1,005 views ·
6 replies
1k views
6 replies
How to protect floor heating controls from children?
Hi! The floor heating control is perfectly placed at a height for our one-year-old. It's even more fun because it lights up and things happen when she presses it. We would like to have something like a cover or something for it so that it at least becomes marginally harder to change the temperature. Does anyone have any tips?
(I know that in new constructions it is placed higher, but this was where it was when we bought the house).
Thanks in advance!
(I know that in new constructions it is placed higher, but this was where it was when we bought the house).
Thanks in advance!
Pictures?
Is it water-based underfloor heating or electric underfloor heating?
Edit: Got the picture, looks like electric underfloor heating.
The following applies to water-based underfloor heating:
(Do the actuators even need to be on the distributor?
The room thermostats should only affect the actuators so that the flow is restricted when the room receives additional heat supply, for example, from solar radiation.
But since underfloor heating is a slow system, it's not very suitable to control it with a room thermostat.)
Edit: Got the picture, looks like electric underfloor heating.
The following applies to water-based underfloor heating:
(Do the actuators even need to be on the distributor?
The room thermostats should only affect the actuators so that the flow is restricted when the room receives additional heat supply, for example, from solar radiation.
But since underfloor heating is a slow system, it's not very suitable to control it with a room thermostat.)
Little ones grow faster than you think! "Teach" the child not to touch - in a gentle way. Regularly check the controls where the child has been. The interest will probably disappear soon.
Five grandchildren - from birth - have visited me over the years on weekends, and I have both stairs, concrete floors, electrical controls at "appropriate" height, media cables, and a hot pellet stove. No accidents have occurred, and I'm not a helicopter grandmother either...
Five grandchildren - from birth - have visited me over the years on weekends, and I have both stairs, concrete floors, electrical controls at "appropriate" height, media cables, and a hot pellet stove. No accidents have occurred, and I'm not a helicopter grandmother either...
Looks like a slightly newer thermostat, there should be a child lock in the settings.
Best answer
If I see correctly, it's this thermostat https://img.bygghemma.se/pfiles/Manual__54f99864-02a9-4b78-95d7-10c36627dfc0.pdf
In the settings menu, there is a key lock.
In the settings menu, there is a key lock.
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