For me it's the humidity control, resetting the temp when my wife decides that 26 is an acceptable temperature, and so I can turn on the vent fan remotely.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
For me it's the humidity control, resetting the temp when my wife decides that 26 is an acceptable temperature, and so I can turn on the vent fan remotely.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
This would make sense as to why they were blowing the most recent model out at Home Depot for $150
This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteOriginally Posted by Sugarphreak
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Going to buy Ecobee Premium, that can control humidifier on furnace (along with all the other features). Have to pull a new thermostat wire.
How many conductors do I need to have?
My Karma ran over your Dogma
Install ecobee beside furnace. Use remote temp sensors. Don't even bother with pulling wires.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Originally posted by SEANBANERJEE
I have gone above and beyond what I should rightfully have to do to protect my good name
Yeah, don't need the unit out in the rest of the house. Pretty sure 5 wires is all you need for ecobee with humidity, but if I ever pull wires for a thermostat again I'd find that 7-strand wire and pull that. I'd also leave large loops at each end and a 5 foot loop bolted to the wall of the furnace room.
Because you don't ever want to need to use wire with slightly different colors.....
But rage is right, don't need that thing put for any reason aside from enjoying the big screen of it. The app is better.
One of the main reasons I want a fancy new thermostat is for humidity control. Reading earlier in this thread the only humidty sensor in this system is in the main control unit, would like to put it somewehre representative of the living space of the house.
Lucky for me, its an unfinished basement, and its literally a 10 ft piece of wire between the furnace location and the current thermostat. I can even use the old tstat wire to fish the new wire into place.
Future-proofing with a 7 strand wire sounds like a solid plan!
My Karma ran over your Dogma
I don't know if HVAC wire is different than cat6, but it's a different price to be sure.
https://www.homedepot.ca/product/sou...own/1000663287
Jesus this used to be around $30.
If you’re not in a rush, order from Amazon. $55 for 50’ of 18/7 wire:
Southwire 64170422 18/7 Solid Copper Class 2 Power-Limited Thermostat Wire, 50 feet, Brown https://a.co/d/79hLKju
Is there a cost effective "smart" thermostat option when you have multiple baseboard heaters - each with its own thermostat?
I mean it'd be cool to use them properly as independent zones and all - but at 200$+ each, when you have 5 of them...
Probably something to be said for only putting smart thermostats on 1 or 2.
And leave the others “dumb”.
I would bet you get 80% of the benefits if you are smart about it.
But a lot of smart thermostats don’t play nice with baseboard heaters anyway.
Originally posted by Thales of Miletus
If you think I have been trying to present myself as intellectually superior, then you truly are a dimwit.
Originally posted by Toma
fact.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Hey just looking for some HVAC chops to confirm what i believe to be true.
Trying to diagnose why my new ecobee won’t control my furnace fan. Basically turning the fan on or off in diagnostics doesn’t seem to do anything. Fan itself seems to always run but at a very very low speed.
Looking at the wiring on the furnace. It looks like this might be caused by the installer jumpering R to G the furnace itself?
Hard to see but that is R and G jumped.
My main question, is to let the ecobee control my furnace fan do I just remove that jumper? And the ecobee will then run “G” whenever it needs to / calls for it?
This is a pretty slick unit and I can choose the fan speed using those little blue knobs down below and the VFD basically sorts it out ( my system is pressure based not airflow based).
Last winter I would have liked a bit more airflow to even out some cool spots in the home, this is my first step in trying to dial that all in.
TIA
Originally posted by Thales of Miletus
If you think I have been trying to present myself as intellectually superior, then you truly are a dimwit.
Originally posted by Toma
fact.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Yes.
What's a good thermostat now? I used to like nest before it was google... Still have one at the office. Is wyze any good, i have a bunch of their other stuff so would be nice to have in that app.
The one connected to the alarm system at my rental always seems to be fucking delayed, either not turning on when it hits below temp, or not turning off when it hits above.. i wake up cold or sweating and have to bump it from my phone......
I dislike them all. If anybody finds one that can be set below 4 or 5°c for garage use, let me know. The only one I’ve found is my old junk piece that originally came with my Vivint house alarm. (it went down to 0°)
My poorly insulated 2x4” wall detached garage uses roughly double the natty gas at 5° as it does at 1° when really cold outside. It’s nice warming up the garage for work without having to run out there.
Last edited by Darell_n; Yesterday at 01:26 PM.