- May 30, 2012
- 2,228
- Pool Size
- 17000
- Surface
- Vinyl
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Hayward Turbo Cell (T-CELL-5)
I have (well had) a Nest thermostat on one of my zones and yesterday I woke up to the thermostat sending me an email saying it had lost power, was running on battery, and if it was not resolved shortly it would turn off and "my house would loose heat". Considering it was 2 degrees F outside at the time, I was not a happy camper.
For those of you not in the NE, my HVAC is likely very strange to you. I have hydronic gas fired heat. Meaning I have hot water baseboards that are supplied by a natural gas fired boiler. I have two zones on this heating system (Upstairs and downstairs). I also have central air. It is a completely separate system from the heating system. It is only one zone (but it supplies both floors)
The upstairs thermostat controls both AC and Heat. The downstairs is heat only. Which sets up the lovely situation of if somebody sets the upstairs to cool, and forgets to turn off the downstairs, the heat and AC get to fight it out on the first floor - but that is not what this is about.
On of the selling points of the Nest thermostat is that it does not need a common wire to run. Smart / WiFi enabled thermostats need a pretty constant source of power, and the common wire acts as a ground where they can drawn 24V from the system transformer on a constant basis. I did not look into how the Nest achieves this magic when I installed it. I just knew it did not need one, and I did not have one.
Apparently the Nest scavenges power from the heating and cooling loops. When the system is not running, it will draw enough power to charge its battery, but not enough to trigger the relay and turn on the heat or AC. Normally this works fine. However it times of extreme cold this is apparently what happens. The thermostat tries to draw from the attached AC air handler when it is in heat mode. However some AC systems (such as mine) have safety interlocks where if the pressure in the system drops too low (either from a leak, or from low temps) it cuts all power to the control board to prevent somebody from starting the system and damaging it. This cuts the power to the Nest.
When the Nest throws the error that it has no power, the temp fix is to pull the thermostat, remove the AC wiring, and then tell the thermostat that there is no AC. It will then begin to power itself from the boiler circuit.
My questions is, if the Nest is smart enough to throw the specific error, and refer me to a web page for that specific error with the directions to provide the temp fix, why can't it just do that all on it's own? Via it's software it should be able to ignore Y, G, and Rc and use W and Rh until power comes back to Y and Rc (when the temps in my attic rise high enough to build the refrigerant pressure back up.
Either way, the Nest is gone for now. I stuck the old battery operated non-WiFi thermostat back on the wall.
For those of you not in the NE, my HVAC is likely very strange to you. I have hydronic gas fired heat. Meaning I have hot water baseboards that are supplied by a natural gas fired boiler. I have two zones on this heating system (Upstairs and downstairs). I also have central air. It is a completely separate system from the heating system. It is only one zone (but it supplies both floors)
The upstairs thermostat controls both AC and Heat. The downstairs is heat only. Which sets up the lovely situation of if somebody sets the upstairs to cool, and forgets to turn off the downstairs, the heat and AC get to fight it out on the first floor - but that is not what this is about.
On of the selling points of the Nest thermostat is that it does not need a common wire to run. Smart / WiFi enabled thermostats need a pretty constant source of power, and the common wire acts as a ground where they can drawn 24V from the system transformer on a constant basis. I did not look into how the Nest achieves this magic when I installed it. I just knew it did not need one, and I did not have one.
Apparently the Nest scavenges power from the heating and cooling loops. When the system is not running, it will draw enough power to charge its battery, but not enough to trigger the relay and turn on the heat or AC. Normally this works fine. However it times of extreme cold this is apparently what happens. The thermostat tries to draw from the attached AC air handler when it is in heat mode. However some AC systems (such as mine) have safety interlocks where if the pressure in the system drops too low (either from a leak, or from low temps) it cuts all power to the control board to prevent somebody from starting the system and damaging it. This cuts the power to the Nest.
When the Nest throws the error that it has no power, the temp fix is to pull the thermostat, remove the AC wiring, and then tell the thermostat that there is no AC. It will then begin to power itself from the boiler circuit.
My questions is, if the Nest is smart enough to throw the specific error, and refer me to a web page for that specific error with the directions to provide the temp fix, why can't it just do that all on it's own? Via it's software it should be able to ignore Y, G, and Rc and use W and Rh until power comes back to Y and Rc (when the temps in my attic rise high enough to build the refrigerant pressure back up.
Either way, the Nest is gone for now. I stuck the old battery operated non-WiFi thermostat back on the wall.