kp2171
Mar 2, 2006, 11:50 AM
Problems with programmable Honeywell thermostat and heating. New batteries put in a week ago.
Basically it isn't necessarily following the scheduled program. Get up in the morning and the house is cold, cold, cold.
The fuse box has a line run to the furnace. The line runs through a mounted switch (metal box w light type switch) on the furnace body, then into the furnace where it is pigtailed to the furnace and the thermostat I'm guessing. When I go downstairs and flip the switch off and then right back on the furnace kicks in and will heat for some time. Eventually it will stop. Sometimes in an hour, sometimes in 6 hours. Every time I go down and flip the switch off/on the furnace kicks in again.
I have seen the thermostat give the sign that it needs new batteries and I replaced them.
I imagine the next thing to do is try to replace the thermostat and see if that fixes the problem. Does it make sense that the thermostat is the likely culprit? If there was a sensor problem or hardware problem in the furnace why would flipping the switch temp fix this?
I have not had to reset the breaker at all. I suppose I could replace the switch and check to make sure the pigtails are all tight and there isn't a loose connection that separates and then comes back together?
Ideas? I know it's time to try some things and see what sticks.
If anything I've said isn't clear let me know. I can also post pics if needed.
Basically it isn't necessarily following the scheduled program. Get up in the morning and the house is cold, cold, cold.
The fuse box has a line run to the furnace. The line runs through a mounted switch (metal box w light type switch) on the furnace body, then into the furnace where it is pigtailed to the furnace and the thermostat I'm guessing. When I go downstairs and flip the switch off and then right back on the furnace kicks in and will heat for some time. Eventually it will stop. Sometimes in an hour, sometimes in 6 hours. Every time I go down and flip the switch off/on the furnace kicks in again.
I have seen the thermostat give the sign that it needs new batteries and I replaced them.
I imagine the next thing to do is try to replace the thermostat and see if that fixes the problem. Does it make sense that the thermostat is the likely culprit? If there was a sensor problem or hardware problem in the furnace why would flipping the switch temp fix this?
I have not had to reset the breaker at all. I suppose I could replace the switch and check to make sure the pigtails are all tight and there isn't a loose connection that separates and then comes back together?
Ideas? I know it's time to try some things and see what sticks.
If anything I've said isn't clear let me know. I can also post pics if needed.