He said he was going to install Hive in his flat as part of an upgrade to the central heating (Hive is a modular smart-home platform usually installed, at least initially, for central heating control). I was doubtful: Internet-controlled domestic systems are always complex, with many moving parts which are hard to configure and which break opaquely.
'At least after a long holiday away, I'll come back to a really warm apartment,' he suggested.
That seemed to clinch it.
For a while it all worked well. And then, finally, the thermostat batteries ran out. Surely a simple matter to replace them?
Not so fast!
In his own words:
"Spent four hours trying to get heating online after battery replacement on the thermostat."
He noted that ChatGPT and Gemini walked him through 90% of the process:
"The AIs had good ideas but didn't include the crucial step: delete the thermostat from the app and re-add -- during the pairing phase."
Here is his simple note-to-self for the next time. Reprinted here just in case it's of help to anyone else.
How to update HIVE thermostat batteries
- Ensure heating & hot water not active
- Once boiler quiet, turn OFF at wall socket
- In HIVE app, delete thermostat icon
- Remove batteries from thermostat, keep out for now
- Unplug HIVE WiFi box, wait 30 seconds, replug, wait for steady green light (up to 10 minutes)
- Add new 'thermostat' icon in hive app, click through to 'pair'
- Turn boiler ON
- On HIVE boiler box, hold 'heat' button for 10 seconds, until flashing amber (white flashing seems ok too)
- On HIVE thermostat, press 'back' & 'menu' buttons simultaneously (bottom left and bottom centre touchscreen points), then insert new batteries - keep holding buttons for 10 seconds to trigger a factory reset
- Place thermostat next to boiler box (within 2 meters). Wait up to 10 minutes for it to pair. Boiler box with thermostat and with HIVE app.
- On successful pairing you will need to update 'heating' schedule and 'thermostat' schedule. Set thermostat to 7° all the time if you have hive radiator valves. Radiator valves can handle battery switch without losing schedule.
And finally:
"I don't want to come across as negative. I'm very happy with Hive and would get it again. Most people just switch the batteries and it works. I got unlucky and had to do a hard reset. Hive is pretty darn useful and when you switch the batteries it's all good, but if the system gets in a muddle, those are the steps to hard reset. And now I know what to do, this whole procedure would be twenty minutes max."

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