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I'm replacing my old thermostat due to issues with it somehow not staying at my set temperature. It's a Simple Comfort 2001, and I'm replacing it with a newer model, a Simple Clean 2001L. Both of them are programmable thermostats. I live in a 2-story house with one HVAC unit outside of the house for the ground floor, and one unit in the attic for the second floor. In order to change out the thermostat, I killed power in my main breaker, shutting off power to everything. However, even though the HVAC unit was off, I noticed that the thermostat was still displaying the set temperature of 45 degrees. It was also the same with the downstairs thermostat. This shouldn't be possible. They don't run on batteries, so why would the thermostat still be displaying? Is there a second switch in my HVAC unit that I should turn off? I don't want to needlessly try to switch it out in a situation like this and get electrocuted, so I wanted to ask about it first.

One thing to mention is the house. It was built in 2004 I believe, and the original thermostats are still here. It's not one of those systems built in the '90s, so I'd say it's relatively modern as it could be. It runs on gas, not electric, so would it be strange if there was a second breaker that I would have to turn off in order to make sure that I can change out the thermostat?

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  • Do you have separate breakers for your furnace/air handler and your air conditioning condenser/heat pump outdoor unit? Commented Sep 7, 2018 at 3:16
  • @ThreePhaseEel I'm not sure. I know that in my main circuit breaker, I can turn off switches to the HVAC system outside, turning off both of my units, but there doesn't seem to be a switch that turns off the heater used on my second floor. Commented Sep 7, 2018 at 3:24
  • I'm with TPE. I have 2 subpanels (one is the "master" for the house but is really a 70A feed from a panel by the meter). My AC units are fed off these true masters so cutting my subpanel doesn't affect them. There's also a possibility (if unlikely) that the condenser is somehow able to feed the Thermostat (blowers and condensers are typically on separate breakers)
    – Machavity
    Commented Sep 7, 2018 at 14:29
  • You may have a "rule of six" panel, where you need to turn off "the top six" (read: all the breakers in the top 12 spaces) to shut power off. Commented Sep 8, 2018 at 6:48
  • @user101402 -- can you post photos of your circuit breaker panels? Commented Sep 9, 2018 at 0:15

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Turns out that for my thermostat, I think I had to wait a bit longer. It took around 10-15 minutes for the display to completely go blank after the breaker was turned off. I think it might have been a large capacitor contributing to this issue, and it was taking a very long time to discharge.

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