 |
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
May 28, 2009, 04:53 PM
|
|
A/C problems upgrading from TH3100D to RTH8500
Hello everybody,
I've been trying to replace an entry-level Honeywell thermostat - TH3100D - with a programmable model - RTH8500 - from the same company.
The TH3100D had five wires connected:
WYGORc[shunted with R via jumper] B and C were not used.
However, for the RTH8500, W and O use the same connection; according to their manual, there should be no O wire, unless you have a heat-pump (I don't - I have an gas-burning boiler and a York air-conditioner outside). The "typical" and "alternate" wiring schemes described in their manual show some other wiring (C, Y, etc) which I don't have.
The "typical" scheme (with O left out) works fine for heating - but the air conditioning doesn't pair up with the fan: the device itself starts functioning, but its effect is nil, because the fan won't kick in.
The "heat-pumps only" scheme, which makes O go into W's place and W into Aux (shunted with E via jumper) sets the fan ON permanently (with no possibility of stopping it), but doesn't start the air conditioning system.
What's the catch here? What am I doing wrong? Where should the O wire go?
|
|
 |
Ultra Member
|
|
May 28, 2009, 06:41 PM
|
|
Did you do your installers setup?? The use the top set of letters, the white will go to the w. and remove the jumper from r to rc if you have a boiler and a airhandler for the ac blower.
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
May 28, 2009, 07:57 PM
|
|
 Originally Posted by Joshdta
Did you do your installers setup??? The use the top set of letters, the white will go to the w. and remove the jumper from r to rc if you have a boiler and a airhandler for the ac blower.
The manual says to ignore the colors if they don't match, label the original wires and then connect them accordingly to the new thermostat. That's what I did: the old thermostat, which functioned as intended, had Red > W, Black > Y, Orange > G, Green > O, White > Rc. There also was a jumper - in the old thermostat - connecting R and Rc (and the new thermostat had a jumper in the same position).
|
|
 |
Ultra Member
|
|
May 29, 2009, 04:40 AM
|
|
Just so I am on the same page as you. You had all the terminals hooked up on the old stat? The orange?? And you have a hot water boiler? Or a gas furnace? Or a electric furnace and heatpump? Sorry I am not 100% sure what you meant on your original post.
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
May 29, 2009, 05:28 AM
|
|
 Originally Posted by Joshdta
Just so i am on the same page as you. You had all the terminals hooked up on the old stat? the orange??? And you have a hot water boiler? or a gas furnace? Or a electric furnace and heatpump? sorry i am not 100% sure waht you ment on your original post.
1. The old thermostat (TH3110D) had W Y G O Rc R B C
2. B and C were unused;
3. R and Rc were shunted (jumper);
4. The original wiring (i.e. the combination that actually worked) was at follows:
W: Red
Y: Black
G: Orange
O: Green
Rc: White
I have a gas furnace + an air conditioner
|
|
 |
Ultra Member
|
|
May 29, 2009, 02:01 PM
|
|
If you do not have a heat pump you do not need a wire on O, So you have it working no or still no?
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
May 29, 2009, 06:10 PM
|
|
 Originally Posted by Joshdta
If you do not have a heat pump you do not need a wire on O, So you have it working no or still no?
Please bear with me: I am a complete and total newbie when it comes to heating&A/C devices.
This is a brand new apartment I moved into. The developer left me two leaflets (NOT manuals), one for the furnace, the other one for the A/C; neither of those mention the words "heat pump" and, after googling their respective model numbers, I came to the (maybe erroneous) conclusions that, in fact, I do not have a heat pump. But, as you're saying, then why do I have an O wire? Why did the original thermostat work perfectly? Why does it have separate O and W terminals, while the upscale, programmable model has the same terminal for O and W - and no matter which combination (as per its manual) I chose, doesn't work properly?
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Jun 10, 2009, 09:54 AM
|
|
[Bump - still seeking an answer to this]
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Apr 16, 2010, 07:29 PM
|
|
[Bump - still seeking an answer to this]
|
|
Question Tools |
Search this Question |
|
|
Add your answer here.
Check out some similar questions!
RTH8500 Wiring O and B Terminals
[ 5 Answers ]
Please help.
I want to replace an old Honeywell CT3600 thermostat with a new touchscreen RTH8500 on a gas hot air furnace w/AC. I think my confusion is what to do about the O and B wires (changeover HEAT and changeover COOL, as I understand it).
Here is manual for new RTH8500: ...
Instalating Honeywell rth8500
[ 6 Answers ]
Hello:
I have a Carrier. My system is a heat pump. In the paper it say it use two stage thermostat. Does this mean that my heat pump unit is a two stage heat pump?
I called Honeywell and the told me to select the unit as a " multistage heat pump with backup or external electric heater. I...
Problems upgrading programmable thermostat
[ 1 Answers ]
I'm upgrading from an "unknown" older analog thermostat to a Honeywell RTH7400 programmable for our heat. The old thermostat had only two wires hooked up, red and green. This must be a single stage unit, since we have a separate thermostat to control A/C (heat pump). The heat is a gas furnace.
...
View more questions
Search
|