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Can anyone tell me what the acceptable hysteresis ie the switch off/on points of a room thermostat is. My wife always complains it's getting cold in that period between the thermostat switching off the heating and coming back on again to meet demand.?
 
It varies from make and model I believe. Have you looked at the manual for your particular model. Someone with better knowledge should be along soon
 
Depends on what type of thermostat you have installed. There's multiple types of stats out there but can put them into 2 categories, mechanical and digital.

Mechanical types vary but most common ones are using bimetallic strips which expand and contract at different rates based on temperature, causing metal to bend slightly in either direction accordingly. These types tend to take longer to switch back on again after temperature drop than the digital types which rely on a thermistor type sensor to monitor air temp.

Mechanical thermostats can take longer to switch on as they age.

Id recommended switching to a digital thermostat firstly for increased accuracy.

Though there could be other factors at play. It could be heat loss/heat input imbalance for the radiators to room coupled with boiler anti cycle delays.

Digital stat recommended as first stage as cheapest and easiest thing to change out.
 
Can anyone tell me what the acceptable hysteresis ie the switch off/on points of a room thermostat is. My wife always complains it's getting cold in that period between the thermostat switching off the heating and coming back on again to meet demand.?

You may have the boiler CH water temperature, i.e. the temperature of the water being sent to the radiators, set a bit high for the current relatively warm weather. Try reducing it a bit. The theory is that doing this will make the emitters (radiators) come on at a lower temperature for longer and reduce the fluctuating radiant component heat from the emitters, which makes a big difference to how people perceive the temperature.

Roughly speaking, the most comfortable heating systems are the ones that run continuously with emitters balanced to compensate for the building losses. So-called 'weather compensation' achieves this, when it's correctly set up.

If this doesn't work, see if @Nicola84 has another friend :)
 
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