6 Months ago (in winter!) I had our clockwork meter upgraded to a smart meter by Eon only to discover that the meter didn't energise our storage heater circuits during the first off peak session after the installation. Clearly unacceptable (since we had no heating) this led to an emergency call out to fit a non smart meter, an official complaint, several compensation payments and a long saga with customer complaints handling that concluded with the fitting of a second - new - smart meter yesterday.
I am assuming the new smart meter is SMETS2 - it is certainly a 2024 model as it has an updated battery powered IHD. In any case, after the fitting it is again not energising the secondary circuit for our storage heaters.
Despite the dodgy summer we are months away from needing our storage heaters (our water is fine, it is on a timer on the main circuit). So I am happy to wait and see whether Eon updates the meter remotely to set it up correctly over the next few days - on this occasion the installer showed me a message on his ipad to the effect that there was some additional back office work to do before the meter was fully operational.
My question really is - is this normal and can I actually rely on Eon to get my storage heating circuit working in the next few days? On my original installation customer services knew nothing about remotely configuring smart meters (and precious little about Economy 7 or Economy 10 metering and timing - despite my prompting them based on my own experience...