Replacing a wall thermostat
Hello group. I had a typical round mercury wall thermostat until a
drunk guy (no, not me :-) shoulder-planted into it and busted off the dial. I'm thinking of replacing it with a battery-powered digital model and a preliminary Internet search indicated it should be a pretty simple two-wire job. But after reading some posts in here I'm a little more concerned (I'm a fairly new homeowner and not super handy). Questions a - Do I need to cut the power to the gas boiler, the hallway, or both? - I'm totally lost with voltage compatability issues - how do I determine this? - If I totally screw this up, how will I know (other than the thermostat not working at all)? Any help and advice will be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance. - Chris, home repair newbie |
Replacing a wall thermostat
theromstats are low votage units, the AC and furnace will shut
themselves off as soon as you disconnect the thermostat. it may be anywhere from 2 to 6 wires or more for complex systems. fortunately there is a standard color system for the wires. unfortunately this means the installer knew that. normaly the terminals are labled for color, so you can just look and see what terminals are being used by what wire and move the wires to the new thermostat. Empressess #124457 The best Games a href=http://www.gamestotal.com/Multiplayer Online Games/a a href=http://www.gamestotal.com/Strategy Games/abra href=http://uc.gamestotal.com/Unification Wars/a - a href=http://uc.gamestotal.com/Massive Multiplayer Online Games/abra href=http://gc.gamestotal.com/Galactic Conquest/a - a href=http://gc.gamestotal.com/Strategy Games/abra href=http://www.stephenyong.com/runescape.htmRunescape/abra href=http://www.stephenyong.com/kingsofchaos.htmKings of chaos/abr DrMega wrote: Hello group. I had a typical round mercury wall thermostat until a drunk guy (no, not me :-) shoulder-planted into it and busted off the dial. I'm thinking of replacing it with a battery-powered digital model and a preliminary Internet search indicated it should be a pretty simple two-wire job. But after reading some posts in here I'm a little more concerned (I'm a fairly new homeowner and not super handy). Questions a - Do I need to cut the power to the gas boiler, the hallway, or both? - I'm totally lost with voltage compatability issues - how do I determine this? - If I totally screw this up, how will I know (other than the thermostat not working at all)? Any help and advice will be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance. - Chris, home repair newbie |
Replacing a wall thermostat
probably best to turn service switch off at the boiler so your more
comfortable working on it. just turn switch back on when your done. buy a nice one with multiple set backs. |
Replacing a wall thermostat
DrMega wrote:
Hello group. I had a typical round mercury wall thermostat until a drunk guy (no, not me :-) shoulder-planted into it and busted off the dial. I'm thinking of replacing it with a battery-powered digital model and a preliminary Internet search indicated it should be a pretty simple two-wire job. But after reading some posts in here I'm a little more concerned (I'm a fairly new homeowner and not super handy). Questions a - Do I need to cut the power to the gas boiler, the hallway, or both? - I'm totally lost with voltage compatability issues - how do I determine this? - If I totally screw this up, how will I know (other than the thermostat not working at all)? Any help and advice will be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance. - Chris, home repair newbie They are easy to install. Just follow the directions that come with them. Make sure you buy one that is compatible with your heating system. The will have information about that on the package. -- Joseph Meehan Dia duit |
Replacing a wall thermostat
"DrMega" writes:
- I'm totally lost with voltage compatability issues - how do I determine this? Me, I'd take the old thermostat out, carefully label the wires I disconnected so I know exactly where they went on the old thermostat (which may be helpful in transferring them to the new stat), and bring the thermostat with me to a store that had some help that knew something. If you want to kill some breakers, the ones that control the boiler and fan are the ones to go after. Typically though stats run off low voltage wiring and there's not much reason to worry. -- Todd H. http://www.toddh.net/ |
Replacing a wall thermostat
Chris, last year I replaced the same kind of round mercury thermostat
with a battery powered digital one. I am a total home-repair newbie, and it was a very simple job. I just bought one that said on the box it worked with my type of furnace (gas forced air) and followed the directions. It's a Honeywell model and came with little stickers for labeling each wire as I disconnected each from the old thermostat, so there was no problem getting them matched to the right terminal in the new one. The directions even had handy hints, like wrapping the wires around a pencil so they wouldn't accidentally fall back into the wall. The hardest part of the job was screwing in the teensy screws on the new terminals. Jo Ann DrMega wrote: Hello group. I had a typical round mercury wall thermostat until a drunk guy (no, not me :-) shoulder-planted into it and busted off the dial. I'm thinking of replacing it with a battery-powered digital model and a preliminary Internet search indicated it should be a pretty simple two-wire job. But after reading some posts in here I'm a little more concerned (I'm a fairly new homeowner and not super handy). Questions a - Do I need to cut the power to the gas boiler, the hallway, or both? - I'm totally lost with voltage compatability issues - how do I determine this? - If I totally screw this up, how will I know (other than the thermostat not working at all)? Any help and advice will be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance. - Chris, home repair newbie |
Replacing a wall thermostat
DrMega wrote:
Hello group. I had a typical round mercury wall thermostat until a drunk guy (no, not me :-) shoulder-planted into it and busted off the dial. I'm thinking of replacing it with a battery-powered digital model and a preliminary Internet search indicated it should be a pretty simple two-wire job. But after reading some posts in here I'm a little more concerned (I'm a fairly new homeowner and not super handy). Questions a - Do I need to cut the power to the gas boiler, the hallway, or both? - I'm totally lost with voltage compatability issues - how do I determine this? - If I totally screw this up, how will I know (other than the thermostat not working at all)? Any help and advice will be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance. - Chris, home repair newbie Alternative answer: Have the drunk guy fix it when he is sober. -- Joseph Meehan Dia duit |
Replacing a wall thermostat
Thanks so much everyone. I'll give it a shot. And if not I have this
idea to try - heh: Alternative answer: Have the drunk guy fix it when he is sober. -- Joseph Meehan |
Replacing a wall thermostat
"DrMega" wrote in message oups.com... Hello group. I had a typical round mercury wall thermostat until a drunk guy (no, not me :-) shoulder-planted into it and busted off the dial. I'm thinking of replacing it with a battery-powered digital model and a preliminary Internet search indicated it should be a pretty simple two-wire job. But after reading some posts in here I'm a little more concerned (I'm a fairly new homeowner and not super handy). Questions a Don't bother with the round digital t-stats. If you're going to replace the old analog t-stat, replace it with a -programmable- digital unit. They are not round but the savings in heat (and cooling if you have a/c) will more than pay for the unit in one year. They are more expensive ($50-150) but much more worth it. They're called programmable because you can program the unit to provide heat when you are home and not provide heat when you are not home. Some are "seven-day programmable" meaning all seven days can have a different program, others are "5-1-1 day" meaning Monday-Friday is the same program and Saturday and Sunday are separate, and then there's the "5-2 day", basically one program for the week and another for the weekend. The wiring is no different, so why bother with a non-programmable digital t-stat? |
Replacing a wall thermostat
DrMega wrote:
Hello group. I had a typical round mercury wall thermostat until a drunk guy (no, not me :-) shoulder-planted into it and busted off the dial. I'm thinking of replacing it with a battery-powered digital model and a preliminary Internet search indicated it should be a pretty simple two-wire job. But after reading some posts in here I'm a little more concerned (I'm a fairly new homeowner and not super handy). Questions a - Do I need to cut the power to the gas boiler, the hallway, or both? - I'm totally lost with voltage compatability issues - how do I determine this? - If I totally screw this up, how will I know (other than the thermostat not working at all)? Any help and advice will be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance. - Chris, home repair newbie Hi, You did not mention what kind of heating(and cooling?) system you have. Installing programmable thermostat is good idea for energy saving. Some needs batteries, some draws power from the furnace control power source. Can't go wrong with any Honeywell brand. And they come with installation, operation(programming) manual. When you work on them turn the breaker off to the furnace. I installed Honeywell vision Pro 8000 commercial model in my house, downtown condo, and cabin. This particular model can handle most any heating/cooling set up and it is very easy to set up. Comes with 5 year warranty. You remove it from base plate on the wall, program it sitting in your favorite chair, when done plug it back onto baseplate. That's why it's called arm chair programming, LOL! |
Replacing a wall thermostat
Hey everyone. I've purchased a Honeywell digital programmable (5-1-1)
and I am totally lost with the wiring. My old mercury t-stat had only two wires, a red and a white, with no labeling on the wires or the wall plate. The new one has a bunch of lettered wire spots (W, C, RC, Y, etc.) and they say in the manual not to choose based on wire color - but I have nothing else to go on. Help please! |
Nevermind: Success!
OK - the Honeywell page had a wizard that said basically to go by wire
color after all... so I did and it worked. First (albeit minor) home repair project complete. Huzzah! Thanks everyone for your help and suggestions. - Chris DrMega wrote: Hey everyone. I've purchased a Honeywell digital programmable (5-1-1) and I am totally lost with the wiring. My old mercury t-stat had only two wires, a red and a white, with no labeling on the wires or the wall plate. The new one has a bunch of lettered wire spots (W, C, RC, Y, etc.) and they say in the manual not to choose based on wire color - but I have nothing else to go on. Help please! |
Nevermind: Success!
Way to go! That's how I felt when I got mine done and it actually
worked, too. Jo Ann DrMega wrote: OK - the Honeywell page had a wizard that said basically to go by wire color after all... so I did and it worked. First (albeit minor) home repair project complete. Huzzah! Thanks everyone for your help and suggestions. - Chris |
Nevermind: Success!
On 21 Sep 2006 21:05:45 -0700, "DrMega"
wrote: First (albeit minor) home repair project complete You never forget your first time. Bravo Greg Guarino |
Replacing a wall thermostat
Be careful with the wire colors. I've installed replacement programmable
thermostats in two houses where some genius spliced the wire up in the attic, but didn't match up the colors. wrote in ps.com: theromstats are low votage units, the AC and furnace will shut themselves off as soon as you disconnect the thermostat. it may be anywhere from 2 to 6 wires or more for complex systems. fortunately there is a standard color system for the wires. unfortunately this means the installer knew that. normaly the terminals are labled for color, so you can just look and see what terminals are being used by what wire and move the wires to the new thermostat. |
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