How to force recalibration of Hive Heating TRV without losing the schedule

Here is another little knowledge nugget I’ve pieced together from various sites because I couldn’t find a single answer anywhere else.

TL;DR – Hold down button on TRV for about 3 seconds until it enters install mode and then hold it down again for another 3 seconds until it exits install mode. Give it a minute and then refresh the TRV in the Hive app to see the ‘Requires Calibration’ button.

My heating has been off all summer and it wasn’t working particularly well last winter (thanks Hive, your TRV’s suck!). I’ve also had a new central heating pump and mid-position valve installed since. So I wanted to have all my Hive Heating TRV’s (Thermostatic Radiator Valves) recalibrate themselves in the hope of a better performance than last winter.

When I installed the valves the Hive app had a ‘Requires Calibration’ button under each one that forced a full calibration rather than waiting for it to learn over a day or two when the heating was on long enough. I wanted to get that button back but the only way I had found previously was completely removing the TRV from the app which also lost the schedule. Thankfully I found another way.

If you hold the button down on the TRV itself for about 3 seconds it goes into Install Mode (a flashing M on the screen and probably a motor whirring sound) which you will have used when you first set them up. Doing this wipes out all settings on the valve including its learnt calibrating info.

“But Andrew, you said this could be done without losing the precious schedule I spent hours setting up and tweaking!”

Yes I did. Without doing anything in the app now press and hold the button on the TRV again for about 3 seconds (you should hear the motor inside whir). Now the valve will come out of Install mode, connect to your Hive network, and because you didn’t change anything in the app it will recognise the valve and reapply its name and schedule.

You will find the ‘Requires Calibration’ button in the app at the bottom of the TRV settings.

As a total side note here is something I read on the Hive forum post linked above. Apparently the Hive TRV valves operate differently when in Schedule Vs Manual mode. They heat up quicker using Manual mode than they do using Schedule mode. So the advice a few people are giving (including Hive tech support themselves apparently) is to 1) stick all valves into Manual mode at 7c (Protect level), 2) Ensure Heat On Demand (HOD) is enabled on them all and 3) Use Alexa or Siri to build a schedule for your valves and control them that way. This is crazy that a 3rd party system might work better than Hives own one but over this weekend I’ll be setting it up and giving it a try!

Apple Wi-Fi for iOS profile “Failed to save logs”

When I find a resolution to an issue that there is very little help for or no record of on any other sites I like to throw out a quick and dirty blog article to help someone in the future. This is one of those.

Having installed the Apple Wi-Fi for iOS debugging profile I got the following error every time I tried to save some logs on my iPhone 12 Mini running iOS 14 .7.1

Failed to save logs
The Wi-Fi diagnostic logs were unable to be saved correctly.

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Hikvision Hilook flapping switch port

I just got a Hikvision Hilook IPC-D650H after hearing good things about the brand. First thing I did was plug it into my POE+ L3 core switch for configuring (instead of mounting up a ladder and then finding an issue like this one). I watched my DHCP server for it to take an address so I could jump onto the web console but nothing showed up. After a long wait and power cycling the camera I looked at the switch logs. There were no IP Helper events and the switch port was going offline/online about every 60 seconds (flapping).

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Screwed up your Synology NAS network settings?

Today I made a stupid change to the network settings on my Synology NAS, and it resulted in the IP being inaccessible, and therefore the management interfaces (http/ssl) too. At first there was a short panic that I would have to reset something to get access, which really feels like using a hammer to crack a nut as the old saying goes. Then I thought of a simple back up route that got me in, so I thought I’d note it down to help someone else (or myself next time I do this).

(Side note: I do believe there is a type of reset you can do that just resets the network settings, but I’ve not tried it).

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ESXi Autostart Start Delay, Stop Delay & Stop Action

I spent a lot longer than I would have liked today googling for more information on the ESXi Autostart options of Start Delay, Stop Delay and Stop Action. In the end my friend Keith’s Google-Fu was stronger than mine and he pointed me in the right direction. Because the articles we found (listed below) don’t use exactly the same terminology (hence me not finding the answers I wanted) I decided to summarise them here with the “correct” terminology of the latest ESXi 7.0 UI.

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Why I dislike DFS channels, and you might too

As many of you know, I’m a voice guy. And in voice every millisecond counts. That is the main reason why I dislike DFS channels, because they introduce significant delay, which is lost time. But how bad can the lost time really be? And why do you care if you’re not running voice? Well folks, flick the lights on, pull the cover close and read on… it gets scary (yes, scarier than Ghost Frames™).

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