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Re: How to adjust honeywell round thermostat (mercury switch) to the right temperature
| Bob F | 28 Feb 2010 18:44 |
> Well, you know how those darn colonies are. They rebel and go their > own way. That's revolting.
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| The Daring Dufas | 27 Feb 2010 20:17 |
>> It's important that the thermostat >> [quoted text clipped - 22 lines] > as and when required. (No need to store it hence reduced losses.) > Things are expremely primitive in the USA compared with Europe. Well, you know how those darn colonies are. They rebel and go their own way.
TDD
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| harry | 26 Feb 2010 19:58 |
> It's important that the thermostat > [quoted text clipped - 14 lines] > Energy was expensive so houses were very well insulated and very > tight. Yes nearly all heating over here is by means of hot water circulation, even in very large buildings.The boiler(furnace in your parlance) can be far more efficient, exceeding 100% in some cases.. Also water is far easier to mix and control than air. The hot water pipes can be much smaller diameter than air ducts & therefor can be better insulated. Domestic hot water can be produced from the same boiler, as and when required. (No need to store it hence reduced losses.) Things are expremely primitive in the USA compared with Europe.
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| TimR | 26 Feb 2010 13:27 |
It's important that the thermostat
> is correctly sited. In Europe every room is independently controlled > in new buildings.- Hide quoted text - That may be an exaggeration. I recently lived in Europe several years.
The heating I encountered was all hot water radiator (or hydronic - it is SO nice to step on a heated tile bathroom floor on a cold morning).
Every radiator had its own thermostat, mounted on the radiator. That's really not an ideal location. The furnace did have an outdoor sensor with reset and a time schedule.
Energy was expensive so houses were very well insulated and very tight.
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| harry | 23 Feb 2010 19:11 |
On Feb 22, 11:07 pm, Glenda Copeland <gscopel...@Use-Author-Supplied- Address.invalid> wrote:
> How do I adjust a thermostat so that the heat reaches the set temperature? > [quoted text clipped - 18 lines] > What's the procedure to adjust a Honewell round thermostat to reach the set > point before turning off? I don't know if such things are available in America but in Europe you can get an "intelligent thermostat." There is an additional outside sensor and the heating is switched on earlier in cold weather and later in warmer weather. The exact amounts depend on the insulation of your house (nonexistant I expect in America). The thermostat determines this for itself after the first run. Dependant on your lifestyle, between 10 and 20% can be knocked off your heating bill. Some of these devices also compensate for wind . A digital thermostat can save 10%. It's important that the thermostat is correctly sited. In Europe every room is independently controlled in new buildings.
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| Glenda Copeland | 22 Feb 2010 23:07 |
How do I adjust a thermostat so that the heat reaches the set temperature?
My Honeywell round thermostat has a bulb with mercury in it and a coil of metal that seems to control when it makes electrical contact.
When I set the Honeywell bulb thermostat to 68°F, the heat only gets to about 58°F. Likewise, when I set the thermostat to 85°F, the heat shuts off when it reaches about 75°F.
This works fine except my husband keeps yelling at me for setting the thermostat to 85°.
I know the simple answer is to change him but why do thermostats have numbers on them if they're not even close to those numbers?
Is there a way to adjust the temperature? When I pull the round cover off, I see a copper pointer on the bottom with etch marks on the plate below but that pointer is already all the way to the left and moving it to the right just seems to make the offset error worse.
What's the procedure to adjust a Honewell round thermostat to reach the set point before turning off?
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