Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help !
Ask
    dc-mike's Avatar
    dc-mike Posts: 3, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #1

    Nov 13, 2008, 06:48 PM
    Alternate switch for Electronic Thermostat
    I live in a house that has HVAC, Fan run hot/cold, outside cooling unit and electric heat at the furnace. The electronic programmable thermostat is in the upstairs hallway.

    Problem: I live in the basement and one of my roommates is extremely cheap and keeps turning the programmed temp/time on/off and economy heat setting off. It may be 68 upstairs, but in the tile floored basement where my bedroom is (with HVAC) it may be 58-62. I know how to wire pretty well, I have done a lot of 12v circuits, but I wanted to get some advice before jumping into this project.

    I found the thermostat feed off the furnace and it runs through the drop ceiling over my room. I was thinking of splicing into the wiring to install 2 switches. One switch would turn AC & Fan on so I have summer control, the other would turn on the electric heating unit and Fan so that I have Winter heat. I envision this as a parallel circuit so that flipping the switch “bypasses” the thermostat and sends the current back to the furnace relay to trigger an “on” signal. (I understand that running the wiring in “series” would only disable the thermostat, and if it was too hot or too cold I could easily do that modification! )

    So, after that long winded question background…

    I have 5 wires, what do I need to connect to operate each sets of devices?

    ----signal (+) wire----- [Switch] ====== [top Fan/bottom heat (2 separate wires) back to furnace relays]

    Is my assumption of the above setup correct?

    THANKS!!
    MarkwithaK's Avatar
    MarkwithaK Posts: 955, Reputation: 107
    Senior Member
     
    #2

    Nov 13, 2008, 06:54 PM

    You are going about this all wrong. If your current stat supports a remote sensor then your best bet would be to go that route.

    You could also install an accustat instead of a normal t-stat.
    dc-mike's Avatar
    dc-mike Posts: 3, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #3

    Nov 13, 2008, 07:14 PM
    Quote Originally Posted by MarkwithaK View Post
    You are going about this all wrong. If your current stat supports a remote sensor then your best bet would be to go that route.

    You could also install an accustat instead of a normal t-stat.
    If it was my house I'd tell him to lay off the thermostat or set it how I wanted and lock in up, but I can't... and replacing the thermostat isn't very stealthy. I figured for <$20 I could rig those swithes up.

    Now that being said, its not my house and I shouldn't be messing with the wiring but I've taken that into consideration...

    So.. my question still remains...
    Thanks for the reply
    MarkwithaK's Avatar
    MarkwithaK Posts: 955, Reputation: 107
    Senior Member
     
    #4

    Nov 13, 2008, 07:19 PM

    And you plan to manually turn these switches on and off?
    dc-mike's Avatar
    dc-mike Posts: 3, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #5

    Nov 13, 2008, 07:25 PM
    Quote Originally Posted by MarkwithaK View Post
    And you plan to manually turn these switches on and off?
    Correct. I only need it for when I'm home and it gets nippy or hot. Kick it on, let it run for 20-30 min and then shut it down.

    I could get all fancy and install a timer switch but I'm not getting that complicated just yet.
    MarkwithaK's Avatar
    MarkwithaK Posts: 955, Reputation: 107
    Senior Member
     
    #6

    Nov 13, 2008, 07:28 PM

    Again, not the correct solution to your problem. The voltage could back feed and blow out your stat, your x-former or worse.
    KISS's Avatar
    KISS Posts: 12,510, Reputation: 839
    Uber Member
     
    #7

    Nov 13, 2008, 07:59 PM

    The AC is problematic and if it's a heat pump there is all sorts of problems.

    The only stealth thing that I would sanction if and only if it's a gas furnace. This would be a 15-20 min timer that would run the heater for 15-20 min.

Not your question? Ask your question View similar questions

 

Question Tools Search this Question
Search this Question:

Advanced Search

Add your answer here.


Check out some similar questions!

Updating 2 Wire Thermostat with Electronic Wireless [ 12 Answers ]

I've searched all the earlier Q&A and can't seem to find a matching problem. I am trying to replace an older 2 wire thermostat with a fancy, new wireless programmable thermostat. I am only running heat. I just want on/off and that's it. The furnace is a Burnham Series 2 Gas Boiler dated...

How to Wire a Thermostat to blower fan for alternate heat source [ 5 Answers ]

Hello all I just built a plenum around my coal stove and I need to wire in a stat , limit switch to run a blower fan . Thanks Steve PS I have all the parts off and hot air oil furnace.

Electronic programmable thermostat [ 1 Answers ]

Can someone tell me how to programm a thermostat, it was given to me by my heating and cooling guy but it had no instructions

2 wire thermostat with Electronic Wireless remote [ 2 Answers ]

I've found GregN had the same problem as me back in Nov 2005. I've read the all the posts, I don't understand how he wired the P474-1100REF with the 2 wire from old round thermostat. I've try the 24vac on the R and the other wire on W, and the system works sometime and the receiver LED dimmed...


View more questions Search