Drayton Wiser Smart Thermostat Dual Zone Heating and Hot Water Control – Works with Amazon Alexa, Google Home, IFTTT


Smart heating
Radiator thermostat with Amazon Alexa
Wiser thermostat kit 1 Wiser thermostat kit 2 Wiser Thermostat kit 3 Wiser Multiroom kit 1 Wiser Thermostat kit 2
Boiler Type Combi Conventional (boiler with separate hot water tank) Combi or Conventional with two heating zones Combi Conventional (boiler with separate hot water tank)
Heating and Hot Water? Heating control Heating and hot water control Heating and hot water control with two heating zones Heating control Heating and hot water control
Radiator Thermostats Included?
Can I add Radiator Thermostats & Smart Plugs?
Compatible with Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant & IFTTT?
Energy Saving Smart Modes?
Easy to install?


Weight: 640 g
Size: Thermostat 3 – 2 Heating Zones and Hot Water
Dimensions: 8.9 x 13.8 x 24.5 cm; 640 Grams
Model: WT734R9K0902
Colour: Sandstone Fabric
Manufacture: Drayton by Schneider Electric
Colour: Sandstone Fabric
Size: Thermostat 3 – 2 Heating Zones and Hot Water

155 Responses

  1. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Bought to replace an old Honeywell wireless thermostat and relay box (bdr91)

    Easy to wire up the new box, simple set up on the app, probably took 10 mins to get going from removing the old one to being able to use the thermostat.

    Will see how it goes these next few weeks bit very impressed so far – considering putting their smart trvs onto our radiators to making our system more flexible

  2. LoreneKrebs says:

     United Kingdom

    Very pleased with this smart heating controller. Installed easily and configuration straightforward – except I had a problem connecting the hub to the cloud. I called tec support – with low expectations – but they were great! picked up after 3rd ring, got straight through to someone who patiently talked me through it and solved the problem. They are also great for advice if you can’t figure out what set of bits you need. highly recommended.

  3. Katrina Butcher says:

     United Kingdom 🇬🇧

    I bought these to enable me to fit smart heating controls which was cheaper than buying the complete valve and thermostat head.

  4. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    We have a 2-zone heating system plus hot water. After doing my research and working out exactly where all the wires went, I did the installation myself in a couple of hours. It’s worked pretty-much flawlessly ever since.

    A couple of points. If you have a 2-zone heating system (+ hot water = 3 zones), try and buy the 3-zone hub and skip the 2 display thermostats. You don’t need them and you’ll never use them. Buy more TRVs instead. You’ll then be able to control more rooms separately, and that’s what all this is about, getting heat only where it is needed. You’ll be able to add TRV’s to the 2 different heating zones, so that heat is only sent to that one zone, and not the whole house. But the display thermostats almost never get used. I’d send them back if i could.

    I will be buying more TRVs as these are what control the radiators and ultimately control the heat to your house.

    Overall, really can’t complain. It does that it should with a minimum of fuss, and that’s all you want from your heating control system.

  5. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    We live in an old farmhouse with 18 inch internal stone walls. Have used two of these to extend the hub to far end of house. Easy to plug in and setup 🙂

  6. ErmelinHardy says:

     United Kingdom

    I had a Drayton Life Style programmer, it is a simple swop that’s why I chose it, I had to put a link across to terminals in the junction box as instructed, works fine after a bit of faffing, but Alexa is being a bitch.

  7. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    This is a good heater / boiler time. I can now switch on the heater using my phone which is very convenient. I asked electrician to have this install for me as I do not want to bother with cable etc. It took him less than 30 minutes. so I guess it must be quite easy. I am pleased with the device. I was hoping the receive will have some display so it doesn’t solely rely on a mobile phone app.

  8. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    We have had a heating control for a combi boiler operating since October 2021. Easy to fit, pair with wifi and use. But last week the wifi router was changed – out of our control as on a park site in a Lodge. The new system is a mesh network – it will not connect to a mesh network. It will not factory reset and reconnect to the old router as the system is open – no security, yet it did before, it can be controlled via the app while there but no longer have remote access, we also have an issue with connectivity to the new network so all in all a frustrating weeks holiday. Tech support have been very helpful but not found a work round without getting a data dongle on a mobile sim – reception is poor so don’t think it will work.

  9. StephanBqc says:

     United Kingdom

    When we bought our first house we knew we wanted smart heating, but could not afford to buy the other well known brands and have it installed. This was a really good price and looked simple enough to install so we had a go and so glad we did! Neither of us have prior electrical knowledge. We googled a few things and looked at the wiring diagrams and gave it a go.

    We have a Main Eco Elite 30 combi boiler, did have a neomitis wireless thermostat and receiver. All we had to do was change the one wire from position 4 to position 2 and sorted – picture showed the wiring before we changed it.
    Had heating working immediately and absolutely love it. We will be adding radiator valves to the system in time, but for now we have the one thermostat and it has already saved us so much money easily paying for itself.

    Fantastic ki

  10. Cory Weinberg says:

     United Kingdom

    I have had a smart heating system for a number of years and just got feed up with the contrary way the signal is received or not. The Wiser system installed easily and the components all talk to each other without any signal booster. The App is simple to understand and is very easy to control each room “the away” feature is easy to use and just works. The two other pluses in my book are, they are made in Britain and they are at least half the price of the brand leader. Very pleased.

  11. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom 🇬🇧

    Bought this to add to already installed Drayton system. Fast delivery, great price poi

  12. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 3 From Our UsersOrdered this controller, the Wiser Thermostat Kit 2, to replace a Drayton Tempus Seven. Easily fitted in minutes onto the same backplate. Then I noticed on the box, “Works with all boilers except gravity fed systems.” Bah.

    Well, I was determined to make it work. All that is required, in my case, is for the hot water to come on whenever the heating comes on. On the Tempus Seven, that mode of operation is selected using a jumper switch. Why that is not a software option in this controller is a mystery. Nevertheless, using the app it’s easy enough to program the hot water schedule to be the same as the heating schedule.

    There is no 5/2 schedule mode, only individual day settings. Once you’ve programmed one day, you can easily copy that day’s schedule to other days, so you don’t have to enter everything 7 times.

    For manual override, I programmed a “Heating On” Moment that turns both the thermostat and hot water on together, and a “Heating Off” Moment that turns them both off together. With these, I can emulate the Advance mode of the Tempus Seven.

    Alexa operation is a little lacking. Alexa can’t see the Moments I programmed so you have to create Routines to operate the thermostat and hot water together. (** See update below **)

    Using an Alexa Routine to turn the Heating On: Alexa can set a temperature on the thermostat and turn the hot water on, but the controller turns the heating off again after one hour. This emulates the Boost function of the Tempus Seven. I have not found out how to get the heating to stay on so if that’s what I want I have to use the app instead of Alexa.

    Using Alexa to turn the Heating Off: Unfortunately, Alexa cannot turn the thermostat off; it can only adjust the temperature. I created an Alexa Routine to turn the hot water off and turn the thermostat down at the same time. But because the thermostat is not off, my central heating pump keeps running. Not ideal but at least the gas is switched off.

    So, Alexa is great when you want to Boost the heating, but to toggle it on or off it’s best to use the app.

    So far I’m happy with this controller. It allows me to control the heating remotely, which I couldn’t do before. But with a few software changes it could be perfect:
    – I’d like to see a gravity fed mode;
    – I’d like Alexa to be able to operate the Moments I created;
    – I’d like Alexa to be able to turn the thermostat off;
    – I’d like the heating to stay on when Alexa turns it on (On and Boost should be available separately in the Alexa skill).

    ** UPDATE **

    I don’t know if anyone at Drayton saw this review but a week later and the Alexa skill can now see my Moments and I have been able to update my routines to give me proper On, Off and Boost via voice control. Thank you! Rating upped to 5 stars.

  13. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 4 From Our UsersWe have this for nearly 2 months now and it is so much more convenient than the traditional thermostat control we had. Setting the times within the app is really simple and more intuitive than older hardware based systems. If you want heat at anytime you can just do it through the app at home or on the way home and want it to be warm when you return, selecting a length of time it is on for (saves money as you don’t forget to turn it back off). There is no subscription, you buy the kit then download the free app and that’s it. I will be adding the radiator valves to a few of our rooms later in the year to give us even more control over our central heating.

    Fitting and setup was really easy, and replaced our Center Honeywell EHE0200361 Wireless Thermostat and BDR91 Relay without any modifications to the wiring from our Baxi Duotec combi boiler. See my photos showing the wiring layouts of both old and new.

    Drayton being a British company is another big plus for me, I like to support our home grown companies.

    Excellent, and actually saves you money on fuel costs!

  14. Earle17Hleghyd says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 2 From Our UsersWould 100% recommend!

    Easy enough to install yourself, in my case it was as simple as unscrewing the old controller (AFTER turning off the power at the breaker) and fitting the new one onto the existing faceplate. Same story with the radiator valves, if you fully open the existing ones before removing you’ll find it much easier! If you aren’t confident you can get someone in to do it: unless you’ve got an unusual setup I’d suggest it takes 15 minute to install the controller and less than 5 minutes per valve.

    The app guides you through connecting the valves and controller to the internet, my wifi often has problems with smart home devices but the whole process was smooth and painless. Far better than the traditional controls I had. Rather than turning the heating on at a specific time, you set the temperature and the boiler cycles on/off to maintain that temperature. Now I’m using less energy while effectively keeping the heating on for longer, plus I waste less as the house overheats far less frequently! It also has various “modes” like “eco” and “comfort” – long story short is they work! I plan to replace the remaining radiator valves soon, part of the reason I chose wiser was because individual valves are at least 10-20 cheaper than alternatives, quickly adds up to massive savings when doing an entire house!

    The app gives you a huge amount of control over the heating: you can create different schedules, assign different rooms to different schedules, basically you can program it in almost any way you like. I can create a far more complex heating schedule in a fraction of the time it took me on my previous thermostat. The dashboard on the app is also very helpful for analysing your energy usage, for example seeing how it varies with the outside temperature. Also for a one off fee you can integrate wiser with your smart meter which I plan on doing shortly! Great way to save money and also gives you an idea on what you can do to be more energy efficient.

    Once it was set up I had some difficulties integrating with Alexa, turns out it was set to the wrong country, no idea how. Tried to get in touch with Amazon about it but succeeded with trial and error before I got a reply. Once I got the integration up and running it was very good. Can easily set up automations like turning on away mode when you set the alarm or boosting heat when you disarm it. Only gripe is that you can only temporarily boost the temperature through Alexa, not change the heating schedule altogether. “Moments” you create in the wiser app are registered under “scenes” in Alexa so it does give you a bit more flexibility, however again these are temporary.

    Although there are definitely improvements to be made with the Alexa integrations this is still an easy 5 stars. Keeping the house warmer for cheaper is a no-brainer, it is incredibly easy to set up and use, and offers a huge amount of control. Could not recommend enough!

  15. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Discovered this product while searching for feedback on the Google product, which I had expected to buy. This is much cheaper and after 3 weeks of use in my house seems much more powerful and ideal for my needs. I have 2 separate heating zones plus hot water, each with a motorised valve so bought Kit 3. Temperature control has hugely improved compared to my old mechanical thermostats. It’s too soon to tell if costs have reduced. I would give it 5* if the app was more powerful such as being able to extract data for more detailed analysis. Although it does integrate with smart meters I am unable to have one. I plan to add the radiator valve kits, fortunately I already have Drayton radiator valves so fitting should be very easy. Unfortunately thir pric on Amazon has just increased by 5 so will have to shop around

  16. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom 🇬🇧

    Does what it says on the box. Bit of an issue with app crashing but overall happy with the purchase.
    Initially app was forcing me to touch thermostat as it couldn’t obtain the temperature but now after 1-2 month of use, that issue is gone. App keep loghing me off randomly and fails to launch many times. I just use the basic features but happy with purchase.

  17. SeymourNED says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 2 From Our UsersAfter being advised to get a Honeywell EvoHome system, I researched all options.
    The Honeywell system is very nice and gets good reviews, but so does the Drayton at way less than half the price, and can control more zones. It’s a challenge to work out the components of the Honeywell system, and many are not available through Amazon now.
    I wanted Alexa control, OpenTherm (though not using it yet), room thermostat and 6 radiator valve heads. The cost for the Honeywell system was about 1050, and the Drayton was 382, BUT on Black Friday I paid 274! It costs more than that just for the Honeywell controller!
    Everything is easy to install, the hub comes with the industry standard backplate and cost me less than 50 to replace the old non-standard one; if your system has a standard backplate, you don’t need a plumber or electrician for any of this! Download the Drayton Wiser app, connect the hub, press the setup button, connect to your network, done.
    Add the room thermostat, which is simple AND if it is assigned to the same room as radiator thermostats the room thermostat overrides, which makes sense as the temperature near the radiator is warmer.
    The radiator thermostats are simple too, connect to network, assign it to a room, allow it to calibrate itself, finished. BUT, be prepared to spend time adjusting the temperature to get it to what feels comfortable where you are in the room, OR buy a room thermostat for every room; I didn’t.
    The app is clean and simple and provides some useful analytics that show what you have set the temperature to, and what it achieves by when; there’s an eco mode that predicts when it’s getting near temperature and shuts off a bit before, as the water is still hotter for a while; there’s a comfort mode that will switch on early to achieve the set temperature for the time you set. If you’re a geek, they provide an API so you can write or download programs to extract data and control the system.
    So, what’s the benefit of spending the money?
    Before, like many, I had a wall mounted room thermostat that turned the boiler on/off, and manual thermostatic radiator valve heads to adjust the temperature in other rooms. The downside of this are many:-
    I don’t sit by the wall thermostat, and I now know it’s actually 5C warmer there than where I sit!
    The boiler was set at a temperature and was on unless the room thermostat or timer was off. Now, it can come on just to provide heat for the bedroom and bathroom a little before I get up, then mainly the lounge where I am most of the time, and the back bedroom which I don’t use gets a low level of heat at times when the other rooms are up to temperature i.e. a flexible dynamic system.
    OpenTherm takes it a stage further and adjusts the boiler water temperature depending on what is required when, saving more energy.

  18. AngelikCalder says:

     United Kingdom 🇬🇧

    I owned this smart plug and TPlink TAPO series smart plug as well. Some basic comparison between them, they have their special feature and pros/cons.

    TPlink TAPO is relative cheaper in price. It do the smart plug function very well. The apps capable for scheduling with daily sunrise/sunset adjustment, however the plug doesn’t have Watt meter build in, also no other wifi/signal extension.

    Wiser SmartPlug is somehow expensive. The apps only capable for regular time schedule with not sunrise/sunset adjustment, which mean you may need adjust the schedule regularly if you want sunset lighting automation. However it have a watt meter build in so you can see the plug power drawing from the apps. Also it have signal extension ONLY FOR DRAYTON HEATING SYSTEM, therefore if you need extending your Drayton heating system thermostat coverage, it could help.

  19. JeanettDXPX says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 8 From Our UsersI had looked at all the smart thermostat systems (Tado, Hive, Nest, Honeywell etc) and settled in this, for a few reasons, it doesn’t need an internet bridge like (Wiser has WiFi built into the hub) Tado and Hive making a simpler and cleaner setup. The Wiser install looked very easy for a home DIYer from watching YouTube videos. It’s also British designed and made which is a real bonus.

    Install was very easy, just swappped the 6 wires from the old system onto the new hub. Pairing the app to the new system was easy and all up and running in less than an hour working slowly with a tea.

    Paired with the Alexa which can turn the central heating or hot water on for an hour. The app has a nice amount of data on showing the room temperature over the day, which helps sitting the schedule for the central heating, as well as where you can probably avoid unnecessary heating if you are looking to save a bit of money.

    Feel like this system was the right choice after researching all the systems on the market.

  20. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 6 From Our UsersNot completely without hiccups but overall a good system.

    Negatives:

    – Would be nice to be able to use rechargeable batteries in the TRVs.
    – The temp of the room is taken from the TRV which will be warmer than any other part of the room. Unless you have one of the room thermostats assigned to that room. These are expensive (60+) and have a horrible interface and apart from taking temperature and humidity readings are completely redundant. A 4 zigbee environment sensor from Ali Express would be better.
    – Option to use wired ethernet on the hub would be good like the European version of the Drayton product. The wifi hardware built in to this unit is ancient.
    – Will almost certainly need smart plugs to maintain links around the house. These are also dear.

    Positives:

    + Its solid once you sort out the wifi issues, and is dead easy to DIY.
    + Doesn’t require any subscriptions.
    + Third party integration with Home Assistant. – This is fantastic actually.

  21. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom 🇬🇧

    Golden Review Award: 7 From Our UsersThis is a review of the Wiser 1 channel smart heating control system. Facing ever increasing energy bills I had been looking around for a while at the various systems available. Then I discovered this one. After reading so many negative reviews about the Hive system I ruled that out. Many of the cheap Chinese smart radiator thermostats also had very bad reviews with breakages happening very easily, plus they only controlled the radiator so were not a complete heating control system. I started reading reviews about the Wiser system which were all mainly positive. So I decided on this system. I purchased a kit that came with the boiler controller, room thermostat and 2 radiator thermostats. I bought an additional 11 radiator thermostats and 2 range extenders. As all my valves were old I decided to replace all of those too. I then set work over the next couple of weeks installing everything. As we already had a wireless thermostat, the boiler controller was easy to swap over. Just make sure it’s in a good position to get a WiFi signal. Set up of the app was easy, so was adding each radiator thermostat, the room thermostats and the two range extenders. After a week it was apparent that one of the radiator thermostats was faulty, the battery had drained already. That was replaced without a problem. Since then the system has been brilliant. I can heat just one room if I want to. The system lets you lock out control of the radiator thermostats locally just in case you have children who like to fiddle. You can also create custom schedules which you can assign to a single or multiple rooms. The app works when you are away from the house too, so you can control your heating from anywhere. Make sure your routers 2.4Ghz radio is set to channel 1, 6 or 11 and is not set to Auto. Having an Android phone or tablet can help here. Install the WiFi Man app from Play store. The app lets you see which channels are the quietest.

  22. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 2 From Our UsersOnce installed (I used a heating engineer to install replacing Honeywell wi fi thermostat) it was a case of following the instructions installing radiator thermostats. This was relatively straightforward. I did need to purchase a plug as one of my radiators was too far away to connect. It was then a question of waiting for the weather to cool down enough to test it out. Living in a town house where the living area is on the top floor has always caused problems with balancing the heat throughout the property. Also as I am now on my own, it is not necessary to heat every room. Once I had got used to the app and played with the settings for each radiator setting, the system works really well. The app takes a bit of getting used to but now I am fine with it. I called the help line once and they were able solve my problem in 5 minutes. It’s early days, but so far I am impressed. My main advice would be 1) make sure you have good Wi-Fi coverage in the areas you want to install the main box and radiator thermostats 2) follow the instructions carefully as provided on the videos and instructions. Also, important right now, this system can save you money. I haven’t used it with Alexa yet hence no rating give

  23. Ali Salman says:

     United Kingdom 🇬🇧

    If all goes well, this system is easy to set up.
    After a week of use and a few days where heating is beginning to get called for briefly, I can see temperature control is responsive. Radiators are quiet and they heat up same as they did with the ordinary TRVs.
    Some potential downsides.
    1) You cannot control the system at all other than via wifi and software. So you could not, for example, turn off the hot water and/or heating manually other than by, switching off power (which in my case is the fused spur in the airing cupboard).
    2) The wifi of the hub is weak.
    Ping monitoring it, it regularly fails to respond. On two occassions the left LED has came on solid red and the unit was offline. I needed to switch the unit to setup mode and back and wifi connection came up.
    3) The iTRVs seem lighweight. Some other reviewers here experience issues with these early on. I hope they last as they will form the bulk of the investment, if you go all out smart with Wiser.

    Hopefully it manages to pay for itself with energy savings.

  24. Jon Martindale says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 3 From Our UsersI have marked 4 star for easy to install for the reason below which is actually no fault of the unit.

    I already had a Drayton controller so it was simply a case of putting the new Wiser unit on the existing backplate.
    I tested it in manual mode with the buttons and all was good , hot water and heating
    Next I used the App to connect my phone and router – all was easy and worked OK
    NOW THE BUT – when I tried to connect the room thermostat it just would not connect. I tried a reset on the room stat but it still would not connect. After over an hour of trying I phoned Drayton Tech Support.
    I got through very quickly and spent some time trying to set it up with them but it was powering up but not connecting. As an another attempt to get it connecting I was asked to change the batteries – IT CONNECTED INSTANTLY.
    SO THIS IS THE BUT AS EXPLAINED BY TECH SUPPORT – YOU DONT KNOW HOW LONG ITS BEEN ON THE SHELF AND ALTHOUGH THERE WAS ENOUGH POWER IN THE BATTERIES TO BOOT IT UP THERE WAS NOT ENOUGH FOR IT TO CONNECT.
    Overall I’m very please with the unit – it works with the App with Alexa and with the room Stat. The only improvement I would ask is it would be nice to have a guide how to use the room stat without having to trawl the net.

  25. gigiofca says:

     United Kingdom

    Had Danfoss controller which started to play up. Straight forward plug and play installation as both use same back plate. App is a bit slow but no complaint at all and sure beats trying to connect nest or hive.

  26. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Brilliant controls. As a heating installer I recommend these to everyone. Full control over every room from your phone. Wouldn’t use anything else. While you can pair it to Alexa the commands are very basic and could be improved greatly, but that’s it!

  27. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 11 From Our UsersI researched a lot of products, and although this one looked really good, I couldn’t help but wonder why the TRV heads were 40 rather than others which were around 60. I thought they may be inferior. I need not worry. They are brilliant. I’ve worked in IT for 30 years, so setup was a doddle. Even installation was one screw and just swap my old timer for the Wiser hub. It fitted on the old backplate so no wiring required. I just turned my old thermostat to max so it just kept the thermostat permanently switched on, giving control to the new Wiser kit.

    Once installed, I set up the schedules for each room individually. On an old system, you set all radiators to switch off at a certain temperature, but if you have all radiators set to 20 degrees, for example, then if the temperature is 18 degrees, then obviously all radiators will switch on. With the Wiser Smart Heating system, you then go one step further by saying (for example). I want the bedroom and bathroom to come on between 6 and 8.30 at 20 degrees with all other radiators OFF. I want the office radiator to come on at 8am at 21 degrees, and the bedroom and bathroom to go off at 8.30. I want the office then to turn off at 5pm, but I want the lounge and hallway to come on at 4pm till 11pm. And I want the bedroom to come back on a 9pm. Stuff like that. It basically means that I am running 1 or 2 radiators all day (or until they reach the required temperature), whereas before I would have been running 10 all day. I can only assume that with the horrendous price increases in the UK for gas, this has made a huge difference. We have a reasonable sized 4 bedroom detached house, and after April, our monthly gas and electricity bill will rise from 100 per month to 130 per month. This is the lowest of anyone we know. We are on standard tariff as our supplier went bust, so we had to change supplier recently to a new one, and they had no fixed price deals going, so we ended up on standard which is one of the highest, and we have smart meters, so they know exactly how much we use. People we know in smaller houses than us are paying far more than us (in some cases more than double). I can only assume it is the Wiser system making the difference. But it makes sense, as having 2 radiators on instead of 10 is a big difference.
    The only negative. The app needs some more thought and some work. It’s great at setting basic schedules, but they need to listen to customers more. I think it must have been designed by a developer. When I first had it, I gave them some feedback saying it is really good, but you should be able to have overrides to the regular schedule for specific dates (like on Microsoft calendars). E.g Aunt Ethel is coming to stay next Thursday for 2 nights, so during that period keep the spare room at 21 degrees. The only way I can see is to wait until the day of arrival and then amend the regular schedule to suit or set it a constant temperature and tell it to ignore the schedule. But with both of these options, you have to remember to undo it afterwards. I heard nothing back.

    Overall though, this is an exceptional system, far better than I could ever have hoped for, which I believe is saving me a lot of money, and probably paid for itself a long time ago. It just needs (like all apps) ongoing customer engagement and development. I would be happy to perform this role for free as I have been heavily involved in mobile app development and I love this product, and I would love to be able to help others save money with the fuel price crisis in the UK.

  28. NoeliaTempleton says:

     United Kingdom

    I replaced my Drayton Wireless Thermostat with new ‘Wiser’ Heating Controls. I bought the Kit 1 and subsequently 7 more Wiser TRVs.
    I was disappointed to find that the Wiser Room Thermostat WiFi signal was too weak to successfully link to the new Hub R (which had directly replaced the old Wireless Thermostat Unit (by the boiler in my loft – which always worked reliably!)
    The answer was obvious, I had to buy a Wiser Plug ‘extender’ (another 38). Great the system worked.
    Next I fitted the two Wiser TRVs (from the Kit 1) at the extremes of distance from the Hub R. One Wiser TRV would not pair reliably. Yes – I had to buy yet another Wiser Plug ‘Extender’ and find the optimal position for its location.
    My house covers 3 floors (top a loft conversion) walls all brick. My extenders are both on 1st floor at opposite ends of the house, and everything now works reliably.
    I am very impressed with the many features of my Wiser system and in particular the ability for ant TRV to ‘call’ for the boiler to run when it’s room schedule requires heat.
    The Hub R is linked to my home WiFi and my iPhone has the Wiser Home App downloaded (needed for set up).
    The App is brilliant and very easy to use and navigate. Too many features to describe here!
    The system can also use Amazon Alexa and I have even linked Wiser to IFTTT App which now automatically switches the heating off / down when my iPhone is away from home.
    You can also control everything from the Wiser Home App when anywhere!
    WISER has exceeded my expectations, except for two things, namely:
    Poor Wiser WiFi signal strength.
    No temperature ‘offset’ to correct the true room temperature for the Wiser TRV measured temperature (shown in the Wiser Home App.

    I would buy again as the overall cost /features compares very well against main competitor systems.

  29. JoyceA13xv says:

     United Kingdom

    I replaced my Drayton Wireless Thermostat with new ‘Wiser’ Heating Controls. I bought the Kit 1 and subsequently 7 more Wiser TRVs.
    I was disappointed to find that the Wiser Room Thermostat WiFi signal was too weak to successfully link to the new Hub R (which had directly replaced the old Wireless Thermostat Unit (by the boiler in my loft – which always worked reliably!)
    The answer was obvious, I had to buy a Wiser Plug ‘extender’ (another 38). Great the system worked.
    Next I fitted the two Wiser TRVs (from the Kit 1) at the extremes of distance from the Hub R. One Wiser TRV would not pair reliably. Yes – I had to buy yet another Wiser Plug ‘Extender’ and find the optimal position for its location.
    My house covers 3 floors (top a loft conversion) walls all brick. My extenders are both on 1st floor at opposite ends of the house, and everything now works reliably.
    I am very impressed with the many features of my Wiser system and in particular the ability for ant TRV to ‘call’ for the boiler to run when it’s room schedule requires heat.
    The Hub R is linked to my home WiFi and my iPhone has the Wiser Home App downloaded (needed for set up).
    The App is brilliant and very easy to use and navigate. Too many features to describe here!
    The system can also use Amazon Alexa and I have even linked Wiser to IFTTT App which now automatically switches the heating off / down when my iPhone is away from home.
    You can also control everything from the Wiser Home App when anywhere!
    WISER has exceeded my expectations, except for two things, namely:
    Poor Wiser WiFi signal strength.
    No temperature ‘offset’ to correct the true room temperature for the Wiser TRV measured temperature (shown in the Wiser Home App.

    I would buy again as the overall cost /features compares very well against main competitor systems.

  30. JeromeGallegos says:

     United Kingdom

    I replaced my Drayton Wireless Thermostat with new ‘Wiser’ Heating Controls. I bought the Kit 1 and subsequently 7 more Wiser TRVs.
    I was disappointed to find that the Wiser Room Thermostat WiFi signal was too weak to successfully link to the new Hub R (which had directly replaced the old Wireless Thermostat Unit (by the boiler in my loft – which always worked reliably!)
    The answer was obvious, I had to buy a Wiser Plug ‘extender’ (another 38). Great the system worked.
    Next I fitted the two Wiser TRVs (from the Kit 1) at the extremes of distance from the Hub R. One Wiser TRV would not pair reliably. Yes – I had to buy yet another Wiser Plug ‘Extender’ and find the optimal position for its location.
    My house covers 3 floors (top a loft conversion) walls all brick. My extenders are both on 1st floor at opposite ends of the house, and everything now works reliably.
    I am very impressed with the many features of my Wiser system and in particular the ability for ant TRV to ‘call’ for the boiler to run when it’s room schedule requires heat.
    The Hub R is linked to my home WiFi and my iPhone has the Wiser Home App downloaded (needed for set up).
    The App is brilliant and very easy to use and navigate. Too many features to describe here!
    The system can also use Amazon Alexa and I have even linked Wiser to IFTTT App which now automatically switches the heating off / down when my iPhone is away from home.
    You can also control everything from the Wiser Home App when anywhere!
    WISER has exceeded my expectations, except for two things, namely:
    Poor Wiser WiFi signal strength.
    No temperature ‘offset’ to correct the true room temperature for the Wiser TRV measured temperature (shown in the Wiser Home App.

    I would buy again as the overall cost /features compares very well against main competitor systems.

  31. FallonGoldschmi says:

     United Kingdom 🇬🇧

    Golden Review Award: 3 From Our UsersInstalled in November 2021. Used dual channel (water + heating) controller with app. Thermostats installed on 8 out of 11 radiators (3 missing require their TRV1 50 yr old valves to be changed). House is better heated with a more even temperature and will continue to benefit. Unfortunately one radiator is outside of Wifi signal range, which is annoying, have not bought plug as room unused.

    UPDATE AFTER ONE YEAR.
    – all radiators fitted with Wiser TRVs except one room (not used, so normal TRV). Bathroom towel rails have no TRV
    – gas savings of 38% in first year, translates into around 800 savings (so paid for itself) and at October 2022 prices annual saving of 1,001. Looking forward to savings
    – I expected to “payback” after two years, so the higher actual savings were very pleasant

    TIPS
    – customer support is excellent. I installed a new boiler last month and installer incorrectly connected a faulty frost thermostat. Drayton customer service were excellent troubleshooting to eliminate the HubR as an issue (as installer and boiler manufacturer believed). Not the first time they have proved excellent.
    – if you need differently timed heating on radiators, they require separate Drayton TRVs. At 40 each this can get expensive. Therefore in one room (not heated) I replaced with one of my non smart TRVs to give frost setting
    – as separate TRVs required, I am not sure of the point of wall thermostat unless (1) you want all radiators to come on at the same time, meaning Drayton Wiser platform is overspecified for you (2) you have two separate heating zones
    – experiment with turning down hot water and/or heating till you surpass your pain level :-). Part of the savings I made were from more intelligent use of both e.g. with an old uninsulated hot water cylinder and HW on 24/7 I was overusing gas by about 300 KwH per month. I saved by heating only twice a day
    – smart meter with the Drayton app shows gas usage patterns per day, therefore can identify what is consuming the most and where to make savings
    – replacing your boiler is around 4x the price of Drayton Wiser system but similar cost savings. Therefore, if you need to choose, change to smart heating. I have now changed my boiler, paid 2,500 and expect to make ~30% savings on gas (my 25 year old non condensing boiler was 20% less efficient when bought than my new boiler, i.e. 74% vs 94%). I will report back on savings in another year.

  32. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Running for about 2 weeks now. Bought as part of start-up set. One wall thermastat, 3 rad thermastats and control box. The control system needs wiring into the boiler. Not as easy as the video suggests. If you’re ok with wiring then straight forward. I had a friend do that bit. The rest, fitting rads thermostats, if you already have manual thermostats, is straightforward. The app on the phone is straightforward. However, there is a 8 second delay between commands on phone and reaction of thermostat. Doesn’t sound alot but when you are programming every radiator for every day of the week if is really really slow. I can’t get the IFTTT bit to work at the moment that could be me or they no longer support Wiser.
    The rad thermastats are noisy when they come on. Wake you up with a start noisy, for the one in the bedroom. Not horrendously noisy but you will hear it and I’m a heavy sleeper. In other rooms with TV or radio on it wont be a problem. Putting the heating on when in the car, on the way home from finishing work early is brill. Turning heating up or down from sofa brill. Not tried voice control yet so can’t comment. Had a couple of none responsive commands so system is not 100%. But I will buy further rad thermastats for other rooms. The pros outway the cons

  33. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom 🇬🇧

    ************UPDATE AFTER 7 MONTHS: System has worked well for the past 7 months and is saving on gas. Only issue I have had is some of the thermostats lose connection on a regular basis. However we recently had a power cut of about an hour after which all thermostats came online with no further drop outs. I must assume the range extenders were not functioning correctly with the thermostats. So if you have thermostats with intermittent drop outs perhaps switch of power to the main controller and any range extenders you have in your system for a few minutes.**************

    Installed the system in a 5 bedroom bungalow with 13 radiators. Installing the control unit next to the boiler was simple. Removed old Drayton unit and installed new (uses the same mounting plate). Replacing the radiator thermostats was simple. System configured and now running.
    Issues found was with a weak WiFi signal at the control unit next to the boiler configuring the timing and temperature settings was slow, slow to update. Had to move my WiFi booster closer to the boiler. To avoid thermostats not responding I also had to add two range extender/ plug units.
    Ran the system for a few days to check if reliable which it is. Changed the mode to ECO mode so hopefully will start to make some savings.
    It would help greatly if the App displayed the signal strength at the hub from each the thermostats. Determining the requirement for and positioning of the range extender/ smart plugs would be so much easier.
    Also I don’t see the point of combining the range extender function with that of a smart plug in the same unit. The position of the range extender is determined by signal strengths and is unlikely to be where you need a smart plug. Drayton should make two separate units ie a range extender unit and a smart plug unit. It would make more sense.
    Note: If you are someone not comfortable with modern technology and want a heating system which is simply on or off not involving batteries, wifi signals, thermostat signals, Apps, etc this may not be for you.

  34. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Installed the system in a 5 bedroom bungalow with 13 radiators. Installing the control unit next to the boiler was simple. Removed old Drayton unit and installed new (uses the same mounting plate). Replacing the radiator thermostats was simple. System configured and now running.
    Issues found was with a weak WiFi signal at the control unit next to the boiler configuring the timing and temperature settings was slow, slow to update. Had to move my WiFi booster closer to the boiler. To avoid thermostats not responding I also had to add two range extender/ plug units.
    Ran the system for a few days to check if reliable which it is. Changed the mode to ECO mode so hopefully will start to make some savings.
    It would help greatly if the App displayed the signal strength at the hub from each the thermostats. Determining the requirement for and positioning of the range extender/ smart plugs would be so much easier.
    Also I don’t see the point of combining the range extender function with that of a smart plug in the same unit. The position of the range extender is determined by signal strengths and is unlikely to be where you need a smart plug. Drayton should make two separate units ie a range extender unit and a smart plug unit. It would make more sense.
    Note: If you are someone not comfortable with modern technology and want a heating system which is simply on or off not involving batteries, wifi signals, thermostat signals, Apps, etc this may not be for you.

  35. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    I was looking to stop heating rooms that we don’t routinely use and the radiator valves connected to the Wiser app have achieved this just as I wanted.

    We already had manually operated Drayton TRVs and so it was an easy swap to install the automated versions.

    We needed to replace the backplate for the hub, disconnect the existing wired thermostat and substitute a permanent link in its place but this was straightforward for a competent DIYer following the wiring diagram.

    Some of the radiator valves were too far from the hub to connect reliably and so I needed two extender plugs which addressed the problem but added to the installation cost.

    The app has a few minor niggles, but generally works pretty well and integrates with Alexa. Graphs that plot each room’s temperature over time are useful to confirm that things are set up properly.

    The major downside that we have experienced is not related to the Wiser system. When several radiators are switched off by the system, water is not necessarily following the route through the pipes that applied when the system was “balanced” at commissioning. This has created a hissing type noise in the “open” radiators that is noticeable but not outrageous.

    When the radiator valves open and close there is a very short buzzing noise from the motor.

    Finally there can be unexpected noise at night when a room gets too cold relative to what is programmed. The boiler will then fire up and, while it can be annoying, this is what should happen. The solution is to set the room temperature even lower during the night!

    It remains to be seen how quickly I might recoup the high costs of the system from reduced heating bills but a month after installation I’m happy enough.

  36. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    These do everything that teh other well known brands do, and at a much more affordable price. Reliability is good.. I have had teh 1st system for just about a year now, never let me down. ECO mode is a bit hit and miss, in early Autum and late spring as it monitors the outside temperature and ovverides whether the heating should on or not. try telling that to somebody that lives in a North facing house!
    The app could be improved, but its adequate, and you still get more info from it than the other well known brands. Can be integrated into IFTTT, but I dont.
    All I will say, is dont hesitate, buy it, especially when its on sales prices… cheaper than a regular wireless thermosta

  37. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    These do everything that teh other well known brands do, and at a much more affordable price. Reliability is good.. I have had teh 1st system for just about a year now, never let me down. ECO mode is a bit hit and miss, in early Autum and late spring as it monitors the outside temperature and ovverides whether the heating should on or not. try telling that to somebody that lives in a North facing house!
    The app could be improved, but its adequate, and you still get more info from it than the other well known brands. Can be integrated into IFTTT, but I dont.
    All I will say, is dont hesitate, buy it, especially when its on sales prices… cheaper than a regular wireless thermosta

  38. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    These do everything that teh other well known brands do, and at a much more affordable price. Reliability is good.. I have had teh 1st system for just about a year now, never let me down. ECO mode is a bit hit and miss, in early Autum and late spring as it monitors the outside temperature and ovverides whether the heating should on or not. try telling that to somebody that lives in a North facing house!
    The app could be improved, but its adequate, and you still get more info from it than the other well known brands. Can be integrated into IFTTT, but I dont.
    All I will say, is dont hesitate, buy it, especially when its on sales prices… cheaper than a regular wireless thermosta

  39. Lancy says:

     United Kingdom

    These do everything that teh other well known brands do, and at a much more affordable price. Reliability is good.. I have had teh 1st system for just about a year now, never let me down. ECO mode is a bit hit and miss, in early Autum and late spring as it monitors the outside temperature and ovverides whether the heating should on or not. try telling that to somebody that lives in a North facing house!
    The app could be improved, but its adequate, and you still get more info from it than the other well known brands. Can be integrated into IFTTT, but I dont.
    All I will say, is dont hesitate, buy it, especially when its on sales prices… cheaper than a regular wireless thermosta

  40. KashaTifewnut says:

     United Kingdom

    I had a new heating system installed this year which came with a Honeywell TR3 programmable wireless stat.
    No smart connectivity or app.

    I did a bit of research and went for the Drayton because of the cost and reviews.

    I’m absolutely delighted.

    I bought the starter kit which had a thermostat, control box and 2 wireless TRVs.

    After an hour of thorough googling I decided to wire the control box myself, which was easy enough after going through a few forums.

    The set-up was a doddle, as was adding the TRVs.
    I ordered another 5 TRVs on the spot.

    All my rooms are now wirelessly connected to both the app and Alexa.
    So I can set room temperatures by voice.

    The app itself is easy to use and links to IFTTT, so it’s geofenced and switches off when I leave the house, and back on when I get home.

    Handily the app can aggregate temperatures, so where I have 2 radiators in one room it uses an average temperature.

    The bathroom radiator is the only one that doesn’t have a TRV on it so I put the thermostat in the bathroom.

    Basically I can individually heat any room in the house as long as I leave the bathroom radiator on.

    At this price I couldn’t be happier!

    Highly recommended.

  41. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Having just replaced our 20 yr old conventional boiler with a much more efficient one I decided to invest some of the projected savings in further enhancements.
    Replacing an old freezer and rescheduling the hot water is already making substantial savings on electricity and Smart Heating is an obvious next step.
    First I reviewed the available products and decided that Wiser was the best value for money and offers all the functionality that we need.
    I considered iTRV’s but eventually decided that the additional cost was not worth the investment but the option is still available in the future (though our Giacomino TRV’s also require a special adapter).
    The big worry was installation and a bit of research showed that our BG UP25 controller has exactly the same wiring as the Wiser Smart Hub so I went for it. It took only a few minutes to shut off the power, unscrew the old controller and replace it with the new one. The existing thermostat is now turned to 100% on and will be removed in due course when the boiler is serviced.

    Connecting my iPad and programming the hot water and heating was very straight forward and there are some youtube videos available to explain the different modes (away mode, eco and comfort) which offer savings on top of setting the old style TRV’s in every room.

    The system has now been commissioned and is working as expected.

    I am thinking that I will use Away mode in the Summer so that the heating does not come on and for the Winter I have a schedule with 15C at night and 20C during the daytime.

    A bit of research and I found the IFTTT site which links to the Wiser account and allows you to create a free account and automate the system even further eg) an applet that runs at a certain time each day to switch to Away mode in Spring and Autumn so I don’t need to keep altering the heating schedule.

    I would certainly recommend checking out this system if your requirements are simple and you want good value for money.

    Update:
    so it’s been in place for 7 days and I have been closely monitoring the system and the power use.
    As regards hot water, I have put extra lagging on the cylinder (12) and I am only heating water on ‘bath nights’ (x3 a week) giving a clear reduction in electricity usage. It actually seems sensible to heat to 65C so that the water is still usable even after three days.
    Central Heating – I am not sure that Comfort mode is working with my new condenser boiler set on Economy so I have turned it off and forward scheduled my settings to get the full impact of heating when I get up in the morning. I have also scheduled a boost on ‘bath nights’ so that it doesn’t feel chilly getting out of the bath.
    Overall the system is working exactly as I want and giving me control and feedback my major power usage. I already have some understanding of the time it takes the house to cool down and heat up.
    It will be interesting to review this when it gets to freezing and sub zero temps later in the winter.

    Wiser smart Radiator Thermostat
    ==========================
    Still very happy with the basic system so I tried adding a smart radiator thermostat.
    My existing TRVs are Giacomini so I ordered the adapter which is available online from Conrad electronics or Amazon.
    Fitting the adapter was ok but does requires a very small Allen key to tighten the nuts.
    My experience is that the temperatures recorded by the smart radiator thermostat go wacky at the start of the day about 15 mins before the schedule kicks in and the heating fires up. (Photos attached).
    I tried re calibrating and factory reset but the problem persisted and I’m still waiting for a response from the support team so I am looking to return this in the next few days.
    Instead I am getting another smart thermometer which I will use as a sensor to record room temperatures and adjust the manual controls and existing TRVs. I could probably acheive the same with a simple digital thermostat but for a little extra cost the wiser smart thermostat will record the temperatures.

    Update: 20/11/20.
    ===============
    Overall I still have a very favorable opinion re: the Drayton Wiser Smart Heating system – as it is easy to install, performs well and allows me to control energy consumption in these difficult times.
    The Smart Radiator Thermostat did not work for me at all and I returned the product which may have been faulty. As stated above, my strategy now is to have two Smart Room Thermostats and this is working very well. In truth I might have done the same by getting a cheaper analog max/min thermostat but it’s nice to have the data recorded and two rooms allows you to exceed the 8 event s a day limit on a schedule.

    (Excellent functionality and Easy to Use (but avoid the radiator thermostat)

  42. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    I’ve had two control systems from the boiler manufacturer, neither were cheap and both failed within two years. Won’t mention the manufacturer but they are one of the higher end domestic boiler manufacturer. The boiler is a combi but the wiser system would easily integrate with a heat only boiler system ( one with a hot water cylinder).
    The system was very easy to install, the thermostatic radiator units simply unscrew and the wiser radiator unit screws straight on. I was replacing my old honeywell Thermostatic radiator controls. The kit comes with and adaptor which will allow the unit to fit most makes of radiator TRV’s without the need to drain the system. I found the unit very easy to set up and pair the TRV to the system. The only criticism is the system isn’t opentherm compatible so its simply a on/off but the way the system performs is very much like a opentherm system.
    With standard thermostatic radiator valves these simply shut the water off to the radiator, this doesn’t interface with the boiler, only a room thermostat and time lock can turn the boiler on and off. With this system it is possible to turn the boiler on and off when any of the TRVs are calling for heat which is fantastic. For instance if your working from home and only want to heat say the living room and kitchen this system will allow these rooms to be controlled simply and efficiently without trying to heat the whole house, as long as each radiator has a wiser unit fitted. Instead of heating the whole house you can now control each room however and whenever you wish.
    We have noticed a drop in the gas bill which is really why this system was fitted an long with reducing the CO2 footprint.
    The house is small but WiFi is always an issue, ro the point the computer upstairs has trouble with WiFi so its hard wired, to date I’ve not had any issues with connectivity at all, this isn’t to say if you have a larger property or a poorly placed router a range extender maybe needed.
    We have had this system. I have had to change the batteries in one or two units in that time, to be fair these are the ones that come with the unit so I don’t expect them to be the best, changing the batteries and reconnecting the TRV back to the system only takes a few minutes and probably will take less time now I know the procedure to rediscover the TRV.
    Lots of data can be accessed in the app, so the tech minded gadget lover can see what the system has been upto.
    Initial cost is a bit high but compared to the benefits this system provides is comparable to fitting a control system to a existing system, without the need to run cables to time clocks, room thermostats etc.
    All in all I can’t recommend this system highly enough.

  43. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    I bought this on a whim really as I was about to put my old Honeywell, wired, programmable thermostat and Siemens time switch back into my system following the fiasco with the Hive I had for less than 6 months! Noticed this Kit 2 as a warehouse deal “like new” so decided to give it a try.

    Very easy to install, with only 2 units – the combined boiler switch/hub/controller and the very small and neat wireless thermostat (the Hive had 3 units – the extra one required an Ethernet connection to your router).

    One installation hiccup was although all three boiler controllers state they will fit straight onto your existing, industry standard, back-plate in fact the Hive would NOT fit (it has a couple of extra profiles on the side of the box) so I had to fit Hives own mounting (not very good quality terminals). When I came to fit the Wiser controller it would NOT fit onto the Hive back-plate – it would have fitted the Siemens original one though! So I ended up changing the back-plate on both installs – at least the Wiser version has better quality terminals.

    A further problem arose when I was starting everything up on the phone app – it appeared the Hub was already registered to someone else – thanks Amazon! Strange as when I received the unit it seemed to be factory sealed,the batteries were shrink wrapped, protective film on screen ans even the clip in desk stand was included?

    At this point I let go a few expletives as I knew that with the Hive system, once the hub is registered to an account, it absolutely cannot be re-assigned – you have to buy a new hub for about 70!

    However I decided to ring Wiser support – not expecting much in view of my previous days call to Hive – nearly 2 hours long – 50% unintelligible audio, lots of resetting of my router, changing cables, standing on my head – all to no avail and when they said “advanced tech support would ring me within 72 hours” to sort it out I decided that was the taking the mickey – Screwfix refund beckoned!

    My call to Wiser support was totally different – a very helpful, polite, friendly and knowledgeable lady, whom I could easily understand on a clear phone line, just needed to know where the kit had been purchased and the serial number of the hub. Within 5 minutes the previous user had been cancelled and the hub was now registered to me – excellent stuff, exactly how customer support SHOULD work!

    Pros:
    Easy to fit / very neat small thermostat unit with the option of wall mount or desk mount / so far the app works well (the ONLY way to program a schedule) and has lots of options and information / attractive colour display / simple 3 touch button control to adjust room temperature or select boost feature / possible to control the system from the app if your internet connection goes down – just press the “setup” button once then connect your phone/tablet WiFi to the built in Wiserxxxxxxx access point.

    Cons:
    No Hot Water display on the thermostat (HW boost or over-ride ONLY available at the hub or on the app) / often the flame symbol stays illuminated for a long time after the room temperature is satisfied and the boiler has turned off (very slow update) / no proximity sensor to briefly turn the display on when you approach it

    Overall it seems a good workable system and if it proves reliable I might just shell out and fit the intelligent TRVs to all my radiators BUT, as I need 12 of these at a cost of around 480 I will have to be very sure of the reliability first – It would be nice to be able to schedule and temperature control various different rooms at varying times – almost like “zoning” without the extra plumbing and valves etc!

    Just a last word on my previous Hive – when the hub failed it also managed to corrupt the time setting in the thermostat and although they say “you can still run the schedule without internet”, you probably could EXCEPT there is NO time setting function available in the menu so yes, it would run the schedule BUT about 8 hours out of sync with the actual time – useless!

  44. LaraSeidel says:

     United Kingdom

    I bought this on a whim really as I was about to put my old Honeywell, wired, programmable thermostat and Siemens time switch back into my system following the fiasco with the Hive I had for less than 6 months! Noticed this Kit 2 as a warehouse deal “like new” so decided to give it a try.

    Very easy to install, with only 2 units – the combined boiler switch/hub/controller and the very small and neat wireless thermostat (the Hive had 3 units – the extra one required an Ethernet connection to your router).

    One installation hiccup was although all three boiler controllers state they will fit straight onto your existing, industry standard, back-plate in fact the Hive would NOT fit (it has a couple of extra profiles on the side of the box) so I had to fit Hives own mounting (not very good quality terminals). When I came to fit the Wiser controller it would NOT fit onto the Hive back-plate – it would have fitted the Siemens original one though! So I ended up changing the back-plate on both installs – at least the Wiser version has better quality terminals.

    A further problem arose when I was starting everything up on the phone app – it appeared the Hub was already registered to someone else – thanks Amazon! Strange as when I received the unit it seemed to be factory sealed,the batteries were shrink wrapped, protective film on screen ans even the clip in desk stand was included?

    At this point I let go a few expletives as I knew that with the Hive system, once the hub is registered to an account, it absolutely cannot be re-assigned – you have to buy a new hub for about 70!

    However I decided to ring Wiser support – not expecting much in view of my previous days call to Hive – nearly 2 hours long – 50% unintelligible audio, lots of resetting of my router, changing cables, standing on my head – all to no avail and when they said “advanced tech support would ring me within 72 hours” to sort it out I decided that was the taking the mickey – Screwfix refund beckoned!

    My call to Wiser support was totally different – a very helpful, polite, friendly and knowledgeable lady, whom I could easily understand on a clear phone line, just needed to know where the kit had been purchased and the serial number of the hub. Within 5 minutes the previous user had been cancelled and the hub was now registered to me – excellent stuff, exactly how customer support SHOULD work!

    Pros:
    Easy to fit / very neat small thermostat unit with the option of wall mount or desk mount / so far the app works well (the ONLY way to program a schedule) and has lots of options and information / attractive colour display / simple 3 touch button control to adjust room temperature or select boost feature / possible to control the system from the app if your internet connection goes down – just press the “setup” button once then connect your phone/tablet WiFi to the built in Wiserxxxxxxx access point.

    Cons:
    No Hot Water display on the thermostat (HW boost or over-ride ONLY available at the hub or on the app) / often the flame symbol stays illuminated for a long time after the room temperature is satisfied and the boiler has turned off (very slow update) / no proximity sensor to briefly turn the display on when you approach it

    Overall it seems a good workable system and if it proves reliable I might just shell out and fit the intelligent TRVs to all my radiators BUT, as I need 12 of these at a cost of around 480 I will have to be very sure of the reliability first – It would be nice to be able to schedule and temperature control various different rooms at varying times – almost like “zoning” without the extra plumbing and valves etc!

    Just a last word on my previous Hive – when the hub failed it also managed to corrupt the time setting in the thermostat and although they say “you can still run the schedule without internet”, you probably could EXCEPT there is NO time setting function available in the menu so yes, it would run the schedule BUT about 8 hours out of sync with the actual time – useless!

  45. Wendy Darling says:

     United Kingdom

    I bought this on a whim really as I was about to put my old Honeywell, wired, programmable thermostat and Siemens time switch back into my system following the fiasco with the Hive I had for less than 6 months! Noticed this Kit 2 as a warehouse deal “like new” so decided to give it a try.

    Very easy to install, with only 2 units – the combined boiler switch/hub/controller and the very small and neat wireless thermostat (the Hive had 3 units – the extra one required an Ethernet connection to your router).

    One installation hiccup was although all three boiler controllers state they will fit straight onto your existing, industry standard, back-plate in fact the Hive would NOT fit (it has a couple of extra profiles on the side of the box) so I had to fit Hives own mounting (not very good quality terminals). When I came to fit the Wiser controller it would NOT fit onto the Hive back-plate – it would have fitted the Siemens original one though! So I ended up changing the back-plate on both installs – at least the Wiser version has better quality terminals.

    A further problem arose when I was starting everything up on the phone app – it appeared the Hub was already registered to someone else – thanks Amazon! Strange as when I received the unit it seemed to be factory sealed,the batteries were shrink wrapped, protective film on screen ans even the clip in desk stand was included?

    At this point I let go a few expletives as I knew that with the Hive system, once the hub is registered to an account, it absolutely cannot be re-assigned – you have to buy a new hub for about 70!

    However I decided to ring Wiser support – not expecting much in view of my previous days call to Hive – nearly 2 hours long – 50% unintelligible audio, lots of resetting of my router, changing cables, standing on my head – all to no avail and when they said “advanced tech support would ring me within 72 hours” to sort it out I decided that was the taking the mickey – Screwfix refund beckoned!

    My call to Wiser support was totally different – a very helpful, polite, friendly and knowledgeable lady, whom I could easily understand on a clear phone line, just needed to know where the kit had been purchased and the serial number of the hub. Within 5 minutes the previous user had been cancelled and the hub was now registered to me – excellent stuff, exactly how customer support SHOULD work!

    Pros:
    Easy to fit / very neat small thermostat unit with the option of wall mount or desk mount / so far the app works well (the ONLY way to program a schedule) and has lots of options and information / attractive colour display / simple 3 touch button control to adjust room temperature or select boost feature / possible to control the system from the app if your internet connection goes down – just press the “setup” button once then connect your phone/tablet WiFi to the built in Wiserxxxxxxx access point.

    Cons:
    No Hot Water display on the thermostat (HW boost or over-ride ONLY available at the hub or on the app) / often the flame symbol stays illuminated for a long time after the room temperature is satisfied and the boiler has turned off (very slow update) / no proximity sensor to briefly turn the display on when you approach it

    Overall it seems a good workable system and if it proves reliable I might just shell out and fit the intelligent TRVs to all my radiators BUT, as I need 12 of these at a cost of around 480 I will have to be very sure of the reliability first – It would be nice to be able to schedule and temperature control various different rooms at varying times – almost like “zoning” without the extra plumbing and valves etc!

    Just a last word on my previous Hive – when the hub failed it also managed to corrupt the time setting in the thermostat and although they say “you can still run the schedule without internet”, you probably could EXCEPT there is NO time setting function available in the menu so yes, it would run the schedule BUT about 8 hours out of sync with the actual time – useless!

  46. Pointless Cafe says:

     United Kingdom

    I bought this on a whim really as I was about to put my old Honeywell, wired, programmable thermostat and Siemens time switch back into my system following the fiasco with the Hive I had for less than 6 months! Noticed this Kit 2 as a warehouse deal “like new” so decided to give it a try.

    Very easy to install, with only 2 units – the combined boiler switch/hub/controller and the very small and neat wireless thermostat (the Hive had 3 units – the extra one required an Ethernet connection to your router).

    One installation hiccup was although all three boiler controllers state they will fit straight onto your existing, industry standard, back-plate in fact the Hive would NOT fit (it has a couple of extra profiles on the side of the box) so I had to fit Hives own mounting (not very good quality terminals). When I came to fit the Wiser controller it would NOT fit onto the Hive back-plate – it would have fitted the Siemens original one though! So I ended up changing the back-plate on both installs – at least the Wiser version has better quality terminals.

    A further problem arose when I was starting everything up on the phone app – it appeared the Hub was already registered to someone else – thanks Amazon! Strange as when I received the unit it seemed to be factory sealed,the batteries were shrink wrapped, protective film on screen ans even the clip in desk stand was included?

    At this point I let go a few expletives as I knew that with the Hive system, once the hub is registered to an account, it absolutely cannot be re-assigned – you have to buy a new hub for about 70!

    However I decided to ring Wiser support – not expecting much in view of my previous days call to Hive – nearly 2 hours long – 50% unintelligible audio, lots of resetting of my router, changing cables, standing on my head – all to no avail and when they said “advanced tech support would ring me within 72 hours” to sort it out I decided that was the taking the mickey – Screwfix refund beckoned!

    My call to Wiser support was totally different – a very helpful, polite, friendly and knowledgeable lady, whom I could easily understand on a clear phone line, just needed to know where the kit had been purchased and the serial number of the hub. Within 5 minutes the previous user had been cancelled and the hub was now registered to me – excellent stuff, exactly how customer support SHOULD work!

    Pros:
    Easy to fit / very neat small thermostat unit with the option of wall mount or desk mount / so far the app works well (the ONLY way to program a schedule) and has lots of options and information / attractive colour display / simple 3 touch button control to adjust room temperature or select boost feature / possible to control the system from the app if your internet connection goes down – just press the “setup” button once then connect your phone/tablet WiFi to the built in Wiserxxxxxxx access point.

    Cons:
    No Hot Water display on the thermostat (HW boost or over-ride ONLY available at the hub or on the app) / often the flame symbol stays illuminated for a long time after the room temperature is satisfied and the boiler has turned off (very slow update) / no proximity sensor to briefly turn the display on when you approach it

    Overall it seems a good workable system and if it proves reliable I might just shell out and fit the intelligent TRVs to all my radiators BUT, as I need 12 of these at a cost of around 480 I will have to be very sure of the reliability first – It would be nice to be able to schedule and temperature control various different rooms at varying times – almost like “zoning” without the extra plumbing and valves etc!

    Just a last word on my previous Hive – when the hub failed it also managed to corrupt the time setting in the thermostat and although they say “you can still run the schedule without internet”, you probably could EXCEPT there is NO time setting function available in the menu so yes, it would run the schedule BUT about 8 hours out of sync with the actual time – useless!

  47. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    I will admit I’m not using many of the smart features, but so far this has exceeded expectations.
    It came as an Amazon return, which meant I soon had an opportunity to interact with customer services. Despite it being Christmas Eve afternoon the phone was promptly answered and the device reset within 10 minutes with the help of a friendly and knowledgeable gent. Another 10 minutes saw the whole thing up and running. The install itself was a simple matter of following the instructions.
    I love the fact it has an Opentherm module even though I cannot use it in my system as it is split into upstairs and downstairs zones. They didn’t cheap out. Both stats paired without issue and have stayed connected ever since. Numerous system changes (heating and wifi) and power outages have failed to upset it.
    So far everything works exactly as intended. I am also impressed that it does indeed seem to be quite smart. It measures humidity, which is required for accurate heating. Most impressive has been the way it now chooses to boost the heating early in the evening, while it has less work to do, and then just let the temperature drift down to the set level by the time it is scheduled to set back for the night. The ability to keep track of weather and heating patterns from since it was installed is also great. As I’m just zoned for downstairs underfloor heating and upstairs radiators I haven’t had any of the range or battery problems others have reported when using radiator smart valves.
    Overall: Excellent performance so far and the only Smart Device that has proved less trouble than its non-smart equivalent. I’d happily buy another.

  48. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    I will admit I’m not using many of the smart features, but so far this has exceeded expectations.
    It came as an Amazon return, which meant I soon had an opportunity to interact with customer services. Despite it being Christmas Eve afternoon the phone was promptly answered and the device reset within 10 minutes with the help of a friendly and knowledgeable gent. Another 10 minutes saw the whole thing up and running. The install itself was a simple matter of following the instructions.
    I love the fact it has an Opentherm module even though I cannot use it in my system as it is split into upstairs and downstairs zones. They didn’t cheap out. Both stats paired without issue and have stayed connected ever since. Numerous system changes (heating and wifi) and power outages have failed to upset it.
    So far everything works exactly as intended. I am also impressed that it does indeed seem to be quite smart. It measures humidity, which is required for accurate heating. Most impressive has been the way it now chooses to boost the heating early in the evening, while it has less work to do, and then just let the temperature drift down to the set level by the time it is scheduled to set back for the night. The ability to keep track of weather and heating patterns from since it was installed is also great. As I’m just zoned for downstairs underfloor heating and upstairs radiators I haven’t had any of the range or battery problems others have reported when using radiator smart valves.
    Overall: Excellent performance so far and the only Smart Device that has proved less trouble than its non-smart equivalent. I’d happily buy another.

  49. MavisWalls says:

     United Kingdom

    I will admit I’m not using many of the smart features, but so far this has exceeded expectations.
    It came as an Amazon return, which meant I soon had an opportunity to interact with customer services. Despite it being Christmas Eve afternoon the phone was promptly answered and the device reset within 10 minutes with the help of a friendly and knowledgeable gent. Another 10 minutes saw the whole thing up and running. The install itself was a simple matter of following the instructions.
    I love the fact it has an Opentherm module even though I cannot use it in my system as it is split into upstairs and downstairs zones. They didn’t cheap out. Both stats paired without issue and have stayed connected ever since. Numerous system changes (heating and wifi) and power outages have failed to upset it.
    So far everything works exactly as intended. I am also impressed that it does indeed seem to be quite smart. It measures humidity, which is required for accurate heating. Most impressive has been the way it now chooses to boost the heating early in the evening, while it has less work to do, and then just let the temperature drift down to the set level by the time it is scheduled to set back for the night. The ability to keep track of weather and heating patterns from since it was installed is also great. As I’m just zoned for downstairs underfloor heating and upstairs radiators I haven’t had any of the range or battery problems others have reported when using radiator smart valves.
    Overall: Excellent performance so far and the only Smart Device that has proved less trouble than its non-smart equivalent. I’d happily buy another.

  50. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    We have a house with solid walls. Some rooms are warm and stay warm, others go cold really quickly.
    We had a Worcester 34cdi with old drayton RF controller built in, and at night the bedrooms used to drop way below the setpoint of the wall thermostat – not great for kids bedrooms – especially when mold started for form in the colder rooms, so had been looking at Smart control systems. (Insulation is a few k so trying this option first)

    This kit came on a treasure truck offer few months ago so bought it, plus 3 additional radiator valves.
    Had to arrange an electrician to install the wall plate and the hub to the boiler… 60ish and less than an hours work.
    The rest is done via the app on your phone.

    Positives:
    -Responsive accurate control of the system
    -Able to have a temperature zone everywhere you have a sensor
    -You can create a schedule of times/temperatures and assign multiple rooms to that schedule, or you can have a schedule per room (as we do as our use of each room fluctuates).
    – Radiator valves (TRVs) *very* easy to install and setup (just observe the battery polarity markings!… as the typical “springs” arent the same as other appliances… I spent 30 mins trying to figure out why none of my valves was powering on…to see that the batteries were in wrong!). TRV up/down can trigger a 2c boost for 1hr for that zone.
    – If you have a TRV and wall control in a single zone then the wall control automatically overrides the heating-demand on the TRV itself.
    – TRVs are simple in that there is no pull out display like the honeywells. Just boost up/down twists to change current setpoint.
    – Not too loud… slight whir for split second when temps adjusting… eg if too cold you hear the valve open, then the heating comes on. If the boiler is on and they dont want heat… then they whir shut.
    – Make sure your valve-body pins are free… get pair of pliers and shift up down a few times with a little wd40 so the motors dont have quite as much work to do.
    – We have solid walls, but didnt need the range extender. Furthermost valve needed to be connected to hub a bit closer, but always responds to control now connected.
    – android app is intuitive and easy to make changes in; there are now also battery status bars for each device and alerts when getting low. Plenty of insights of how your house behaves thermally, compared with say the outside temperature and what rooms heat when. (Mine is saying to install a TRV in our lounge as we are overheating it constantly as its an “always on” radiator – which had suspected).
    – comfort mode works out over time what your room takes to heat vs outside weather and turns on the heating before scheduled time so it reaches the set point when youve told it to. Works pretty well IMO.
    – there is a “eco” mode but not tried it out. Apparently its turned our heating down quite a few times when not needed… time will tell if reduces bills, but we bought it more for comfort so that we didnt have to wake up in middle of night to turn heating up for the kids.
    – hub range pretty decent. Our hub is in our outhouse round back of house and we still get 2/5 signal upstairs at front of house; the rad valves seem to maintain decent connection just the app sometimes struggles.
    – each of the smart TRVs can be “locked” so can only be changed via the app… useful if you have little hands that like to fiddle with things that whirr and flash

    Negatives:
    ipad app:
    – layout… doesnt landscape when you turn the screen
    – doesnt have the “settings” options… for that I have to use my android phone… so wouldnt have been able to setup using our ipad. Also doesn’t work with older ipads (we have a mini it wont install on, which might have been useful to just put on a wall in the hallway)

    Android app:
    1. latest update… if low signal to the hub it sits waiting to connect to the hub before you can change any settings… previously you could go in, review and only when you came to change something would it complain about hub connection… now… it just blocks everything. Loathe to buy the range extender given its 1 corner of the house that has the problem and we are moving our boiler soon.
    2. Initial setup – I couldnt create an account without the app being connected to my hub… so as such I couldnt do that side of things before my hub was actually installed

    All access is via the “app”… that is you have to have a phone/tablet to control the system with any granularity; there is no way to login online and make changes, even though you can control the system via the app when away from home.

    Only things missing IMO from the infrastructure are:
    – TRVs dont have a temp display on them (see honeywell).
    – a more advanced display control unit to upgrade to (see honeywell)
    – underfloor heating manifold (again…Honeywell) (we are planning this on our extension next year, so if not available will have to change systems, but for the price “right now” this is a no-brainer)
    – ability to login via a web-page and do all the same things the app can do

    So far so good. Id **thoroughly** recommend and would buy again.

    Update: replaced my lounge radiator lockshield with a wiser trv (for some reason this was our pass-thru, so moved them to the bathroom rad instead). Head registered then lights would randomly start flashing. +/- worked in opposite direction and then it disconnected and lights were flashing at random. Clearly a dud. Raised with Amazon who sent out next day replacement (which works perfectly) and now our lounge wont be epicly overheating whenever any other room demands heat.

    If you have a smart meter you can also integrate with that, but my supplier (BG Evolve) doesnt do smart meters – not sure how it looks on the app.

    I like the insights view shows you when heating was turned on or off during setpoint cycles. It shows external temp (from weather forecast) and internal temp in the room vs setpoint so you can see how outside temp influences internal temp and then when the system triggers. I guess it means you can look and see if its triggering when you arent using that room and adjust the schedule for that room – which I had done up front as our activity is fairly predictable

  51. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    We have a house with solid walls. Some rooms are warm and stay warm, others go cold really quickly.
    We had a Worcester 34cdi with old drayton RF controller built in, and at night the bedrooms used to drop way below the setpoint of the wall thermostat – not great for kids bedrooms – especially when mold started for form in the colder rooms, so had been looking at Smart control systems. (Insulation is a few k so trying this option first)

    This kit came on a treasure truck offer few months ago so bought it, plus 3 additional radiator valves.
    Had to arrange an electrician to install the wall plate and the hub to the boiler… 60ish and less than an hours work.
    The rest is done via the app on your phone.

    Positives:
    -Responsive accurate control of the system
    -Able to have a temperature zone everywhere you have a sensor
    -You can create a schedule of times/temperatures and assign multiple rooms to that schedule, or you can have a schedule per room (as we do as our use of each room fluctuates).
    – Radiator valves (TRVs) *very* easy to install and setup (just observe the battery polarity markings!… as the typical “springs” arent the same as other appliances… I spent 30 mins trying to figure out why none of my valves was powering on…to see that the batteries were in wrong!). TRV up/down can trigger a 2c boost for 1hr for that zone.
    – If you have a TRV and wall control in a single zone then the wall control automatically overrides the heating-demand on the TRV itself.
    – TRVs are simple in that there is no pull out display like the honeywells. Just boost up/down twists to change current setpoint.
    – Not too loud… slight whir for split second when temps adjusting… eg if too cold you hear the valve open, then the heating comes on. If the boiler is on and they dont want heat… then they whir shut.
    – Make sure your valve-body pins are free… get pair of pliers and shift up down a few times with a little wd40 so the motors dont have quite as much work to do.
    – We have solid walls, but didnt need the range extender. Furthermost valve needed to be connected to hub a bit closer, but always responds to control now connected.
    – android app is intuitive and easy to make changes in; there are now also battery status bars for each device and alerts when getting low. Plenty of insights of how your house behaves thermally, compared with say the outside temperature and what rooms heat when. (Mine is saying to install a TRV in our lounge as we are overheating it constantly as its an “always on” radiator – which had suspected).
    – comfort mode works out over time what your room takes to heat vs outside weather and turns on the heating before scheduled time so it reaches the set point when youve told it to. Works pretty well IMO.
    – there is a “eco” mode but not tried it out. Apparently its turned our heating down quite a few times when not needed… time will tell if reduces bills, but we bought it more for comfort so that we didnt have to wake up in middle of night to turn heating up for the kids.
    – hub range pretty decent. Our hub is in our outhouse round back of house and we still get 2/5 signal upstairs at front of house; the rad valves seem to maintain decent connection just the app sometimes struggles.
    – each of the smart TRVs can be “locked” so can only be changed via the app… useful if you have little hands that like to fiddle with things that whirr and flash

    Negatives:
    ipad app:
    – layout… doesnt landscape when you turn the screen
    – doesnt have the “settings” options… for that I have to use my android phone… so wouldnt have been able to setup using our ipad. Also doesn’t work with older ipads (we have a mini it wont install on, which might have been useful to just put on a wall in the hallway)

    Android app:
    1. latest update… if low signal to the hub it sits waiting to connect to the hub before you can change any settings… previously you could go in, review and only when you came to change something would it complain about hub connection… now… it just blocks everything. Loathe to buy the range extender given its 1 corner of the house that has the problem and we are moving our boiler soon.
    2. Initial setup – I couldnt create an account without the app being connected to my hub… so as such I couldnt do that side of things before my hub was actually installed

    All access is via the “app”… that is you have to have a phone/tablet to control the system with any granularity; there is no way to login online and make changes, even though you can control the system via the app when away from home.

    Only things missing IMO from the infrastructure are:
    – TRVs dont have a temp display on them (see honeywell).
    – a more advanced display control unit to upgrade to (see honeywell)
    – underfloor heating manifold (again…Honeywell) (we are planning this on our extension next year, so if not available will have to change systems, but for the price “right now” this is a no-brainer)
    – ability to login via a web-page and do all the same things the app can do

    So far so good. Id **thoroughly** recommend and would buy again.

    Update: replaced my lounge radiator lockshield with a wiser trv (for some reason this was our pass-thru, so moved them to the bathroom rad instead). Head registered then lights would randomly start flashing. +/- worked in opposite direction and then it disconnected and lights were flashing at random. Clearly a dud. Raised with Amazon who sent out next day replacement (which works perfectly) and now our lounge wont be epicly overheating whenever any other room demands heat.

    If you have a smart meter you can also integrate with that, but my supplier (BG Evolve) doesnt do smart meters – not sure how it looks on the app.

    I like the insights view shows you when heating was turned on or off during setpoint cycles. It shows external temp (from weather forecast) and internal temp in the room vs setpoint so you can see how outside temp influences internal temp and then when the system triggers. I guess it means you can look and see if its triggering when you arent using that room and adjust the schedule for that room – which I had done up front as our activity is fairly predictable

  52. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    We have a house with solid walls. Some rooms are warm and stay warm, others go cold really quickly.
    We had a Worcester 34cdi with old drayton RF controller built in, and at night the bedrooms used to drop way below the setpoint of the wall thermostat – not great for kids bedrooms – especially when mold started for form in the colder rooms, so had been looking at Smart control systems. (Insulation is a few k so trying this option first)

    This kit came on a treasure truck offer few months ago so bought it, plus 3 additional radiator valves.
    Had to arrange an electrician to install the wall plate and the hub to the boiler… 60ish and less than an hours work.
    The rest is done via the app on your phone.

    Positives:
    -Responsive accurate control of the system
    -Able to have a temperature zone everywhere you have a sensor
    -You can create a schedule of times/temperatures and assign multiple rooms to that schedule, or you can have a schedule per room (as we do as our use of each room fluctuates).
    – Radiator valves (TRVs) *very* easy to install and setup (just observe the battery polarity markings!… as the typical “springs” arent the same as other appliances… I spent 30 mins trying to figure out why none of my valves was powering on…to see that the batteries were in wrong!). TRV up/down can trigger a 2c boost for 1hr for that zone.
    – If you have a TRV and wall control in a single zone then the wall control automatically overrides the heating-demand on the TRV itself.
    – TRVs are simple in that there is no pull out display like the honeywells. Just boost up/down twists to change current setpoint.
    – Not too loud… slight whir for split second when temps adjusting… eg if too cold you hear the valve open, then the heating comes on. If the boiler is on and they dont want heat… then they whir shut.
    – Make sure your valve-body pins are free… get pair of pliers and shift up down a few times with a little wd40 so the motors dont have quite as much work to do.
    – We have solid walls, but didnt need the range extender. Furthermost valve needed to be connected to hub a bit closer, but always responds to control now connected.
    – android app is intuitive and easy to make changes in; there are now also battery status bars for each device and alerts when getting low. Plenty of insights of how your house behaves thermally, compared with say the outside temperature and what rooms heat when. (Mine is saying to install a TRV in our lounge as we are overheating it constantly as its an “always on” radiator – which had suspected).
    – comfort mode works out over time what your room takes to heat vs outside weather and turns on the heating before scheduled time so it reaches the set point when youve told it to. Works pretty well IMO.
    – there is a “eco” mode but not tried it out. Apparently its turned our heating down quite a few times when not needed… time will tell if reduces bills, but we bought it more for comfort so that we didnt have to wake up in middle of night to turn heating up for the kids.
    – hub range pretty decent. Our hub is in our outhouse round back of house and we still get 2/5 signal upstairs at front of house; the rad valves seem to maintain decent connection just the app sometimes struggles.
    – each of the smart TRVs can be “locked” so can only be changed via the app… useful if you have little hands that like to fiddle with things that whirr and flash

    Negatives:
    ipad app:
    – layout… doesnt landscape when you turn the screen
    – doesnt have the “settings” options… for that I have to use my android phone… so wouldnt have been able to setup using our ipad. Also doesn’t work with older ipads (we have a mini it wont install on, which might have been useful to just put on a wall in the hallway)

    Android app:
    1. latest update… if low signal to the hub it sits waiting to connect to the hub before you can change any settings… previously you could go in, review and only when you came to change something would it complain about hub connection… now… it just blocks everything. Loathe to buy the range extender given its 1 corner of the house that has the problem and we are moving our boiler soon.
    2. Initial setup – I couldnt create an account without the app being connected to my hub… so as such I couldnt do that side of things before my hub was actually installed

    All access is via the “app”… that is you have to have a phone/tablet to control the system with any granularity; there is no way to login online and make changes, even though you can control the system via the app when away from home.

    Only things missing IMO from the infrastructure are:
    – TRVs dont have a temp display on them (see honeywell).
    – a more advanced display control unit to upgrade to (see honeywell)
    – underfloor heating manifold (again…Honeywell) (we are planning this on our extension next year, so if not available will have to change systems, but for the price “right now” this is a no-brainer)
    – ability to login via a web-page and do all the same things the app can do

    So far so good. Id **thoroughly** recommend and would buy again.

    Update: replaced my lounge radiator lockshield with a wiser trv (for some reason this was our pass-thru, so moved them to the bathroom rad instead). Head registered then lights would randomly start flashing. +/- worked in opposite direction and then it disconnected and lights were flashing at random. Clearly a dud. Raised with Amazon who sent out next day replacement (which works perfectly) and now our lounge wont be epicly overheating whenever any other room demands heat.

    If you have a smart meter you can also integrate with that, but my supplier (BG Evolve) doesnt do smart meters – not sure how it looks on the app.

    I like the insights view shows you when heating was turned on or off during setpoint cycles. It shows external temp (from weather forecast) and internal temp in the room vs setpoint so you can see how outside temp influences internal temp and then when the system triggers. I guess it means you can look and see if its triggering when you arent using that room and adjust the schedule for that room – which I had done up front as our activity is fairly predictable

  53. RobtWolfgram says:

     United Kingdom

    Where to start. Well swapping over the controllers was an absolute doddle, and the smart room thermostat did all the work itself. It all seemed so simple. And then the problem hit. Trying to connect the controller / hub to my WiFi. So many times it said it connected but then the app couldn’t find it, red lights flashing, green lights flashing. It nearly went back in the box and to the UPS returns point. However I swapped some emails with Drayton Support and they suggested I try a different phone to the Huawei P30 I had been using. I tried an old Samsung S7. This time during the connection the setup light went solid red so I contemplated an unopened bottle of whisky. As I contemplated for about 10 minutes, the light went solid green. The app still wouldn’t connect. I had set the guest wifi to 2.4GHz having previous experience of smart things. Eventually in despair with thoughts of a hefty hammer I changed the 2.4 GHz WiFi back to 2.4 GHz / 5 GHz auto. Closed the app, restarted. At first it still refused to register / find the hub. And then a miracle – it found the hub after a few tries. It all works now. Only 6 hours later.

    So the secret to not spending 6 hours. Set your guest WiFi to 2.4 GHz. Run through the connection routine as far as the register page and remote control. At this stage you are directly connected to the hub on a temporary network. On your phone “forget” the passwords to your home WiFi networks or your phone may switch networks when it shouldn’t. At the end of setup, tell the hub the name and password of your guest WiFi. It should turn solid red. Make sure the hub setup light changes to solid green – can take 10 minutes. At that point, change your Guest WiFi back to 2.4 GHz / 5 GHz auto. Give it a few minutes to settle. Connect your phone to the guest WiFi. Complete the registration and click to remote connect. You may need to try a couple of times. If not return to the register screen, skip, logout, restart the app, try again. Perseverance seems to be required. Put your hammer and bottle of spirits away, relax with a nice cup of tea. You can now reconnect to your main WiFi and test whether the hub can be controlled from a different WiFi. Test with mobile WiFi too. Drayton support come back quickly if you need them but hopefully my experience will help you complete the process a lot quicker.

    Once set up you can control both central heating and hot water remotely from your phone. On that basis I would give the product 5 stars but the setup instructions only 2 because whilst it is easy when you know what to do someone needs to tell you how when it doesn’t work first time. Switching WiFi networks around a couple of times – not in the manual, not intuitive unless you’ve gone through the pain before. Changing phones – never would have thought of that. Drayton support were good, 4 stars. So overall a 4 I think.

  54. GermanSACO says:

     United Kingdom

    Where to start. Well swapping over the controllers was an absolute doddle, and the smart room thermostat did all the work itself. It all seemed so simple. And then the problem hit. Trying to connect the controller / hub to my WiFi. So many times it said it connected but then the app couldn’t find it, red lights flashing, green lights flashing. It nearly went back in the box and to the UPS returns point. However I swapped some emails with Drayton Support and they suggested I try a different phone to the Huawei P30 I had been using. I tried an old Samsung S7. This time during the connection the setup light went solid red so I contemplated an unopened bottle of whisky. As I contemplated for about 10 minutes, the light went solid green. The app still wouldn’t connect. I had set the guest wifi to 2.4GHz having previous experience of smart things. Eventually in despair with thoughts of a hefty hammer I changed the 2.4 GHz WiFi back to 2.4 GHz / 5 GHz auto. Closed the app, restarted. At first it still refused to register / find the hub. And then a miracle – it found the hub after a few tries. It all works now. Only 6 hours later.

    So the secret to not spending 6 hours. Set your guest WiFi to 2.4 GHz. Run through the connection routine as far as the register page and remote control. At this stage you are directly connected to the hub on a temporary network. On your phone “forget” the passwords to your home WiFi networks or your phone may switch networks when it shouldn’t. At the end of setup, tell the hub the name and password of your guest WiFi. It should turn solid red. Make sure the hub setup light changes to solid green – can take 10 minutes. At that point, change your Guest WiFi back to 2.4 GHz / 5 GHz auto. Give it a few minutes to settle. Connect your phone to the guest WiFi. Complete the registration and click to remote connect. You may need to try a couple of times. If not return to the register screen, skip, logout, restart the app, try again. Perseverance seems to be required. Put your hammer and bottle of spirits away, relax with a nice cup of tea. You can now reconnect to your main WiFi and test whether the hub can be controlled from a different WiFi. Test with mobile WiFi too. Drayton support come back quickly if you need them but hopefully my experience will help you complete the process a lot quicker.

    Once set up you can control both central heating and hot water remotely from your phone. On that basis I would give the product 5 stars but the setup instructions only 2 because whilst it is easy when you know what to do someone needs to tell you how when it doesn’t work first time. Switching WiFi networks around a couple of times – not in the manual, not intuitive unless you’ve gone through the pain before. Changing phones – never would have thought of that. Drayton support were good, 4 stars. So overall a 4 I think.

  55. RussellLowell says:

     United Kingdom

    Where to start. Well swapping over the controllers was an absolute doddle, and the smart room thermostat did all the work itself. It all seemed so simple. And then the problem hit. Trying to connect the controller / hub to my WiFi. So many times it said it connected but then the app couldn’t find it, red lights flashing, green lights flashing. It nearly went back in the box and to the UPS returns point. However I swapped some emails with Drayton Support and they suggested I try a different phone to the Huawei P30 I had been using. I tried an old Samsung S7. This time during the connection the setup light went solid red so I contemplated an unopened bottle of whisky. As I contemplated for about 10 minutes, the light went solid green. The app still wouldn’t connect. I had set the guest wifi to 2.4GHz having previous experience of smart things. Eventually in despair with thoughts of a hefty hammer I changed the 2.4 GHz WiFi back to 2.4 GHz / 5 GHz auto. Closed the app, restarted. At first it still refused to register / find the hub. And then a miracle – it found the hub after a few tries. It all works now. Only 6 hours later.

    So the secret to not spending 6 hours. Set your guest WiFi to 2.4 GHz. Run through the connection routine as far as the register page and remote control. At this stage you are directly connected to the hub on a temporary network. On your phone “forget” the passwords to your home WiFi networks or your phone may switch networks when it shouldn’t. At the end of setup, tell the hub the name and password of your guest WiFi. It should turn solid red. Make sure the hub setup light changes to solid green – can take 10 minutes. At that point, change your Guest WiFi back to 2.4 GHz / 5 GHz auto. Give it a few minutes to settle. Connect your phone to the guest WiFi. Complete the registration and click to remote connect. You may need to try a couple of times. If not return to the register screen, skip, logout, restart the app, try again. Perseverance seems to be required. Put your hammer and bottle of spirits away, relax with a nice cup of tea. You can now reconnect to your main WiFi and test whether the hub can be controlled from a different WiFi. Test with mobile WiFi too. Drayton support come back quickly if you need them but hopefully my experience will help you complete the process a lot quicker.

    Once set up you can control both central heating and hot water remotely from your phone. On that basis I would give the product 5 stars but the setup instructions only 2 because whilst it is easy when you know what to do someone needs to tell you how when it doesn’t work first time. Switching WiFi networks around a couple of times – not in the manual, not intuitive unless you’ve gone through the pain before. Changing phones – never would have thought of that. Drayton support were good, 4 stars. So overall a 4 I think.