His only interest seems to be his weekly programming. But even this feature is problematic. You can set three different temperatures (comfort, economy and frost protection) with a button for each and an accuracy of 0.5 ° C. Then you can program every hour of every day of the week with one of these three temperatures, and even put off. It's a bit tedious but doable in a few minutes.
The first problem is that then the keypad is locked, and to unlock it you have to do a long press on the "less". Which, of course, changes the temperature setting, and makes unusable the remote control!
Then I just noticed that the clock take half an hour a day in advance !!!
In summary:
- No thermal inertia
- Poor heat
- Not practical to solve
- Unusable remote
- Because of faulty programming clock.
50 years of experience said heating TAURUS pub on cardboard!