Search the forum,

Discuss Glowworm hot water express 80 Any help on this control appreciated in the USA area at PlumbersForums.net

Messages
11
Hi there, I am trying to take care of my mum's house as she has gone into a care home, and I have to keep the heating going through the winter, her Central heating control is as old as the boiler, approx 30 years. And there is a dial on it 1 to 5, I have no idea what it does, any help would be great, the last time British gas came here they said it had a thermostat in the hall, but it has no adjustment, I have posted the control and would appreciate any advice on the dial setting. As the house will be sold and money going to care home, I don't want to change the control but just want to keep it going, so any help appreciated. Thanks!
 

Attachments

  • PXL_20211210_123737276.jpg
    PXL_20211210_123737276.jpg
    165.1 KB · Views: 13
1. I'm not familiar with that control, but suspect its a thermostat built into the programmer.
2. If so, I'd expect 3 to equate to around 18 to 20 degrees. If the property is going to be empty, altering it down to 2 should reduce the heating costs without causing damage.
3. Does it click round 1 2 3 4 5 or just rotate smoothly. If the latter it would further suggest a thermostat.
4. Intrigued by the non-adjustable thermostat in the hall. If you could post a picture of said thermostat that might help determine what the numbers on the programmer are for.
 
The thing in the hall is a temperature sensor not a 'thermostat'. The thermostat set point is determined by the knob with numbers 1-5 on the controller. "1" corresponds to a temperature of 16°C, "5" is 28*C.

According to Ray Ward's book, the CT174 is a seven day programmer with two on/off periods. It contains three AAA batteries, so you might want to check these are okay.

If you hunt around the you'll probably find the instruction book stashed somewhere in the house. Or you could get it replaced with a modern programmer.

P.S. Speaking from experience, looking after an unoccupied house is much harder than one might initially imagine. Unless the care home stay is temporary, I'd recommend getting an estate agent involved and letting it out as soon as possible.
 
Last edited:
1. I'm not familiar with that control, but suspect its a thermostat built into the programmer.
2. If so, I'd expect 3 to equate to around 18 to 20 degrees. If the property is going to be empty, altering it down to 2 should reduce the heating costs without causing damage.
3. Does it click round 1 2 3 4 5 or just rotate smoothly. If the latter it would further suggest a thermostat.
4. Intrigued by the non-adjustable thermostat in the hall. If you could post a picture of said thermostat that might help determine what the numbers on the programmer are for.
That is exactly what the British gas engineer said, but he had also never seen one, the problem with the suspected thermostat in the hall is that it is just a box with vents and a screw visible as my mum liked to paint over everything and it was only last year that I knew what it was after the BG engineer mentioned it, but I can't see any visible markings, so I plan to scrape the paint off and clear the vents.
 
The thing in the hall is a temperature sensor not a 'thermostat'. The thermostat set point is determined by the knob with numbers 1-5 on the controller. "1" corresponds to a temperature of 16°C, "5" is 28*C.

According to Ray Ward's book, the CT174 is a seven day programmer with two on/off periods. It contains three AAA batteries, so you might want to check these are okay.

If you hunt around the you'll probably find the instruction book stashed somewhere in the house. Or you could get it replaced with a modern programmer.
Thanks for that, I thought about getting it upgraded bit when the house sells it will get replaced with a new boiler as well, so I am not keen on throwing money at it, thanks for the info!
 
Thanks for that, I thought about getting it upgraded bit when the house sells it will get replaced with a new boiler as well, so I am not keen on throwing money at it, thanks for the info!
Thanks for that, I thought about getting it upgraded bit when the house sells it will get replaced with a new boiler as well, so I am not keen on throwing money at it, thanks for the info!
So with that info, if I left the control on permanently and set it to 1, it would keep the house at a steady 16 Deg?
 
So with that info, if I left the control on permanently and set it to 1, it would keep the house at a steady 16 Deg?
Once you've scraped the paint out of the vent, yes. But I suggest you check, e.g. by leaving a max/min thermometer in the house that it's working okay.
 
Yes, I had previously thought about setting the programmer to come on at 5 am till 10am and 7pm till 12am to keep the house heated, but with the temperature sensor it will be better left on '1', I will test it out, here is a photo of the sensor, would it be safe to open it up? Or will bits jump out of it?
Once you've scraped the paint out of the vent, yes. But I suggest you check, e.g. by leaving a max/min thermometer in the house that it's working okay.
D
 
1. I'm not familiar with that control, but suspect its a thermostat built into the programmer.
2. If so, I'd expect 3 to equate to around 18 to 20 degrees. If the property is going to be empty, altering it down to 2 should reduce the heating costs without causing damage.
3. Does it click round 1 2 3 4 5 or just rotate smoothly. If the latter it would further suggest a thermostat.
4. Intrigued by the non-adjustable thermostat in the hall. If you could post a picture of said thermostat that might help determine what the numbers on the programmer are for.
 
Tbh I would set to on and 1 on dial as it’s winter
 
I have tried that now, it's about 18 Deg inside the house at the moment, but it seems inconsistent, as I heard it going off and on during the night, will watch it during the day, I was thinking about getting a simple programmer and thermostat to replace it, would it be a voltage free contact going back into the boiler or switching live? And any recommendations? I need something simple, reliable but not too expensive.
 
You will end up spending around 80-100 on it ?
 
Drayton lifestyle twin and a Honeywell 6360b
 

Reply to Glowworm hot water express 80 Any help on this control appreciated in the USA area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

Hi everyone, Looking for a bit of advice, recently went to a job where heating was operating when called for however not for the hot water. I have changed the 3 port actuator Honeywell head however this doesn’t seem to have solved the issue, does this mean that the programmer is faulty? Or is...
Replies
8
Views
292
  • Question
Ideal Logic 24, Previous problem was that the hot water was only cold or barely warm if the heating was in use. If heating was off and boiler cold then would get hot water most of the time. Changing the flow cartridge about 2 years ago (when I moved in) solved this problem enough to suffer it as...
Replies
2
Views
139
Hello, I am seeking some advice, I have a POTTERTON PROMAX 28 COMBI Boiler and I noticed yesterday that the water around the house is no longer warming up. The heat exchanger has been changed 6 months ago, so I do not believe it is that. Does anyone have any ideas on what it could be? Thanks
Replies
4
Views
232
Hi, Can anyone advise as to why the cold water to my bathroom keeps airlocking? This originally happened about 12 months ago and has happened 3-4 times since. It’s an upstairs bathroom, fed from a tank in the attic. The tank is about 8 Meters away and feeds a bath, sink and toilet. The tank...
Replies
9
Views
339
My son has an apprenticeship interview for to become a plumber and heating engineer. The have said there will be a multiple choice exam for this for suitability. The thing is my son panics during tests/exams. Is there any book I can buy him to practice the multiple choice test for the exam? What...
Replies
3
Views
421
Creating content since 2001. Untold Media.

Newest Plumbing Threads

Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock