J
Jabbajaws
Hi All,
Firstly this is information l need for an economy 7 immersion heater circuit. My mother has been experiencing power cuts, resulting in her digital timer control circuit, that powers the immersion heater re-setting itself to default factory settings. Because of this she was unaware the programming had changed and has recieved a ÂŁ650 electric bill. I need to ensure that this doesn't happen again.
She has economy 7 type storage heaters, which seem to be independently controlled by a YEB supply e7 device. There are 6*15A BS3036 semi-enclosed fuses in the E7 CU, yet only 5 heaters, so im assuming the 6th is for a lower element in the immersion ( havent confirmed this yet ).
Am l right in thinking that a run back timer is a device that will prevent, let's say the immersion heater from being switched on during on peak hours, in case of control timer reset?
Or is it a device that will allow a maximum load usage, should the on peak mode be powered accidentally or in case of control timer reset, to keep consumer costs lower?
This is a grey area for me as l am inexperienced in this subject, but learning fast.
All advice appreciated...
JJ... :bucktooth:
Firstly this is information l need for an economy 7 immersion heater circuit. My mother has been experiencing power cuts, resulting in her digital timer control circuit, that powers the immersion heater re-setting itself to default factory settings. Because of this she was unaware the programming had changed and has recieved a ÂŁ650 electric bill. I need to ensure that this doesn't happen again.
She has economy 7 type storage heaters, which seem to be independently controlled by a YEB supply e7 device. There are 6*15A BS3036 semi-enclosed fuses in the E7 CU, yet only 5 heaters, so im assuming the 6th is for a lower element in the immersion ( havent confirmed this yet ).
Am l right in thinking that a run back timer is a device that will prevent, let's say the immersion heater from being switched on during on peak hours, in case of control timer reset?
Or is it a device that will allow a maximum load usage, should the on peak mode be powered accidentally or in case of control timer reset, to keep consumer costs lower?
This is a grey area for me as l am inexperienced in this subject, but learning fast.
All advice appreciated...
JJ... :bucktooth: