1986
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Registered: 19th Jun 13
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Anyone had this fitted ? thinking about getting it done and just wondered if anyone had a view on it ?
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whitter45
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Registered: 15th Nov 02
Location: Norton
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I prefer this from the company I work for
the ad has just been approved for release
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvbEuPVtVNc
In all honesty its pretty expensive and the novelty wears off
[Edited on 10-04-2014 by whitter45]
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John
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Registered: 30th Jun 03
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Nest has just been released in the UK.
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Rob_Quads
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Registered: 29th Mar 01
Location: southampton
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I've been looking into these for quite a bit.
At the moment ended up going the DIY route, so far have my PI with wireless temp sensors in all the rooms. Nearlly ready to hook up to the central heating too.
Nest is quite cool although heard very mixed reviews due to the way it interacts with the water heating system and as a result a lot of the efficiency is lost
Honeywell also do a system. Theirs looks to be the best with per room dynamic trvs and you can control each room to be what you want.
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John
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Registered: 30th Jun 03
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I will diy most things but when you buy a normal heating controller, it'll probably work. Can imagine you'll be logging onto the pi all the time to fix stuff.
Other thing that's put me off doing it is that there's no point. I've generally got the radiators all on high anyway.
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Ben G
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Registered: 12th Jan 07
Location: Essex
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Hive is free with British gas at the moment if you fixed your tariff iirc.
Nest looks nicer.
The neostat by heatmiser is lovely too.
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Rob_Quads
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Registered: 29th Mar 01
Location: southampton
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Agree in what you say about the Pi, its whats stopped me completing it so far - the Wife factor lol.
Watch out on British Gas' fixed tarrif. A few of the others have already said they won't put up their prices now the government have removed some of the green taxes so you will end up paying a lot more than the cost of the Hive by fixing with british gas
Really like http://evohome.honeywell.com but its a good £600+ to do a house properly
also like the HeadMiser, specially the way you can link in a separate electric floor into the system.
[Edited on 10-04-2014 by Rob_Quads]
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Ben G
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Registered: 12th Jan 07
Location: Essex
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quote: Originally posted by John
I will diy most things but when you buy a normal heating controller, it'll probably work. Can imagine you'll be logging onto the pi all the time to fix stuff.
Other thing that's put me off doing it is that there's no point. I've generally got the radiators all on high anyway.
same here. If it put the heating on, it's because i'm cold and want to be warm as soon as possible. When i'm sufficiently warm, I turn the heating off.
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John
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Registered: 30th Jun 03
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Heatmiser seems to be good, but not as good as your more mature brands.
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corsa-torque
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Registered: 15th Mar 11
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Good bit of kit, handy in the winter when you want to leave work and arrive at a warm home.
If you can get it for free via a tariff fix well worth having and if not £199 isn't too bad.
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Stu_22
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Registered: 25th Mar 02
Location: Luton
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I have it handy for me as my shifts never finsh at the same time in the evenings but took me a few times to remember to turn it on and would go home to a cold house
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Andrew
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Registered: 5th May 04
Location: Skoda Octavia Estate, Ford Puma
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quote: Originally posted by John
I will diy most things but when you buy a normal heating controller, it'll probably work. Can imagine you'll be logging onto the pi all the time to fix stuff.
I'm with John on this (maybe i'm getting old). I don't see the point in a gadget controlling the heating in my house. We just use a switch to turn it on and off as and when it's cold.
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Ben G
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Registered: 12th Jan 07
Location: Essex
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You can't swtich it on from the thermostat if you're out though. All well and good if your shift pattern is constant.
Not so good if you work 3 shift.
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Andrew
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Registered: 5th May 04
Location: Skoda Octavia Estate, Ford Puma
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Modern houses will warm up in 15 - 20 minutes. I can live with that!
I don't warm my car up in the mornings before my 1 hour commute, same principle in the house.
I see it as a gadget and something else to go wrong
Saying all this, i'll probably want a hive solution next year
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1986
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Registered: 19th Jun 13
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quote: Originally posted by Andrew
Modern houses will warm up in 15 - 20 minutes. I can live with that!
I don't warm my car up in the mornings before my 1 hour commute, same principle in the house.
I see it as a gadget and something else to go wrong
Saying all this, i'll probably want a hive solution next year
I did think a few of these points but having a baby over xmas one of these would have been very handy I just think for the little they cost its probably not a bad investment
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Ben G
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Registered: 12th Jan 07
Location: Essex
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If i could remotely activate my car to get the heating on then I would.
As long as it didn't use fuel, of course.
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Rob_Quads
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Registered: 29th Mar 01
Location: southampton
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Induction charging from driveway to car with an electric in-car heater - Job done.
Current tech might need a bit of development to get there though
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John
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Registered: 30th Jun 03
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Loads of cars come with an electric/diesel fired auxiliary heater, just not normally in the UK because it doesn't get cold enough.
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dannymccann
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Registered: 9th Aug 06
Location: Doddington, Lincolnshire
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Seems a bit pointless to me really...as Andrew says unless you've got a proper old and draughty house it only really takes 15 / 20 minutes until you feel the heating kicking in?
I know in my new build once the heating has been on for 5 with it's plasterboard walls the room starts getting toasty almost immediately
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Dom
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Registered: 13th Sep 03
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quote: Originally posted by Rob_Quads
At the moment ended up going the DIY route....
Have you got a blog or a write-up about your project? Be interested in seeing what you're doing and how your achieving it (particularly the individual room temperature modules)
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Rob_Quads
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Registered: 29th Mar 01
Location: southampton
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http://www.convery.me.uk/blog/xrf-temperature-sensor-xrf-slice-of-pi/
XRF modules are the key to mine. Fairly cheap and have worked flawlessly for a year now
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Dom
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Registered: 13th Sep 03
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quote: Originally posted by Rob_Quads
http://www.convery.me.uk/blog/xrf-temperature-sensor-xrf-slice-of-pi/
XRF modules are the key to mine. Fairly cheap and have worked flawlessly for a year now
Does your project control individual zones/rooms (if so what valves are you using on the radiators?) or are you simply averaging the temperature results across all zones/rooms and switching on the boiler when required?
Certainly an interesting project though
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Rob_Quads
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Registered: 29th Mar 01
Location: southampton
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Its not doing anything at the moment lol. Twins have got in the way of the plans.
Ideally I'm looking at getting some TRVs that are XigBee enabled but they are not cheap and then is it worth going the custom root with such expense...
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John
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Registered: 30th Jun 03
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Got a NEST.
It's summer and I've only wired it up today so can't really give a review on functionality.
I can review the quality though, very Apple, which is to be expected. Quality feels really good, packaging is nice, even the screws you get with it are nice.
It only controls heating, not hot water so was a bit of a pain working out how to keep my current programmer while using the NEST as thermostat only. Wiring for the nest itself is pretty simple though, just power and a relay.
Impressed so far.
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Russ
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Registered: 14th Mar 04
Location: Armchair
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quote: Originally posted by whitter45
I prefer this from the company I work for
the ad has just been approved for release
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvbEuPVtVNc
In all honesty its pretty expensive and the novelty wears off
[Edited on 10-04-2014 by whitter45]
is that fucking ben from eastenders
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