Originally Posted by
Ditbenik
Hi Dan, i'm pretty new to all this but i've a question which i didn't see discuss. Maybe someone can help. First of all i'm using Domoticz (the latest stable version) on a Synology. My heating system is as follows. I have on the grond floor under floor heating in 7 rooms. They are controlled bij HCE0. In every room there is a DTS92 for temperature management. (On the first floor there are 4 radiators using the HR92). The system is all connected as follows: The Evohome receives the temperatures from the DTS92's. When there is a heat demand it controls the Intergas Boiler by modulation using the R8810A1018. Also the Evohome sends signals to the HCE80 to open the valves of a specific room. Now my question:
In Domticz I see every room temperature correctly also relay's (not always withe the right names, sometimes just called zone especilly the one with ufh). What I don't see are the signals send bij the Evohome to the HCE80. First I thouhgt that the relays for the rooms where those signals, but the device id is comming from a DTS92. I checked this by removing the batteries and then the signal is seen at last by the time I removed the battery. So the relay for example for the living room is not comming from the Evohome but from the DTS92. I'm curious what the Evohome is telling the HCE80. The reason I want to know this is that te relay now asks for a heat demand (even with percentages bigger than 50) but the valve for the UFH is not opened. It seems to be a different signal. By accident i was tryring to rebind my evohome for the living room to the HCE80 by pressing only the bind button on the Evohome and I suddenly saw I new relay (with the same id as the evotouch called living room. I thought: this is the one i'm looking for, but unfortunately in the log i could see it received only 3 times a signal and then it was'n seen anymore. I also tried to do this binding again, and again, but I never could repeat what happened the first time. I hope I made myself clear and maybe someone can help.
Thanks, Hans