| Application: | Electric Heat (Line Voltage) Heat Only |
|---|---|
| Stages: | 1 Heat |
| Programmability: | Non-Programmable |
| User Interface: | Push Button |
| Mount: | Vertical |
| Options: | Large Display |
| Power Method: | Hardwired |
| Voltage: | 208V 240v Line voltage |
| Temperature Range (F): | 40°F - 86°F |
| Switch: | DPST |
| Wattage: | 3120 to 3600 |
| Wiring: | 5-1/2" Tinned Copper Leadwires |
| Frequency: | 50 Hz 60 Hz |
| Color: | Premier White |
| Height: | 4-7/8" |
| Width: | 2-3/4" |
| Depth (Inches): | 7/8" |
I recall it needed a neutral, makes sense since it needs to be powered continuously to sense temperature etc.
are you using this thermostat for electric baseboard heat?. if so, you do notny. elect. baseboard heat is strictly a resistive load. i would however, use thepole therm, and not the single pole. that way when you shut it off it is a positive off, and kills the power to both legs. a single pole therm will only kill one leg, leaving one leg hot to the heater all the time. hope this helps.... bob
You need two wires in, 220VAC and two wires out to the load.
You should have two supply wires, 120 volts each and two heater wires. The thermostat base connects in series with these four wires to control the current to the heater. The primary concern is to ensure that the thermostat has a current rating capable of handling the baseboard unit. I believe the specs for this unit state that it will handle up to 3500 watts, please verify your current requirements by checking the UL specification tag located on the heater. It should handle most baseboard heaters without issue.
I'm not 100% sure what you mean by 2 black wires? In my case I had two sets of wires coming into the switch box. One set comes in from the electrical panel (i.e. power) and the second set comes from the electric baseboard heater. So the thermostat has four wires that hook up to the two wires coming in from the electrical panel and the two wires coming from the baseboard heater. Hope that makes sense. Kim Nordyke
If you are not sure, you should have a qualified electrician look at it and install an appropriate thermostat. It sound like you have a single pole thermostat. If so you something like the Honeywell TH114-A-240S-B (240v, 16.7A, SPST) may work.
Sorry, I don't know. I have 4 wires and just matched them up so the unit would work. Great unit, works very well with our electeic baseboard. I've replaced all the thermostats in the house with this model.
yes it will It took me a couple tries to get the wires right but they work great good luck
This thermostat requires 240 voltage supplied to run the electronics and relay. It can be used on a 4 wire setup only, but not a 2 wire
Hi Thermostat you already have that is single pole thermostat and this new is double pole, as long you two wires from supply and two wires from your baseboard you can use this new thermostat and connect two wires from supply to line side and wires from baseboard to the load side on the new thermostat. Thanks
No this unit requires that you have both wires of the 240 volt feed and the load for this to work. So if you only have two wires in the wall case that means you are only breaking on leg and this will not work. Check to see if the two white wires are wire nutted together in the back of the box then all you have to do is separate the two and you will be good to go. Timothy L Heisey
These units are powered by the incoming line feed, so I assume they would need the 2 wire input and associated 2 wire output to function. I don't think they would work in a contact closure situation, which sounds like what you have.
No this will not work.
It is great with with electric heat. I have two of these types, one 110V with an oil heater and another 220V with baseboard and am very happy with them. It might be OK with an oil furnace as long as you keep the setting he same all day long. But since it uses a proportional integral control logic that ramps up the on time to avoid excessive overshoot and once stabilized keeps amazingly constant temperatures, you may find it short cycles too much for an oil heater when first turning it on or after increasing the setting. If you keep the setting constant all day, it may work fine, but I would still be concerned about short and too rapid cycling.
you dont give the model number for this thermostat. if it is a single pole 110 volt thermostat, then yes it will work fine. if it is a four wire 220 volt thermostat, then no, i dont recommend it. please be sure that your thermostat wires are in fact 110 volt, and not 24 volt control voltage. hope this helps. .
Don't think you have line voltage if you have oil heat. Generally speaking, oil fired boilers/furnaces have 24 volt control wiring, not 110 or 220 volt line voltage. This thermostat is for electric resistance heat.
It is a line voltage stat, so I see no reason why it would not work.
This is an electric heat thermostat with high voltage (house 240 volts alternating current) in and out. I doubt your old 2 wire thermostat uses line voltage.
Please refer to the document linked below. http://s3.pexsupply.com/manuals/1327003981533/70442_PROD_FILE.pdf
We'd recommend that you check out the manual linked below. http://customer.honeywell.com/techlit/pdf/69-0000s/69-2022.pdf
No manual necessary. One button up and another to go down. It's so easy even a parent can do it.
It will, according to the manufacturer.
We would recommend part TH1100D1001.
This thermostat measures 2-3/4" x 4-7/8".
Yes, with no problem.
Mounts in the same box as any switch or outlet. Single gang.
Yes, this thermostat will work.
yes
yes it will. i have the same set up. just make sure you connect the wires properly
Check with your electrician to be on the safe side.
Yes, it is. You can also use Honeywell thermostat TL8230A1003.