samboy Posted Friday at 21:28 Report Share Posted Friday at 21:28 Hi gang. When the heating is on is it better to shut all doors to contain the heat in each room as i do or as my mate says leave all the doors open so the heat circulates around the house ?. Thanks all. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TIGHTCHOKE Posted Friday at 21:33 Report Share Posted Friday at 21:33 Cheaper by far to only heat the rooms you use. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yellow Bear Posted Friday at 21:42 Report Share Posted Friday at 21:42 7 minutes ago, TIGHTCHOKE said: Cheaper by far to only heat the rooms you use. But be sure to keep the whole house above 14C to avoid multiple issues Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TIGHTCHOKE Posted Friday at 21:46 Report Share Posted Friday at 21:46 3 minutes ago, Yellow Bear said: But be sure to keep the whole house above 14C to avoid multiple issues Fair point, I've always found that "balancing" the radiators is worth the effort. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bigbob Posted Friday at 21:51 Report Share Posted Friday at 21:51 Only time we have the heating on is when babysitting the grandkids then i shut the curtains and the doors other than that put a jumper on and if its really cold a pair of socks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
marsh man Posted Friday at 21:59 Report Share Posted Friday at 21:59 I would have thought it would make a difference with how many rooms are not in use , how big your house is , how old the house is , insulated , double glazing, detached or semi detached , end terrace or mid terrace and the list continue . The only room in my house where I leave the radiator off is in my bedroom , I like a warm house but not in my bedroom . MM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
amateur Posted Friday at 22:22 Report Share Posted Friday at 22:22 (edited) I can answer authoritatively, as far as my heating bill is concerned. We used to have standard TRVs on all the radiators in the house. The rooms we used all the time were set at a comfortable level, the unused rooms set low, and the boiler timer switched between day and night. This year, I fitted Hive individually programmable valves throughout so that the rooms we use only heat up during the time that we use them. My heating bill has dropped from £357/month to £216. Well worth the £850 investment. Edited Friday at 22:26 by amateur Misstype Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wilts#Dave Posted Friday at 23:20 Report Share Posted Friday at 23:20 52 minutes ago, amateur said: I can answer authoritatively, as far as my heating bill is concerned. We used to have standard TRVs on all the radiators in the house. The rooms we used all the time were set at a comfortable level, the unused rooms set low, and the boiler timer switched between day and night. This year, I fitted Hive individually programmable valves throughout so that the rooms we use only heat up during the time that we use them. My heating bill has dropped from £357/month to £216. Well worth the £850 investment. I’m sure a well setup smart thermostat would have achieved similar results alongside the standard trv’s set accordingly, if your old system merely switched between day and night? You must have a rather large house to heat though, to have been costing £357/month to heat! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bruno22rf Posted Friday at 23:46 Report Share Posted Friday at 23:46 1 hour ago, amateur said: I can answer authoritatively, as far as my heating bill is concerned. We used to have standard TRVs on all the radiators in the house. The rooms we used all the time were set at a comfortable level, the unused rooms set low, and the boiler timer switched between day and night. This year, I fitted Hive individually programmable valves throughout so that the rooms we use only heat up during the time that we use them. My heating bill has dropped from £357/month to £216. Well worth the £850 investment. Strewth, our 3 bed is just over £130 month and we are nearly 800 in credit, and our solar panels pay most of that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
amateur Posted yesterday at 04:07 Report Share Posted yesterday at 04:07 4-bed detached, but with a wife who feels the cold. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TOPGUN749 Posted yesterday at 07:39 Report Share Posted yesterday at 07:39 Keep doors closed and regulate each room to the temperature you want, 14 degrees lowest,up to 20+ degrees centigrade. I aim for 20 degrees lounge,and bathroom,18 kitchen,17 bedrooms,16 hallway, Total annual consumption 1100kw/hour’s electricity,3,700kw/hours gas.(£803 a year) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JohnfromUK Posted yesterday at 13:10 Report Share Posted yesterday at 13:10 15 hours ago, marsh man said: I would have thought it would make a difference with how many rooms are not in use , how big your house is , how old the house is , insulated , double glazing, detached or semi detached , end terrace or mid terrace and the list continue . /\. This My house is quite large, old and insulated fairly well for an old building, but nothing like a modern house might be. There are 4 separate central heating radiator water circuits so that heating can be controlled with their own time and thermostat settings to suit the usage. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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