John Ward (Flameport) has a U-tube and website full of useful stuff, still do not know which diagram you were referring to, the S plan has moved on with the use of modulating boilers, using thermostats like the EPH it can control the motorised valve with one output and the boiler with the OpenTherm output with the thermostats set as master and slave.
It seems although not looked into it the Drayton Wiser also has a module to work OpenTherm and still contracts for the motorised valves.
Central heating wiring is not as simple as before the boilers started to use the latent heat from the flue gases, as the return water temperature is now important. And boiler output is turned up and down not on/off.
This has been made more complex as the plumbers seem to think the TRV does not form a zone, the LABC it seems does consider a TRV produces a zone so can't blame the law, it is the way some plumbers have interpreted the law. So it seems there are only two thermostats the EPH and Drayton which can handle zone valves, and only Drayton Wiser can handle zone valves and TRV electronic heads as well.
So we have a load of clever systems which simply will not work with new build houses due to way they are plumbed. The Worcester Bosch have not adopted OpenTherm and is very hard to get to run efficiently in a zoned new build, and we see a load of botched up systems as a result.
Linking the two zone valves together and using electronic TRV heads is likely the best way around the problem, and Hive have designed an on/off control with electronic TRV heads which will work with Worcester Bosch and other boilers which are not OpenTherm enabled.
However wifi linked TRV heads are not cheap, think Hive around ÂŁ55 each so with 14 radiators that becomes rather expensive, so we normally use some compromise, some wax TRV heads, some stand alone like the eQ-3 or Terrier i30 and some dedicated to the wall thermostat heads.
We I went to collage and Uni it seemed they were out of touch with costs, simple maths if the annual fuel bill is ÂŁ500 and very clever control can reduce that to ÂŁ400 and the central heating system has a projected life of 10 years then the maximum worth spending on the controls is ÂŁ1000. So we may have TRV heads which are IFTTT enabled and can be set to geofence, but will it save enough to be worth while, and will they work where your live?
I watch my wife returning from Shrewsbury to put on the kettle and make her coffee, up to Welshpool works reasonable well, but the last 10 miles the map shows she is still 5 miles away and she is walking in the door, Nest Gen 3 does seem to have turned on the heating when we both go out, and looking at the temperature reported on the TRV heads it does seem it did turn off, but very few times do we both go out, and there is no history while we are out to say if it worked or not. And even if it did over the two years fitted we have both left house together around 10 times, so at around ÂŁ1 a time saving that's ÂŁ5 per year, I need to live to 500 to get money back.