.
 
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