2 minute read

Introduction

Replacing a thermostat sounds intimidating until you realize it’s often just two wires. The Emos OpenTherm programmable thermostat was bought as a direct replacement for an aging thermostat on an older boiler, and the result was a painless upgrade that took minutes to install.

What is OpenTherm?

Before diving into the review, a quick primer. Most basic thermostats use simple on/off control — the boiler fires at full power until the target temperature is reached, then shuts off completely. OpenTherm is a communication protocol that lets the thermostat and boiler talk to each other. Instead of crude on/off switching, the boiler modulates its output — burning less gas as you approach the target temperature rather than overshooting and cycling.

The practical benefit: smoother temperature curves, less gas wasted on overshoot, and potentially lower energy bills. The Emos thermostat supports both OpenTherm and traditional on/off mode, so it works with virtually any boiler.

Installation

DIY-Friendly

This was a straightforward self-install. The thermostat is wired (not wireless), which means you need the existing thermostat cable running from your boiler to the wall. In our case, the Emos was a direct replacement for the previous thermostat from a different brand — same wiring, same wall mount position. The whole swap took about 15 minutes including reading the manual.

Key Specs

  • Protocol: OpenTherm + on/off compatible
  • Type: Wired, surface-mounted
  • Display: Digital LCD with backlight
  • Programming: Weekly schedule (up to 6 time slots per day)
  • Dimensions: 12.6 x 8.4 x 2.6 cm
  • Compatibility: Universal — works with most gas boilers

Daily Use

The interface is straightforward. You set your weekly heating schedule with up to 6 temperature changes per day (more than enough for most households). The display shows current temperature, target temperature, and active program. Override is easy — bump the temperature up or down temporarily without disrupting the programmed schedule.

Programming

Setting up the weekly schedule is intuitive once you read the manual. You can copy days (weekday/weekend patterns) which saves time. The thermostat remembers settings through power outages, so you won’t lose your programming.

Energy Savings

Let’s be honest: no significant energy savings were noticed compared to the previous thermostat. But this was expected — the old thermostat was already programmable, and the heating patterns didn’t change. The benefit here was replacing aging hardware with something reliable and modern, not revolutionizing energy consumption.

If you’re coming from a basic manual thermostat without programming capability, the savings from scheduled heating alone would be noticeable.

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Universal compatibility — replaced a different-brand thermostat without issues
  • Easy self-installation — 15-minute job with basic tools
  • OpenTherm support — future-proof for modulating boilers
  • Reliable programming — set-and-forget weekly schedule
  • Clean, readable display

Cons

  • Not smart/WiFi — no remote control or app
  • Wired only — needs existing thermostat cable
  • Basic aesthetics — functional but not design-award material

Final Verdict

The Emos OpenTherm thermostat is the kind of product that just works. No frills, no app, no cloud dependency — just solid, programmable heating control that you install yourself in 15 minutes. If you need to replace an aging wired thermostat and want OpenTherm compatibility without paying for smart home features you won’t use, this is the one.

Rating: 5/5

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