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Floor heating control
Floor heating control
Economical control of any heating system requires zoning of the building into separately-
The action of the room thermostat is to sense the room temperature and control the
floor heating to achieve a comfortable condition. Most occupants will feel comfortable
at 18 -
Effective room air thermostat control requires that the thermostats are exposed to the air within the heated space. Locations behind furnishings or where exposed to heat sources such as sunlight, are to be avoided.
Aside from the digital temperature display, this thermostat has multiple functions, such as on/off switching or temperature setting according to time of day. Also, it can be used for control based on floor temperature, room temperature or a combination of both.
Separate programmable thermostat controls for each zone provides for the ultimate in energy control.
For economical operation where the heating is not on a controlled tariff, Heatec
recommend their programmable thermostats. This allows for the temperature set point
to be altered according to daily times. For example the heating may be controlled
to turn to the normal operating temperature (eg. 21 C) starting from 5 am (to allow
ample warm up time) then drop back to a lower setting (eg. 18C) at 9 am, until resuming
a normal setting from 4 pm to 9 pm. Heatec thermostats provide for independent time
settings on a day-
Floor thermostats
Where the floor heating is only used to supplement another main heating (eg. ducted
system) minor control difficulty may result when using room thermostats, since heat
from the main system may cause the floor heating thermostat to hold the floor heating
off. This can be overcome by increasing the floor heating temperature set point,
time-
Some difficulty may be experienced in deciding on the temperature set point when using floor sensing alone. A setting in the mid 30’s would be suitable for cold weather, but on the warmer days, this setting will be unnecessarily high, over warming the room. Rather than controlling the heating by floor sensing thermostat alone, a combination of room temperature sensing with floor temperature high limit override is recommended.
Timber veneer floors normally have an upper temperature limit that must not be exceeded in order to maintain warranty. A thermostat with a floor sensor used as a high limit override should then be used.
Rather than using our programmable thermostats some customers use our non-
