Frederick C. Wilt said:Double drat.
Well at this point I would have to resort to swapping in a new unit.
You've got power but the thermostat is not working.
And the thermostat senses when it is disconnected from the power.
So the power is getting to the power sensing circuitry but is not powering the thermostat.
It would seem that something in the power circuitry of the thermostat has failed.
The documents don't indicate there is a fuse of any sort.
One last thing you might try is to disconnect everything BUT the R and C terminals and see if the thermostat powers up.
giesen said:I got an email from Aprilaire today (I haven't tried it yet, but I'll try when I get home):
The reason this happens is that when the batteries are installed first the thermostat sees the power source coming from the batteries and will ignore the 24-30vac on the “R” and “C” terminals.
Frederick C. Wilt said:Well at least they had something to say.
I hope it works.
If the thermostat does in fact do what they say that is, IMO, a design flaw.
I didn't see anything in the documentation stating when the batteries should be installed.
Did you?
giesen said:Well I just tried it, and still same problem. I removed the thermostat, removed the batteries, and put the thermostat back on the backplate without batteries. It never lights up. I emailed Aprilaire again, I'll see what they say when they respond tomorrow.
giesen said:Well I just tried it, and still same problem. I removed the thermostat, removed the batteries, and put the thermostat back on the backplate without batteries. It never lights up. I emailed Aprilaire again, I'll see what they say when they respond tomorrow.
Frederick C. Wilt said:Actually that behavior makes more sense then having the unit ignore power if the batteries were inserted first.
So are we back to the unit being defective?
Or is it very senstive to over voltage and the 28 volts is shutting it down?
I'll try installing the second t-stat in place of the one I'm having problems with. Hopefully that one functions correctly. If not, and it turns out there is a mfg defect, maybe it will help narrow down the bad batch.giesen said:According to the spec sheet and manual it says it will take 18V-30V. I know we're a bit on the high side of that but I did mention the voltage to Aprilaire in my email and they didn't say anything about it. So my thoughts are swinging back to it's defective (either that or I am)
giesen said:According to the spec sheet and manual it says it will take 18V-30V. I know we're a bit on the high side of that but I did mention the voltage to Aprilaire in my email and they didn't say anything about it. So my thoughts are swinging back to it's defective (either that or I am)
Frederick C. Wilt said:Well let's assume the spec sheet is correct and your 28.x volts is not a problem.
As I am running out of idea we are back to the unit being defective.
Two questions:
1. Has it ever worked?
2. Did you try disconnecting all connections except for R and C?
giesen said:It has never worked (I've had it installed for about a month, and it died on me in the middle of the night after about 2 weeks because the batteries were dead, I'm now on my second set of batteries).
I have not yet tried #2, but I will try it when I get home. Aprilaire has asked me to send a picture of my backplate to show them all the connections which I will do at the same time.
*EDIT* - Just to be clear, the thermostat works perfectly except for the battery issue. I have it being controlled by my Elk (and in turn my ISY994i)