dillsquatt
Registered User
- Messages
- 90
Check the details of such systems. They're generally meant to be kept running all the time. Many have a "summer" mode.There should not be any technical reason to leave the system on permanently. It would be ridiculous to have it running during the summer.
This is false. But it's an understandable error.leave the system on all the time as it should never be turned off.
I have no working central heating whatsoever in my 30 year old house and its been 22-23c for the past week! Large east facing windows pull in heat from the sun during summer and recent warm days, and surprisingly airtight, so good likelihood its just the effect of recent Indian summer. You should be able to reduce the temperature on the thermostat to very low so it doesn't chew electricity.We set ours to have a different set temperature between day and night time. Its been on all summer, but the heat pump hasn't kicked in to heat the house up since spring time. It still heats the water, again when it goes below a set point. We keep our set temperature at 18 degrees during the day and 16 at night. Ours has an anti-freeze that kicks in automatically if required - so I don't worry about sudden changes in weather.
The house may be warm from just the sun - particularly if you've south facing windows. If the thermostat is set low, then its unlikely that the heat pump has kicked in. My indoor temperatures this week have been 19.5 - 20.5 without the heat pump kicking in and regularly opening windows.
Do you've an app with it? This would allow you to look back and see how long it was on for. I do with a Mitsubishi Ecodan. But other vendors may have different ways of monitoring.
Unlike Sue Ellen, I hate the constant heat part of it - but we're all different. If you make changes its slow to heat up, etc.. Its a system that you set and don't mess with it - e.g. trying to heat things up quickly will use more energy.
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