Back down in price. May be an alternative to the recent deal from Amazon. The price adjusts automatically when the item is added to the basket.
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Top comments
bcfcrule to gleechy
30 Mar 164#10
Or allows you to turn it off when not needed!
sammo1010
31 Mar 163#43
You will need to remove the link between LS and LR. Then you need a 5 core cable from the boiler to the hive receiver and connect as follows:
Boiler L - Receiver L
Boiler N - Receiver N
Boiler LS - Receiver 1
Boiler LR - Receiver 3
Boiler earth (green/yellow) - receiver earth terminal
gleechy
31 Mar 163#23
University of codswallop. it learns nothing and it takes your control and laughs at you and wastes energy what planet are you on?
philstoker
31 Mar 163#37
I think it's possible to add illiterate to the accusations that you are rude. I *used* to be in the industry. Left it to go to a totally different working world. I this have no vested interest in these being successful or not. Here's a few actual facts for you though: heating bill 2014 - £1175. Heating bill 2015, £875. Change to prices, minus 5%. The rest? Intelligent heating. Lifestyle changes mean I had the heating on more. However, you household thermostat, that yellow dial on the wall, or your manufacturer issued digital one, is accurate to between 2 and 3 degrees. Nest, Tado and hive along with my old lot, offer accuracy to 0.5 degrees. The effect of your system is that your stat aims for 20 degrees, hits target and then heads on up to 22. (overheated energy wasted). It gets there, and then slams on the brakes, heading back down to 20 as it's too warm. It misses 20 and hits 18. (underheated). Your wife/husband/master shivers in the arm chair at the four degree swing, and walks over and cranks the stat to 22 degrees. The cycle repeats and you are wasting energy. This isn't conjecture. It's an environment agency doctrine generated to ask people to improve their heating habits.
Let's move past the bit where I am right and you are wrong and move onto your troll like tendencies. Does it make your heat hotter by insulting someone on a social platform for sh*ts and giggles? Does it stoke your coals? Well done big man. Good for you.
Technology isn't for everyone. I sold it ethically and with industry leading data and knowledge. It sounds like you need to climb down off your soap box and burn it to keep warm.
It's good tech. Well thought out. And saves people money. Apart from trolls it appears. Glad to be able to help.
sammo1010
31 Mar 16#47
No problem
sammo1010
31 Mar 161#45
That would still work, but if you switch the boiler off via the boiler controls it will interrupt the receiver power supply possibly loosing any settings stored
garlik_bread to sammo1010
31 Mar 16#46
Ok, thanks for the help!
sammo1010
31 Mar 163#43
You will need to remove the link between LS and LR. Then you need a 5 core cable from the boiler to the hive receiver and connect as follows:
Boiler L - Receiver L
Boiler N - Receiver N
Boiler LS - Receiver 1
Boiler LR - Receiver 3
Boiler earth (green/yellow) - receiver earth terminal
garlik_bread to sammo1010
31 Mar 16#44
Thanks, that was one of the scenarios i had drawn up. The other being:
Boiler NS - Hive N
Boiler LS - Hive L
Bridge Hive L to Hive 1.Common
Boiler LR - 3.Heat On
Earth
garlik_bread
31 Mar 16#41
To those that have fitted theirs themselves, can anyone offer any advice? I've picked up my Hive today, expecting to be able to fit this fairly easily, but am totally stumped.
I don't have an existing Thermostat and the guide included in the box essentially boils down to "wire it in". My boiler board has the following:
Thanks in advance :stuck_out_tongue:
clarkey1976 to garlik_bread
31 Mar 161#42
:confused::sunglasses:
gleechy
31 Mar 16#40
Did you really think about that before writing? "if you're going out, chances are you'd probably leave the heating on" Not if you have an eye on saving money and for the odd occasion that you do it'll teach you to not forget, you certainly don't need to buy a new system for that, and for the stat you set it to a comfortable temperature and leave, it will kick in when it gets too cold, if it doesn't get a new stat that does, the rest is sales talk, I don't gain anything by having a negative view but at least it's my own and without prejudice which is more than I can say for some.
gleechy
31 Mar 16#39
If this was a site for your convenience it would be job well done on your figures, try to think outside your little box and the concept of delivering this to normal people who don't leave the heating on whilst they go out and actually use their stat to turn the heating to what feels comfortable, and turn the system off when not needed. There now can you see this isn't your world the system you have bought into is an up to date luxury benefitting some forgetful people.
Don't come running to me when your heating won't turn off and you can't work out why because the computer says no. Nice to see you have a friend who likes you for what you say, maybe you could sell them one of these scams systems.
PowerPantsPete
31 Mar 16#38
I don't know you, but REALLY like you! :wink: Yours sincerely OP.
philstoker
31 Mar 163#37
I think it's possible to add illiterate to the accusations that you are rude. I *used* to be in the industry. Left it to go to a totally different working world. I this have no vested interest in these being successful or not. Here's a few actual facts for you though: heating bill 2014 - £1175. Heating bill 2015, £875. Change to prices, minus 5%. The rest? Intelligent heating. Lifestyle changes mean I had the heating on more. However, you household thermostat, that yellow dial on the wall, or your manufacturer issued digital one, is accurate to between 2 and 3 degrees. Nest, Tado and hive along with my old lot, offer accuracy to 0.5 degrees. The effect of your system is that your stat aims for 20 degrees, hits target and then heads on up to 22. (overheated energy wasted). It gets there, and then slams on the brakes, heading back down to 20 as it's too warm. It misses 20 and hits 18. (underheated). Your wife/husband/master shivers in the arm chair at the four degree swing, and walks over and cranks the stat to 22 degrees. The cycle repeats and you are wasting energy. This isn't conjecture. It's an environment agency doctrine generated to ask people to improve their heating habits.
Let's move past the bit where I am right and you are wrong and move onto your troll like tendencies. Does it make your heat hotter by insulting someone on a social platform for sh*ts and giggles? Does it stoke your coals? Well done big man. Good for you.
Technology isn't for everyone. I sold it ethically and with industry leading data and knowledge. It sounds like you need to climb down off your soap box and burn it to keep warm.
bma1445
31 Mar 162#36
Actually it's common sense - of course it's going to help with the bills. It's not a miracle cure, it will have a small effect. For example, if you're going out for the day, chances are you'd probably forget to turn the heating off if you had an old programmer and stat. With hive, if I get more than 700 yards down the road, I get a notification to ask if I'd like to turn my heating down.
It also seems to be quite a lot more accurate than my old stat. If my old stat was set to 20c, it would heat up to about 21.5, then switch off until about 19. The hive switches on around 19.5 and off at 20.
gleechy
31 Mar 16#35
Sorry to un impress you but I didn't want to over repeat something that is glaringly obvious, you see I'm right, maybe in the minority on this thread which I presume is predominantly seen by people who have committed to this scam and couldn't bear to loose face.
This is a product which is very functional and with it, but not as a money saving device which is the pretence that the majority are buying it.
philstoker
31 Mar 162#29
Also to the guy saying it's bad for the environment, that is like having a prius and ragging it everywhere you drive. Used properly these systems save around 20% in your heating bills, it's proven through industry studies and advocated as being a great idea, so much so that in some eco deals for new more efficient boilers, they ring fence part of the funding for smart heating controls. No offence to you but you're wrong to put these down. They work by reducing the vast majority of people's (who don't ride their thermostat) boiler burn times. This saves them money and in turn helps reduce waste of fuel.
gleechy to philstoker
31 Mar 16#34
I understand you have a job to keep making sure as many people don't see that they could quite easily control their heating with proper controls that don't take over, but this doesn't excuse selling an item based on forgetful people not turning their heating off before leaving the house.
Unless you hadn't noticed the studies wouldn't be published if they didn't show positives, but if you don't have the ability to think for yourself I'm afraid they have you at a loss.
I'm sure it all looks nice and some people are impressed with technical terms but as a general product it takes more away from the environment than is necessary and therefore I'm out.
gleechy
31 Mar 16#33
And you say this so as not to look stupid having already committed to this hype, clever guy.
joey_corlione
30 Mar 16#7
...need something like this to control individual rooms, rather than the whole house, and it starts to get very expensive when you start adding zones. Evohome might be more cost effective for this possibly, not sure, any thoughts?
martinspoon to joey_corlione
30 Mar 16#8
Evohome will depend on the number of radiators in your home and your average heating bill. We've got 14 radiators and an oil boiler (oil is cheap at the moment), I figured the payback period on evohome would be around 10 years for me, so too long as far as I am concerned. There are potentially other options for you though - depending on your setup you might be able to zone your central heating (e.g. upstairs/downstairs) with a Nest for each zone. Depends on cost and whether two zones is enough for you.
Harry_Potter to joey_corlione
31 Mar 16#32
Or tado
Daerve
31 Mar 161#31
Not only are you wrong but you're also rather rude.
philstoker
31 Mar 161#28
Interesting thread. I was the sales manager for Passiv Systems (another alternative to hive or nest) until recently, and as such had to learn what "the enemy" could do. Hive was the original and worked well, but Nest took the control and the overall saving to new levels. Honeywell (evohome) was just too expensive, I sized them up out of genuine interest and it was around five grand to do my three bed semi. Tado was excellent too. In the end I opted for a z_wave controller as standalone and began assembling my own home automation solution. That's a modular and ongoing solution, which is future proof. One thing to be aware of. Nest is a marketing tool for Google. During our trials of it, I noticed that when I had the system set to come on at random times of night, the Gmail account linked with it started advertising sleeping pills. When I cranked the heating for an hour in the middle of the day, I got adverts for dog food, and pet insurance. If that bothers you, then Tado or Hive are for you.
louisputtick to philstoker
31 Mar 16#30
This is where I have ended up, I am planning out using the eQ-3 MAX! radiator and room stats, with separate water controller but still lots to read on what else you can do.
5Rivers79
30 Mar 161#4
This or the nest v3? Any advice? Thanks.
PowerPantsPete to 5Rivers79
30 Mar 161#6
IMHO The hive looks more aesthetically pleasing, but feel the Nest is slightly more 'feature rich'. For example, it has the ability to track your usual heating patterns and adapt the temperature according to this history automatically.
vns146 to 5Rivers79
31 Mar 16#27
For me, it's Nest all the way because:
- it's better integrated with other systems
- they are constantly updating the software
- it now does hot water
- nest have also launched location awareness
- the 3rd generation is very very slick
Also ...
- if you know anyone with npower, ask them to buy it for you at the discounted rate (£129.99)
ddlee1
31 Mar 16#26
nice one. fingers crossed then :neutral_face:
ddlee1
31 Mar 16#25
sounds promising. logic 35 combi.
Chrrye
31 Mar 161#24
Probably the intelligence planet or the rationality planet. You should visit sometime.
gleechy
31 Mar 163#23
University of codswallop. it learns nothing and it takes your control and laughs at you and wastes energy what planet are you on?
gleechy
31 Mar 162#22
That's not even an argument, you turn it off before leaving the property, duh!!
ddlee1
30 Mar 16#16
just purchased the heating one only as got a combi boiler. Hoping able to install myself? thoughts welcomed
wolves2013 to ddlee1
30 Mar 16#18
Follow the instructions, there spot on, what boilers it to go on
seanuk03 to ddlee1
30 Mar 16#19
Both nest and hive come with installation / connection instructions... Very straightforward if you are comfortable working around electric, but bare in mind that neither manufacturer will honour warranty for installations that aren't done by one of their trained engineers. (Nest have a unique installer id that needs to be registered into the thermostat when installing so they know if its been done correctly).
souljacker to ddlee1
31 Mar 16#21
Fitted mine today, very easy, took me around half an hour, as long as you can do basic electrics you should be fine
bma1445
30 Mar 16#20
They can't sell a self install kit and then not honour the warranty on it.
As for the nest vs hive thing: if you have a strict schedule and don't like control - nest. If your schedule isn't fixed, or you like control, hive.
wolves2013
30 Mar 161#17
If youve got british gas cover, get them round for a fault, and while they are there, they can supply and fit for 149quid
ukmonkey
30 Mar 16#15
Do these have to be installed by a engineer?
seanuk03
30 Mar 16#14
Im an installer for both hive and nest. Nest is by far the more superior thermostat. If you want the gimmicks of being able to control your heating while your out then yes hive is for you, but if you want intelligent control over your heating... go for nest! Also if you are with npower you can get nest for an extra £5
gleechy
30 Mar 161#9
At a time when the world is trying to reduce our carbon footprint, a device that turns the burners on before you get home is a shocking invention, behind the outdoor heater.
bcfcrule to gleechy
30 Mar 164#10
Or allows you to turn it off when not needed!
Daerve to gleechy
30 Mar 16#13
The nest thermostat is actually far more sophisticated than simply turning on the burners before you get home. For example if you get home at 5 then a traditional thermostat would probably need to be set to turn on at 4 to get the house warm regardless of the temperature outside. A nest learns how long it takes your system to warm the house up so will only use just enough energy to get your house warm when you want it warm. So in essence far from wasting energy it actually saves it.
tapi
30 Mar 16#12
tado seems better than both?
paul106
30 Mar 16#11
Any deals on the upgrade kit? Only want the shiny new thermostat!
Opening post
Free Collection or Delivery
Top comments
Boiler L - Receiver L
Boiler N - Receiver N
Boiler LS - Receiver 1
Boiler LR - Receiver 3
Boiler earth (green/yellow) - receiver earth terminal
Let's move past the bit where I am right and you are wrong and move onto your troll like tendencies. Does it make your heat hotter by insulting someone on a social platform for sh*ts and giggles? Does it stoke your coals? Well done big man. Good for you.
Technology isn't for everyone. I sold it ethically and with industry leading data and knowledge. It sounds like you need to climb down off your soap box and burn it to keep warm.
Latest comments (49)
Hive 2 on Vokera syntesi 35
Boiler L - Receiver L
Boiler N - Receiver N
Boiler LS - Receiver 1
Boiler LR - Receiver 3
Boiler earth (green/yellow) - receiver earth terminal
Boiler NS - Hive N
Boiler LS - Hive L
Bridge Hive L to Hive 1.Common
Boiler LR - 3.Heat On
Earth
I don't have an existing Thermostat and the guide included in the box essentially boils down to "wire it in". My boiler board has the following:
Thanks in advance :stuck_out_tongue:
:confused::sunglasses:
Don't come running to me when your heating won't turn off and you can't work out why because the computer says no. Nice to see you have a friend who likes you for what you say, maybe you could sell them one of these scams systems.
Let's move past the bit where I am right and you are wrong and move onto your troll like tendencies. Does it make your heat hotter by insulting someone on a social platform for sh*ts and giggles? Does it stoke your coals? Well done big man. Good for you.
Technology isn't for everyone. I sold it ethically and with industry leading data and knowledge. It sounds like you need to climb down off your soap box and burn it to keep warm.
It also seems to be quite a lot more accurate than my old stat. If my old stat was set to 20c, it would heat up to about 21.5, then switch off until about 19. The hive switches on around 19.5 and off at 20.
This is a product which is very functional and with it, but not as a money saving device which is the pretence that the majority are buying it.
Unless you hadn't noticed the studies wouldn't be published if they didn't show positives, but if you don't have the ability to think for yourself I'm afraid they have you at a loss.
I'm sure it all looks nice and some people are impressed with technical terms but as a general product it takes more away from the environment than is necessary and therefore I'm out.
- it's better integrated with other systems
- they are constantly updating the software
- it now does hot water
- nest have also launched location awareness
- the 3rd generation is very very slick
Also ...
- if you know anyone with npower, ask them to buy it for you at the discounted rate (£129.99)
As for the nest vs hive thing: if you have a strict schedule and don't like control - nest. If your schedule isn't fixed, or you like control, hive.