Help..
Good morning,
I am not very experienced in this matter and therefore I wanted to explain my case hoping that someone can help me.
I thank in advance anyone who has the patience to read this long story and try to understand something to help me :p
I purchased some tado X components, but now I wonder if I did well and how I could better manage my situation, which is this:
I have a house with 2 floors + tavern + attic (so 4 floors total).
The two main floors are served by two thermostats (which I replaced with the wired tado X thermostats) that each connect to their own zone valve (the zone valves do not have an electrical connection to the boiler).
One would be for the living area and one for the sleeping area.
To each radiator of these I added the tado X heads.
Moving on to the other two floors, they are not served by any thermostat and, for now, instead of the classic radiators, they are equipped with two disused water convectors.
The problem is that water flows inside these 24/7 if the boiler is on.
I would like to avoid closing the taps in these areas to have at least a minimum of heat generated by the convectors...
My problem is basically this:
Stupidly I thought that the thermostats were connected in some way to the boiler and that therefore by connecting the tado° thermostats I could decide to turn off the boiler at will, preventing the hot water from running 24/7 on the floors not served by the zone valve, mostly because otherwise the boiler always stays on.
I was wondering, however, at this point, even if there had been the connection, could I have actually done this thing or did I simply have the wrong idea of how these gadgets work?
I was thinking of buying the X radio receiver to connect the boiler to the tado° network... But the question is:
If I do it, will I then be able to tell the thermostat to turn off the boiler?
And how does it work since each zone can only have one zone regulator?
Should the thermostats that connect to the zone valves have the radio receiver as the zone regulator?
Sorry if I made a bit of confusion but there are certain points that I don't understand and I hope I'm the only one who complicates them.
Many thanks to anyone who wants to waste time trying to help me..
(Translated by Google)
I am not very experienced in this matter and therefore I wanted to explain my case hoping that someone can help me.
I thank in advance anyone who has the patience to read this long story and try to understand something to help me :p
I purchased some tado X components, but now I wonder if I did well and how I could better manage my situation, which is this:
I have a house with 2 floors + tavern + attic (so 4 floors total).
The two main floors are served by two thermostats (which I replaced with the wired tado X thermostats) that each connect to their own zone valve (the zone valves do not have an electrical connection to the boiler).
One would be for the living area and one for the sleeping area.
To each radiator of these I added the tado X heads.
Moving on to the other two floors, they are not served by any thermostat and, for now, instead of the classic radiators, they are equipped with two disused water convectors.
The problem is that water flows inside these 24/7 if the boiler is on.
I would like to avoid closing the taps in these areas to have at least a minimum of heat generated by the convectors...
My problem is basically this:
Stupidly I thought that the thermostats were connected in some way to the boiler and that therefore by connecting the tado° thermostats I could decide to turn off the boiler at will, preventing the hot water from running 24/7 on the floors not served by the zone valve, mostly because otherwise the boiler always stays on.
I was wondering, however, at this point, even if there had been the connection, could I have actually done this thing or did I simply have the wrong idea of how these gadgets work?
I was thinking of buying the X radio receiver to connect the boiler to the tado° network... But the question is:
If I do it, will I then be able to tell the thermostat to turn off the boiler?
And how does it work since each zone can only have one zone regulator?
Should the thermostats that connect to the zone valves have the radio receiver as the zone regulator?
Sorry if I made a bit of confusion but there are certain points that I don't understand and I hope I'm the only one who complicates them.
Many thanks to anyone who wants to waste time trying to help me..
(Translated by Google)
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