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Anonymous Posted on May 22, 2012

The thermostat is not working good, only when i press a lot of times, in also Does not apply to the right button

  • Anonymous May 23, 2012

    For example When I am clicking the button "time" could come up the of the screen the numbers of the up & down or when i am clicking the "mode" its affecting anther button

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  • Master 1,902 Answers
  • Posted on May 24, 2012
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Your thermostat is bad, you are going to have to replace it. It is cheaper to replace then to take to a electrical shop and have them determine while your board is bad.

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0helpful
1answer

Thermostat says Heat On, but furnace is not running

Hi Juliegeee. I am Roger. I am going to download you a programming sequence I put together that will probably help. To test and see if it is the thermostat before reading all that I wrote hear, Jump or touch the two wires together on the thermostat and see if your furnace starts and stays running. If it does, this post I made will help you to get it going. There are many manufacturers making many different digital thermostats. With residential thermostats, the variations of types, methods of operation and how to program them has gone far past the market need to just plain crazy. The only reliable place (?) to get specific operations and program manuals for your particular product, would be from "customer support" at the "manufacturers" web site or phone number. The "Model", "Serial" and "Product" numbers of your particular thermostat are usually printed on a small piece of paper pasted in its cover somewhere. In most cases, Just the Name and model on the outside cover will be enough for identification when asking a question or ordering an owners manual. That said, here are a couple things that seem to be fairly standard. This is the best way I found to program over the years. Remove the thermostat from its base plate. Be careful pulling on it. They don't all come off the same way and we don't want to break it. Before starting the programming process, it's best to erase whatever may be in your thermostat already. Overlapping time periods can cause a lot of trouble. Removing the battery's will erase any programming that may have been done before now. The factory program is just for basic operation and they don't normally have any schedules in them. The factory program will not be affected by removing the battery's. It's also much easier to do all this while sitting at a table and not hunched over at the wall. Remove the old battery's and replace them with new ones. The battery's are used to store your programming so be sure to put good battery's back in before starting. Here are some common terms used in programming a thermostat. If the names I am using for these procedures is different in your thermostat, change them when writing this all down. One "SCHEDULE" covers a 24 hour block of time. Each block of time from a start time to a stop time is a "PERIOD" in the "SCHEDULE". Again, these are the most common terms and may very in your thermostat. Here is an example of how to program one complete "SCHEDULE" ----- Get a large piece of paper and write down EXACTLY what you want your thermostat to do in ONE, 24 hour day. Here is an example of one "SCHEDULE" having 4 time "PERIODS". > ----- You want your furnace to start at 5:00 AM and warm the house to 72 degrees by 5;30 when you get up. Write down "72 degrees from "5;00 AM to 6;30 AM, or when you expect to leave the house. Then write down "62 degrees from 6;30 AM to 4;00 PM or 30 minutes before you expect to be home. Then write down "72 degrees from "4;00 PM to 10;30 PM or when you expect to go to bed. Then write "62 degrees from "10;30 PM to 5;00 AM or 30 minutes before you expect to get up.-----< You have just covered a 24 hour period of time and created ONE "SCHEDULE". Each day of the week needs a schedule. Various thermostats are different in how they handle schedules. You will need to read your "Owners Manual" to find out how your thermostat arranges its schedules. To get started, look for a "SET" button or touch sensitive area on the display screen. If there is no SET button you can see, check your manual for the button to press. That will put your thermostat in its programming mode. With some thermostats, the display will blink or change color to let you know you are programming. While in this mode, use the temperature set point arrows ( up and down) to scroll through all the different things that can be set ( Programmed ). When you hit one you are looking for, press the left and right arrows or buttons to set that function or time where you want it. Press the up and down arrows to get to the next adjustment, use the left and right arrows or buttons as before to set that function. Keep doing this until you have gone through all the various functions and set points. When you have gone all the way through, and have all the functions set where you want them, DOUBLE CHECK all your times and temperature changes against the desired operation you wrote down. Be extra careful none of your start and stop times for the temperature resets overlap each other. If you programmed in Holidays or special events you may have, be sure the TIME and DATE are correct. Press the "RUN" or "START" button to lock it all in and start your programs running. Again, be careful of overlapping the times in each "PERIOD" of each "SCHEDULE". That can keep your system running all the time or maybe even not at all. I hope all this will help you to better understand these complicated devices called thermostats. Thermostats are a deep subject and specific factory information in your owners manual may be needed to get you through. I hope this helps though. At least a little. Write it down before starting and be extra careful of overlapping in the time "PERIODS" and you should be OK. Good Luck, and let me know if you need more help. Roger
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1answer

Honeywell cm61 wireless programmer switches heat on before set time

Overlapping time periods can cause a lot of trouble. Removing the battery's will erase any programming that may have been done before now. The factory program is just for basic operation and they don't normally have any schedules or operational customer programs in them. The factory program will not be affected by removing the battery's. It's also much easier to do all this while sitting at a table and not hunched over at the wall. Remove the old battery's and replace them with new ones. The battery's are used to store your programming so be sure to put good battery's back in before starting. I will change this to use the word "Program" in place of the word "PERIOD" that I am most familiar with. Its a little complicated, but I think it will solve your problem. --------->One "SCHEDULE" covers a 24 hour block of time or One Day. Each block of time in the schedule from a "start time" to a "stop or temperature change time" is one "PROGRAM" in the "SCHEDULE". Here is an example of how to program one complete "SCHEDULE", (One day of 24 hours) Containing 4 Programs . ----- Get a large piece of paper and write down EXACTLY what you want your thermostat to do in ONE, 24 hour day. THE EXAMPLE> ----- You want your furnace to start at 5:00 AM and warm the house to 72 degrees by 5;30 when you get up. Write down "72 degrees from 5;00 AM to 6;30 AM", or when you expect to leave the house. Then write down "62 degrees from 6;30 AM to 4;00 PM" or 30 minutes before you expect to be home. Then write down "72 degrees from 4;00 PM to 10;30 PM" or when you expect to go to bed. Then write "62 degrees from 10;30 PM to 5;00 AM" or 30 minutes before you expect to get up.-----< You have just covered a 24 hour period of time using 4 Programs and created ONE "SCHEDULE". Each day of the week needs a schedule. Various thermostats are different in how they handle schedules. You will need to read your "Owners Manual" to find how your thermostat arranges its schedules. To get started, look for a "SET" button or touch sensitive area on the display screen. If there is no SET button you can see, check your manual for the button to press to put the thermostat in its programming mode. With some thermostats, the display will blink or change color to let you know you are programming. While in this mode, use the temperature set point arrows ( up and down) to scroll through all the different things that can be set ( Programmed ). When you hit one you are looking for, press the left and right arrows or buttons to set that function or time where you want it. Press the up and down arrows to get to the next adjustment, use the left and right arrows or buttons as before to set that function. Keep doing this until you have gone through all the various functions and set points for one 24 hour day. DOUBLE CHECK all your times and temperature changes against the desired operation you wrote down. Be extra careful none of your start and stop times for the temperature resets overlap each other. If you programmed in Holidays or special events you may have, be sure the TIME and DATE are correct. Press the "RUN" or "START" button to lock it all in and start your programs running. Again, be careful of overlapping the times in each "PROGRAM" of each daily "SCHEDULE". Overlapping times can keep your system running all the time, starting and stopping or changing temperatures, or maybe even not run at all. I hope all this will help you to better understand these complicated devices called thermostats. Thermostats are a deep subject and specific factory information in your owners manual may be needed to get you through. I hope this helps though. At least a little. The main trick to getting them right is to write it down before starting and make sure it covers a 24 hour day. Again, be extra careful of overlapping times from program to program and you should be OK. Good Luck. Roger.
18helpful
2answers

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i just called customer service for the same problem. Push the fan button, which is the MIDDLE BUTTON of the 3 bottom buttons, and the UP ARROW button at the same time, you will see the number 1 on the left of the screen. Press the bottom right button until you see the number 28 on the left, 68 should be on the right. Press the DOWN ARROW until you get to the desired temp, it won't go lower than 50. Then press ok.
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I have a Robert Shaw thermostat and it converted to celsius degrees. How do I program it for farenheit???

The thermostat is preset to display the temperature in degrees
Fahrenheit (US models) or degrees Celsius (Canadian models). The
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?° and ?°Ÿbutton for three seconds. The display will read F or C.
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Permanent hold message on thermostat

press run program.... from there, set the schedule for maximum efficiency. permanent hold only shows up after the hold button has been pressed 2-3 times. If this does not fix the issue, there is a master reset button on the thermostat that will set all settings back to factory default.

Btw, I’m available to help over the phone in case u need at https://www.6ya.com/expert/cody_17f08cf8e340c06c

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I have accidentally made the screen resolution bigger, have tried changing it in "adjust font size dpi" but can't get the cursor to reach the apply button. So I can't restore the screen to the...

Hi, Chrissieg!

Try keyboard shortcuts instead. When it's time to press Apply button press ALT key + A then Enter to execute Apply button

or

just press Enter to execute OK button.
It will have the same result.
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Location of reset button on model 44110

There is a little reset button right under DAY/TIME. You will need a pencil/pen tip to press this little switch in to reset your unit.
Hope this helps.
Good luck.
Mac =)
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Sound like you need new one... take a look on amazon ecobee3 Smarter Wi Fi Thermostat Remote Sensor. It's not worth repairing it..
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