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micky micky is offline
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Default Installing NEST Thermostat - two wires

In alt.home.repair, on Mon, 10 Aug 2015 22:23:28 -0600, Tony Hwang
wrote:

Tony Hwang wrote:
micky wrote:
In alt.home.repair, on Mon, 10 Aug 2015 08:19:51 -0700 (PDT), trader_4
wrote:

On Monday, August 10, 2015 at 11:11:45 AM UTC-4,
wrote:
I am considering buying a NEST thermostat today. I have one of the
basic two wire thermostats where I have a white and a red wire.
It's the type with the mercury bulb.

The guy came around from the installers and tried installing a nest
three months ago and told me it would not work on a two wire
system. I have heard different stories about this. Some say yes it
does work, other say it won't work without pulling through a common
wire (whatever that is, I am no electrician) My two wires are red
and white BUT I also have two other wires that are there, a black
and a green one that weren't connected at the thermostat. I am
wondering if I could use one of those wires as a common if need be.
I would imagine they are for a future install of a heat pump.

Can anyone advise me on this?.

Thank you.


Assuming those additional wires run all the way back to the furnace,
which is likely, then yes one of them could be used as a common to
supply power. If the installer was at all competent, he should have
been able to deal with that the first time around.


I looked into the Nest a few years ago and from what
I saw, there were a huge number of problems, with most of them involving
trying to steal power with 2 wire installations. Things like it
shorting out, forcing the heat or cooling to full on, regardless of
temp.

I think the Nest sucks for other reasons too. Lots of stories of
people saying that they can't control it, it just does what it wants,
etc. That's how it's marketed, isn't it? I saw people complaining
that if they were home from work, sick in bed, and wanted it to just
keep
a set temp, it would just keep reverting back to figuring out that
because
it didn't see movement for awhile, it thought you'd left the house.....

This is the wave of the future. If you're just going to lie in bed for
hours, you should have gone to a hotel.

I don't need that.

Of course you don't NEED it but it's modern, high-tech, and it's what we
will all have soon.

For me a Honeywell VisionPro that's programmable
works just fine. I would get internet connectivity in my next one,
so that I could control the heat from my phone, turn it up when I get
back to the airport, etc. Could get a VP that does that for $150.

There's something about coming into a cold house that seems like part of
taking a trip. It doesn't take long to warm up.

Also, don't be fooled into some incredible claimed energy savings.
Those savings are mostly due to what you can do with any programmable
thermostat.

I'm sure you're right.

I strongly suggest you buy something else. Version 1 had big issues with
under-rated relay causing a/c compressor burn out when relay sticks.
There are many other choices like Ecobee, 3M, Honeywell, etc. They are
all WiFi thermostats. I believe 3M one is made by Honeywell.


BTW, I have wireless(no wires betweeen thermostat and system) and WiFi
Honeywell thermostat. I can control it any where in the world using
internet. using computer or smart phone)


Of course that means terrorist hackers can turn up the heat in your
house. You've been warned.