johnt2613
Aug 26, 2005, 10:01 PM
I'm in the process of having my 1941 oil boiler replaced with a new gas boiler, and I want to replace my line voltage thermostat with a 24v programmable thermostat. At thermostat now is 110 with 1 black and 1 white. I know I will need a 24v transformer but don't know exactly how to wire this. Can you advise?
labman
Aug 27, 2005, 05:23 AM
Usually there is a 24 volt AC transformer in the furnace with the secondary winding connected to a red wire running to the thermostat and a blue wire, common, to the gas valve, A/C relay, and fan relay. From the thermostat there will be white wire to the gas valve, yellow to the A/C, and green to the fan. The thermostat is wired to switch the power from the red to the white, yellow, and green as needed with the blue completing the circuit. Most thermostats and furnaces have the contacts labeled R, B or C, W, Y, and G for the corresponding wire colors. It may be wired to have the A/C control wires return to the furnace and its controls and then a second wire goes to the A/C unit. Internal wiring may replace the green wire if the thermostat does not give you the option of fan only or continuous fan.
Chances are the boiler will come already wired. Locate the R and W terminal on the boiler, and connect the black and white wires to them and to the R and W on the thermostat. Digital or programmable thermostats may need the blue wire connected to them. If so, it complicates things. How much play do you have in the existing wires? It is possible you can use them to pull a modern 5 wire cable from the boiler to the thermostat. Even if the wire won't come out, it shouldn't be too much of a job to fish a cable from an unfinished basement up through an uninsulated interior wall cavity to the thermostat.