Michael_S Posted Wednesday at 16:29 Share Posted Wednesday at 16:29 LG Therma V LG HM121M.U32 (AHBW126A0) So this is a second hand unit that I have installed so no warranty, no installer to fall back on. Unit works fine unless there is even a 1s power cut after which the controller restarts in 'off' mode and the clock and programme settings are lost (it seems to go into a default 'holiday mode' settings well as being off). There is no sign of a 'bios' type battery that I can see on either the controller or main unit circuit boards. The unit did not come with a controller, I got a second hand one and it had this problem. I have now got another second hand one and it at least comes back to 'on' if the power goes on and off, but it also loses the time and reverts to the holiday mode programme so is not a big step forward. Can anyone advise where I can get support on this, I have not managed to find LG service support anywhere neither a phone number nor an email that gets answered. I was wondering if I could use one of the newer controllers with my old series 2 heat pump? It has 3 wires labelled 12v, grnd and signal. Thanks for any suggestions This is the controller I am using - tbh I don't actually have any documentation confirming it is the correct one for my heat pump but it looks like the pics in the manual Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ProDave Posted Wednesday at 18:08 Share Posted Wednesday at 18:08 I have a 5kW version of the same era with that same controller. I concluded very early on that the controller was the most illogical thing known to man and there was no way the average "man in the street" could program that and set heating schedules etc. So mine is controlled from the "room thermostat" input and that connects to the UFH controllers and a perfectly normal central heating time clock that everyone understands. So I don't even bother to set the time on mine, let alone anything else. So I honestly can't say if forgetting the time and mode is normal or not. The main thing for me is, do any parameters that you have customised remain after a power cycle? THAT would be a right royal PITA if they all needed resetting after a power cycle. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sharpener Posted Wednesday at 18:15 Share Posted Wednesday at 18:15 Like my 2011 Steca solar inverter it might have a supercapacitor for backup, 3V Panasonic IIRC. Not very reliable, have had whole inverter replaced twice under warranty bc it failed, will try and fix it myself it it goes again as is now out of warranty. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael_S Posted Wednesday at 18:25 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 18:25 5 minutes ago, sharpener said: Like my 2011 Steca solar inverter it might have a supercapacitor for backup, 3V Panasonic IIRC. Not very reliable, have had whole inverter replaced twice under warranty bc it failed, will try and fix it myself it it goes again as is now out of warranty. Now that is helpful, it does have a SC on the controller board (STARCAP 0.33F 5.5v tabbed) that I had originally hoped was a battery. Do SCs degrade over time the same way batts do in which case a like for like swap might be the answer? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sharpener Posted Wednesday at 18:31 Share Posted Wednesday at 18:31 1 minute ago, Michael_S said: Do SCs degrade over time the same way batts do in which case a like for like swap might be the answer? I think you have probably found the solution. IIRC Farnell stocked the right one for me but I didn't want to buy one as a spare for precisely that reason. Steca would not confirm it but the loss of time and date following power interruptions led me to the same conclusion. I think the first replacement inverter may have been old stock as the model had been superseded. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael_S Posted Wednesday at 18:33 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 18:33 (edited) 26 minutes ago, ProDave said: I have a 5kW version of the same era with that same controller. I concluded very early on that the controller was the most illogical thing known to man and there was no way the average "man in the street" could program that and set heating schedules etc. So mine is controlled from the "room thermostat" input and that connects to the UFH controllers and a perfectly normal central heating time clock that everyone understands. So I don't even bother to set the time on mine, let alone anything else. So I honestly can't say if forgetting the time and mode is normal or not. The main thing for me is, do any parameters that you have customised remain after a power cycle? THAT would be a right royal PITA if they all needed resetting after a power cycle. It took me an awful long term thinking the whole unit was dodgy before I figured that this 'holiday' programme was set - the loss of any programming after each power cycle did not make it more intuitive what was going on and both the installer and user manuals are 'unclear' and limited in scope. Luckily the service configuration settings (things like flow temp, weather comp curve etc) do seem to be retained I guess they are stored in some sort of ROM chip. Do you know if the thermostat needs to switch a nominal current (5v dc) or similar or does it switch mains voltage? I have two wifi relays that I was going to use for thermostat control using home automation but was not sure whether to use the nominal voltage one or the mains one. Thanks Edited Wednesday at 18:38 by Michael_S Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ProDave Posted Wednesday at 18:39 Share Posted Wednesday at 18:39 4 minutes ago, Michael_S said: Do you know if the thermostat needs to switch a nominal current (5v dc) or similar or does it switch mains voltage? I have two wifi relays that I was going to use for thermostat control using home automation but was not sure whether to use the nominal voltage one or the mains one. Thanks I will have to look that up. It's a pair of contacts on the main ASHP not the controller, and you have to enable that with one of the DIP switches in the control board. Do you have the installation manual for the HP itself, it should be there, if not I can photograph the relevant pages of my manual. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael_S Posted Wednesday at 21:22 Author Share Posted Wednesday at 21:22 (edited) 2 hours ago, ProDave said: I will have to look that up. It's a pair of contacts on the main ASHP not the controller, and you have to enable that with one of the DIP switches in the control board. Do you have the installation manual for the HP itself, it should be there, if not I can photograph the relevant pages of my manual. Yes, am aware of the dip switches and mine actually currently has a Netatmo receiver attached, I am pretty sure the Netatmo is powered by a live and return and then there is a second 'switched live' that is the 'call for heat' signal, it is just I am used to low voltage open/closed circuit thermostat controls so am just a bit wary about wiring in my mains voltage wifi switch/relay as if I am wrong it will fry the board.... Edited Wednesday at 21:23 by Michael_S Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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