1

TLDR: I think I need to flip R and W wires, and to splice the blue (C) wire to the brown wire coming of the transformer. Is this correct?

Long version:

Like many others on here, I'm trying to add a C wire to my thermostat, and to my furnace so that I can use a smarter thermostat.

The thermostat has the red and white wires connected to their respective R and W terminals. The blue wire is present, but not connected.

According to my understanding of how thermostats are supposed to work, the R wire is supposed to be connected to 24v, while the W wire is energized only when the thermostat is calling for heat.

On my furnace, however, P3-9, the always-energized 24v wire, which is white, connects to T2, which is connected to the W terminal on the thermostat, and P3-7, the 'energized with heat wire' is red, but is connected to the R terminal.

Shouldn't these be switched?

Using battery power it doesn't matter, but I'm concerned that if I add a smart thermostat I'll need this to be correct.

Similarly, I believe that I can splice the Brown wire that goes from opposite the white wire on the transformer to P2-2 to the terminal block and then to the B wire going to the thermostat.

Is this correct?

I've annotated the wiring diagram with what I think are the correct fixes.

Lots of WiresWiring diagram edited

1 Answer 1

2

The only things you need is a tap from Pink to connect to the B common wire and to flip the red and white wires on the Thermostat terminals: block.

Write down a big W above the T1 conn. and R below the T2 conn. label so you or whoever has to look at it later doesn't get confused.

2
  • That agrees with my analysis as well, but the red/white thing seems a bit non-standard. Guess nobody cared when this furnace came out.
    – gbronner
    Oct 11, 2019 at 19:12
  • Followed these directions and new thermostat is working
    – gbronner
    Oct 14, 2019 at 14:56

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.