Moes Smart Central Heating Thermostat

Joined
14 Sep 2020
Messages
23
Reaction score
2
Country
United Kingdom
Hi Guys,

I'm looking at replacing my Drayton Combi Stat with a Moes smart thermostat. (The GC model for central heating boilers)

As you can see from the pics, I only have 3 wires going to the existing thermostat. The Moes needs 4. I'm pretty sure what to do here with a bit of research, however I just wanted confirmation from someone who knows or has fitted these before. (Ignore the bad paintwork... will be fixing that too!)

[GALLERY=media, 105190]IMG_1855 by Justin Bodley posted 15 Sep 2020 at 8:04 PM[/GALLERY]
[GALLERY=media, 105192]IMG_1917 by Justin Bodley posted 15 Sep 2020 at 8:04 PM[/GALLERY]
[GALLERY=media, 105191]IMG_1915 by Justin Bodley posted 15 Sep 2020 at 8:04 PM[/GALLERY]
[GALLERY=media, 105189]15743699100817916200797039582658 by Justin Bodley posted 15 Sep 2020 at 8:04 PM[/GALLERY]

Any advice would be gratefully appreciated!

Thank You!
 
Yes. Connect up the wires as follows

OLD>NEW
L. > 4
N. > 3
2. > 2

then put a wire link between 4 and 1

The thermostat looks like it is really meant as an underfloor heating stat requiring a temperature probe in the floor. You won’t have one, so make sure you select room only as the temperature source.
 
@Taylortwocities has given you the answer, however do consider what the thermostat does, the wall thermostat can have two completely different jobs but look the same.
1) Is to control the temperature of the room.
2) Is to turn boiler up/down or on/off as required.
They may seem the same, however with a modern gas boiler we control room temperature in the main with the thermostatic radiator valve (TRV) which is analogue, and the return water controls boiler output which again is analogue, we can link the TRV to a hub or thermostat which is in turn connected to the boiler ebus, OpenTherm is most popular, but if we try to control boiler output using a mark/space ratio (digital) it can defeat the analogue controls.

The modern gas boiler will have a sweet point at which it is most economical and this is unlikely to be when running flat out, and when it switches off any heat in the boiler is sent out of the flue and wasted, so the idea is to allow the boiler to modulate first, so not as hot when it finally does switch off, so less heat is lost when it does switch off, so main control is with the TRV heads, the wall thermostat is there to switch off boiler when there is a change in the required temperature or when the weather improves, not to control room temperature directly.

So a very cheap on/off hard wired wall thermostat even the programmable type will turn off the heating on warm days or when there is a change in temperature requirement like going out or going to bed, and of course back one when on your way home or about to get up. But if it tries to use a mark/space ratio (that means switching it on and off on a regular basis) which is used to stop oil and electric central heating from over shooting, it will use more gas as it keeps the boiler running flat out each time it is on, and defeats the condensing software of the boiler.

I had the Honeywell Y6630D1007 Wireless Room Thermostat in the last house, a very good thermostat, but not suited to a modulating gas boiler, it would have been A1 in this house with oil. So will gas modulating boilers the very cheap are OK to stop cycling in warm weather and the expensive are OK, but the mid range tend to use the mark/space ratio, so as the target temperature is approached it starts to switch the boiler off/on to ensure it does not over shoot, and this wastes gas, where the expensive even when using on/off control work out when to turn off using built in algorithms so they don't cycle the boiler. As an example we have Nest.

There are other methods Nest can also use OpenTherm and it turns boiler up/down not on/off, Hive is an odd one out, it uses demand for heat so the Hive TRV heads tell the wall thermostat to stay on if any room is still below set point, Drayton have TRV heads which work out when to close to stop over shoot so are faster getting room to temperature, as some of the electronic TRV heads have rather too much anti-hysteresis built in so are slow getting room to the last couple of degrees. But we are looking at expensive systems with the likes of EvoHome, Drayton Wiser, Tado etc.

You can get nearly the same with a cheap wall thermostat and cheap stand alone programmable TRV heads like the eQ-3, and any wifi switch can turn heating on/off with geofencing, however not found geofencing that good, yes it works, can't say it doesn't, but out of the house for 10 hours and with heating off it drops maybe 6°C and on return it will warm up the first 4°C quite rapid, but the anti-hysteresis software in the TRV heads means the Nest Gen 3 thermostat can't warm up house that last 2°C, so using a timed schedule I can set the temperature to 2°C higher for an hour then down to wanted temperature which speeds up reheating, so it is at temperature required when I get home. Nest Gen 3 would likely do it OK if I did not have programmable TRV heads also set to geofence with IFTTT, so now use simple scheduled temperature changes. And with the eQ-3 TRV heads which are not wifi, only bluetooth, but only £15 less for non blue tooth I have set each room with slight delay, so kitchen heats first, then the dinning room, and then the living room and finally the bedrooms which means rooms heat faster, and unused rooms not heated. All this does not tie in with geofencing. I am sure Drayton Wiser would work, but if you price it up, you will see why I have not fitted it.

So if using a very old boiler or oil then that thermostat will likely work well, if using a modern gas boiler, then that thermostat from what I read uses a mark/space anti-hysteresis system so will work, but not in an economic way.
 
Yes. Connect up the wires as follows

OLD>NEW
L. > 4
N. > 3
2. > 2

then put a wire link between 4 and 1

The thermostat looks like it is really meant as an underfloor heating stat requiring a temperature probe in the floor. You won’t have one, so make sure you select room only as the temperature source.

Thank you..... yes this is pretty much what I thought. Just wanted verification from an expert. I have seen the same unit wired with the live linked to pin 2..... I'm guessing that because this is a switch it doesnt matter which way pins 1 and 2 are wired?
 
It doesn’t matter functionally. It’s normal convention for the live to connect to the centre. ie pin1 in the Moes.
 
Arrived and wired as you said! Perfect! Thank you!

Yes. Connect up the wires as follows

OLD>NEW
L. > 4
N. > 3
2. > 2

then put a wire link between 4 and 1

The thermostat looks like it is really meant as an underfloor heating stat requiring a temperature probe in the floor. You won’t have one, so make sure you select room only as the temperature source.
 
Hello, I don't want to open a new topic , I just have a similar problem, I received many solutions from the manufacturer but my heating does not w turn on. Adds a few photos how my old thermostat was connected, what my connection looks like, I also tried a solution with 4-1 but nothing too. Maybe I have to set something on the boiler, I have two thermostats at home. I will be grateful for your help

1663742042389 (1).png
 

Attachments

  • 20220921_123716.jpg
    20220921_123716.jpg
    189.4 KB · Views: 104
  • 20220921_130037.jpg
    20220921_130037.jpg
    140.7 KB · Views: 71
  • 20220920_131658.jpg
    20220920_131658.jpg
    139.9 KB · Views: 99
  • 20220920_131612.jpg
    20220920_131612.jpg
    79.9 KB · Views: 82
As far as I am aware only the Nest e smart thermostat will work without the neutral. But most the old bi-metal thermostats the neutral was only to reduce the hysteresis and they would work without it. Some were used on the 24 volt control so the neutral was simply not there.

Seems likely missing neutral, but only you can test.
 
Thank you , one wire was hidden in the wall because it was not needed for the old thermostat.
I have to open the boilers and check how the wires come out from it exactly because the manufacturer says that you must work with my boilers and the wires that I presented to them.
 
Yes, but they may assume that the hidden wire (possibly the neutral) has been connected properly and that it is connected to a neutral at the boiler/programmer/wiring centre.
 
I think so too, and I don't think boiler is a problem, but I'm looking for a solution, I know the basics of electronics, but I'm not a specialist.
I only have a power on my Thermostat when black is connected as neutral in the old one it was connected as SL , what I want to say that any other configuration prevents the thermostat from working.
 
Back
Top