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[Solved] Termet Silwer Stove: How to Lower Floor Heating Temperature from 40°C to 25-30°C (Bifunctional)

wojczarek 36057 11
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Treść została przetłumaczona polish » english Zobacz oryginalną wersję tematu
  • #1 16763115
    wojczarek
    Level 6  
    Hello.
    I have a request to people who will be familiar with this, namely I have a bifunctional Termet Silwer stove the lowest temperature I can set on the stove is 40 degrees and this is too much because I have only floor heating, what can I do in such a situation to lower the temperature to around 30-25stopni
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  • #2 16763223
    1repcaK
    Level 21  
    Read about three-way valves.
  • #3 16763231
    jacekwwy
    Level 19  
    40 degrees is the "homicide" for the stove, it's best if the temperature for the stove is at least 60 degrees. So you set the stove at a minimum of 60 degrees and some regulator would be useful for the floor-tile, which will reduce the temperature to, for example: 20-30 degrees
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  • #5 16763278
    mod22
    Level 28  
    You set the furnace at a higher temperature and strips with a mixing system and a three-way valve are used for the flooring. This is the basis.
  • #6 16763993
    Anonymous
    Level 1  
  • #7 16795434
    wojczarek
    Level 6  
    Okifaro, thank you for your help regarding the temperature on the stove as the only one you can see on gas stoves, because the stove can actually be switched to floor heating, the rest of the colleagues know that they are calling, but they do not know very well in which church, thank you all ??? ???????????
  • #8 16795804
    BUCKS
    Level 39  
    1repcaK wrote:
    Read about three-way valves.

    jacekwwy wrote:
    40 degrees is the "homicide" for the stove, it's best if the temperature for the stove is at least 60 degrees. So you set the stove at a minimum of 60 degrees and some regulator would be useful for the floor-tile, which will reduce the temperature to, for example: 20-30 degrees

    mod22 wrote:
    You set the furnace at a higher temperature and strips with a mixing system and a three-way valve are used for the flooring. This is the basis.

    The forum reads different people, so you have to stigmatize nonsense so as not to mislead others.
    The thread is about the Termet Silver boiler, which is a gas condensing boiler.
    And condensing boilers in principle like low temperatures and in the case of radiators, they most like the return temperature of about 30 degrees, because then they have the highest efficiency.
    The condensing boiler likes condensate, the more its boiler has more efficiency, and because it is made of durable materials, this condensate does not harm him.
    Due to the preference for low temperatures, condensing boilers are recommended for floor-standing and as he wrote okifaro and pitrel The Termet Silver boiler has a reduced temperature mode of 25-55 dedicated to floor heating.

    Otherwise, it looks like the old "traditional" boilers, which are basically withdrawn from use and rarely buy such a new one. I have an atmospheric boiler (open combustion chamber) for a dozen or so years, and the boiler will prefer a higher temperature, although the setting range is 35-82 degrees. At lower temperatures of 35-50 degrees, the boiler will also work, but due to the increased amount of condensate, which accelerates corrosion and agony of the boiler, this is not recommended. Then, wanting to use such a boiler near the floor pan, additional mixing valves are obligatory.
    The thread's author would also have to have valves if he had the installation of mixed heaters + floor-standing, but if he has 100% of the floor, it will go without mixers, etc.

    I would ask you to keep the minimum level on the forum and not give advice that indicates that their author has no mastered basics about condensing boilers.
    Although I do not use a condensing boiler, I know these basics, so I would not write such nonsense.
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  • #9 16797851
    mod22
    Level 28  
    BUCKS wrote:
    1repcaK wrote:
    Read about three-way valves.

    jacekwwy wrote:
    40 degrees is the "homicide" for the stove, it's best if the temperature for the stove is at least 60 degrees. So you set the stove at a minimum of 60 degrees and some regulator would be useful for the floor-tile, which will reduce the temperature to, for example: 20-30 degrees

    mod22 wrote:
    You set the furnace at a higher temperature and strips with a mixing system and a three-way valve are used for the flooring. This is the basis.

    The forum reads different people, so you have to stigmatize nonsense so as not to mislead others.
    The thread is about the Termet Silver boiler, which is a gas condensing boiler.
    And condensing boilers in principle like low temperatures and in the case of radiators, they most like the return temperature of about 30 degrees, because then they have the highest efficiency.
    The condensing boiler likes condensate, the more its boiler has more efficiency, and because it is made of durable materials, this condensate does not harm him.
    Due to the preference for low temperatures, condensing boilers are recommended for floor-standing and as he wrote okifaro and pitrel The Termet Silver boiler has a reduced temperature mode of 25-55 dedicated to floor heating.

    Otherwise, it looks like the old "traditional" boilers, which are basically withdrawn from use and rarely buy such a new one. I have an atmospheric boiler (open combustion chamber) for a dozen or so years, and the boiler will prefer a higher temperature, although the setting range is 35-82 degrees. At lower temperatures of 35-50 degrees, the boiler will also work, but due to the increased amount of condensate, which accelerates corrosion and agony of the boiler, this is not recommended. Then, wanting to use such a boiler near the floor pan, additional mixing valves are obligatory.
    The thread's author would also have to have valves if he had the installation of mixed heaters + floor-standing, but if he has 100% of the floor, it will go without mixers, etc.

    I would ask you to keep the minimum level on the forum and not give advice that indicates that their author has no mastered basics about condensing boilers.
    Although I do not use a condensing boiler, I know these basics, so I would not write such nonsense.

    A mass of gibberish and nothing about. Read what the author asked for. This is not about explaining how a condensing boiler works because everyone knows it.
  • #10 16797977
    BUCKS
    Level 39  
    mod22 wrote:
    A mass of gibberish and nothing about. Read what the author asked for. This is not about explaining how a condensing boiler works because everyone knows it.

    Read what I wrote, because reading comprehension is probably your weakness.
    Well, the forum is reading various people looking for knowledge, so you have to stigmatize posts containing nonsense so that others do not duplicate the same nonsense.
    Since you know how the condensing boiler works, why did you write nonsense, that the boiler is to be set to a higher temperature, since the author has 100% of floor heating, he sets a reduced range of 25-55 degrees instead of 40-80 degrees on the boiler and has a problem with the head.
  • #11 16802895
    mod22
    Level 28  
    BUCKS wrote:
    mod22 wrote:
    A mass of gibberish and nothing about. Read what the author asked for. This is not about explaining how a condensing boiler works because everyone knows it.

    Read what I wrote, because reading comprehension is probably your weakness.
    Well, the forum is reading various people looking for knowledge, so you have to stigmatize posts containing nonsense so that others do not duplicate the same nonsense.
    Since you know how the condensing boiler works, why did you write nonsense, that the boiler is to be set to a higher temperature, since the author has 100% of floor heating, he sets a reduced range of 25-55 degrees instead of 40-80 degrees on the boiler and has a problem with the head.

    Because I did not read what exactly the boiler model is and I wrote it from the machine. And in this thread, you're right. There is still the problem of adding additional "traditional" radiators (and to the way I know life probably will eventually come) that need more than 20 few degrees, in which case the need is to use a mixing system for the floor-standing. Greetings.
  • #12 17421416
    wojczarek
    Level 6  
    Subject closed positively
    The oven is set to the floor range and after the subject

Topic summary

The discussion revolves around adjusting the temperature settings of a Termet Silwer bifunctional stove, specifically lowering the floor heating temperature from the minimum of 40°C to a more suitable range of 25-30°C. Several users suggest utilizing a three-way valve and a mixing system to achieve the desired temperature. It is noted that the Termet Silwer boiler has two operational temperature ranges: a standard range of 40-80°C and a reduced range of 25-55°C, which can be set in the service menu. Users provide detailed instructions on how to access and change the settings to the reduced range, emphasizing the efficiency of condensing boilers at lower temperatures. The conversation concludes positively, confirming that the stove can be successfully set to the appropriate floor heating range.
Summary generated by the language model.
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