John Carroll Posted yesterday at 13:33 Posted yesterday at 13:33 (edited) Some one asked me some time ago to have a look at this and explain how it works, I got a lot of info from another site and I think this is how it works. It uses time and temperature vs time only in most fairly simple anti fast cycling methods, Vaillant use a table of time+target temp. WB 2.3B Anti Fast Cycle Time, (settable) 3 to 45 minutes, default 5 minutes. 2.3.C Anti Fast Cycle Flow Temperature Hysteresis, (settable) 2C to 15C, default 6C His is set, 12 minutes and 7C. The "anti fast cycle time" is actually the last running time of the burner, if the last running time was 12 minutes or more then the boiler will refire when the flow temperature falls to target temp - 7C, if the boiler then runs for say only 5 minutes before the next burner cut then it will not look at the flow temperature for (12-5), 7 minutes, if the flow temperature has then fallen to target temp - 7C (or more) then the burner will refire. This would seem to indicate that the minimum anti cycle time is the time taken for the flow temperature to fall to the target flow temp - 7C. Edited yesterday at 13:34 by John Carroll
JohnMo Posted yesterday at 13:58 Posted yesterday at 13:58 But this mechanism is to protect the boiler, nothing more nothing less. Short cycling is just a quick way to empty your bank balance. You heat the boiler, pipework and a load of energy goes out the flue and maybe you still have a cold house. If you boiler is in that mode, you maybe have way to many zone, badly set up heating system, or another issue, or all the above.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now