Currently reading:
Any experience with Dimplex pilot wire? (isolation)

Discuss Any experience with Dimplex pilot wire? (isolation) in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

mattg4321

-
Esteemed
Arms
Reaction score
2,046
Hi guys,

As title, does anyone have experience installing dimplex panel heaters with control by DXRXPW4 4 zone controller?

It seems the pilot wire is 230v but I'm not sure how this should be isolated. Lets say you have 6 2kw heaters all on their own MCB. If you then supply the controller via a FCU and run a pilot wire in series to all 6 heaters, is there any way this pilot wire supply can 'backfeed' through to mains supply in one of the heaters. Wouldn't want to isolate one heater at consumer unit and then get a belt off it as the pilot wire switches on!

Obviously if the two supplies are indeed separate I was thinking of DP isolation next to each heater and a label saying pilot wire needs isolation at controller FCU before work.

Seems like a bit of a fudge from Dimplex (why not use ELV) whose literature isn't of much help. I called them and they weren't all that knowledgeable to be honest! May try again and hope I get someone who knows the answer but thought I'd try here too.
 
Hi guys,

As title, does anyone have experience installing dimplex panel heaters with control by DXRXPW4 4 zone controller?

It seems the pilot wire is 230v but I'm not sure how this should be isolated. Lets say you have 6 2kw heaters all on their own MCB. If you then supply the controller via a FCU and run a pilot wire in series to all 6 heaters, is there any way this pilot wire supply can 'backfeed' through to mains supply in one of the heaters. Wouldn't want to isolate one heater at consumer unit and then get a belt off it as the pilot wire switches on!

Obviously if the two supplies are indeed separate I was thinking of DP isolation next to each heater and a label saying pilot wire needs isolation at controller FCU before work.

Seems like a bit of a fudge from Dimplex (why not use ELV) whose literature isn't of much help. I called them and they weren't all that knowledgeable to be honest! May try again and hope I get someone who knows the answer but thought I'd try here too.

Just looked these up. Bit of a carp design IMO with the pilot wire being LV.
 
I can say whenever the black wire is live the brown wire is also live and vice versa. When we manufacture them the tester puts the black wire in a screwit to prevent himself getting an electric shock.
 
Sounds like a terrible design. Customer is keen on using them though. Need to suggest alternatives as I don't fancy using this system.

Recommendations for heating a medium sized office/storage space electrically with one programmable thermostat? Cost is an issue. Could use a 230v programmable stat to control panel heaters via contactors I suppose.
 
Sounds like a terrible design. Customer is keen on using them though. Need to suggest alternatives as I don't fancy using this system.

Recommendations for heating a medium sized office/storage space electrically with one programmable thermostat? Cost is an issue. Could use a 230v programmable stat to control panel heaters via contactors I suppose.

What about using the same heaters but the MBS configuration?

http://www.dimplex.co.uk/products/d..._fronted_xx_range/control_options_1_4Zone.htm
 

Reply to Any experience with Dimplex pilot wire? (isolation) in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

YOUR Unread Posts

This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by untold.media Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock