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gaber79  
#1 Posted : Tuesday, November 18, 2008 9:06:12 AM(UTC)
gaber79

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Posts: 7

Bryant - Unipart (rep. parts)
BDP Com. Division of Carrier
Model# 517ekz4 or 517en24 (old and hard to read)
Serial# 5286a16713
product# 517enx024000aapo

I have a wall mounted old mercury switch thermostat that I replaced with a new digital one. Connected the blue (cooling) wire and don't think I was suppose to. The digital one apparantly can run both heating and cooling off of one wire?
When I first hooked it up only the heat would run in both heat and cool mode.
I disconnected and reconnected the old thermostat and nothing worked.
Reconnected the digital and nothing works.
Checked fuses in box and they did not flip.
Is there a reset in the outdoor blower motor?
Or is it a capacitor...or...?

Any help would be great! Thank you in advance!
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v2k04  
#2 Posted : Tuesday, November 18, 2008 10:20:07 AM(UTC)
v2k04

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Posts: 784

These designations are for 24 volt control wiring used in most residential and light commercial equipment, line voltage stuff can be different. Never assume that a wire color is correct for the function it should perform; check it out first The same goes for high voltage control wiring and motor terminals .

  • {Terminal name}, {color}, {function}
  • (R), Red, hot side of transformer.
  • (C) Common side of transformer (See B)
  • (Y), Yellow, Compressor activity (cooling or cooling and heating on a heat pump).
  • (W), White, Heat (gas burner, oil burner , electric heat, (auxiliary heat on a heat pump including defrost output from the outdoor unit)
  • (G), Green, furnace blower fan. (needed for air conditioning, heat pumps and some electric furnaces).
  • (O), Orange , Energize to cool (used for reversing valve on heat pumps)
  • (B), Blue or Orange, Energize to heat (used on some systems, Rheem/Ruud is notorious for this).
  • (B) or (X), Blue, brown or Black, common side of transformer. Needed on some electronic thermostats or if you have indicator lamps. Do not confuse with (B) Reversing valve above.
  • (E), blue, pink, gray or tan, emergency heat relay on a heat pump. Active all the time when selected, usually not used.
  • (T), Tan or Gray, outdoor anticipator reset.
    Used on GE/Trane/American Standard and some Carrier Products.
  • (W2), Pink or other color, second stage of heat (may be same as (W) on heat pump or fossil fuel system). Note: some thermostats require a jumper from W1 to Y for heat pump operation.
  • (Y2), Blue or Pink, second compressor stage.
  • (L), Blue, brown, tan or gray service indicator lamp.
  • Numbers, see manufacture's diagrams but can be stages of electric heat especially on York/Borg Warner/Coleman-Evcon, Frasier Johnson/ Air-pro.
  • (X2), Second stage of Electric Heat on GE/Trane/American Standard
v2k04  
#3 Posted : Friday, November 28, 2008 5:46:23 AM(UTC)
v2k04

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boy I would like to see one of those keyboards that can type chicken scatchings like that!!! Thats cool!!!
icehouse  
#4 Posted : Friday, November 28, 2008 7:47:44 AM(UTC)
icehouse

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Posts: 440

Sounds like you shorted the transformer.
gaber79  
#5 Posted : Saturday, November 29, 2008 6:45:55 AM(UTC)
gaber79

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Posts: 7

Hey icehouse, thank you for the advise. What does the transfrormer look like compared to the capacitor? Does a transformer replace cheaply?
Thank you and I will look into it and test it on an ohm meter.
icehouse  
#6 Posted : Saturday, November 29, 2008 9:29:57 AM(UTC)
icehouse

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Originally Posted by: gaber79 Go to Quoted Post
Hey icehouse, thank you for the advise. What does the transfrormer look like compared to the capacitor? Does a transformer replace cheaply?
Thank you and I will look into it and test it on an ohm meter.

http://customer.honeywel...f/69-0000s/69-1641EF.pdf
bigglenn357  
#7 Posted : Saturday, November 29, 2008 9:53:50 AM(UTC)
bigglenn357

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look inside of air handler make sure power is off to system and see if there is a 5 amp auto type fuse that blew.If you didnt turn off power to system when changing tstat you most likely blew fuse by touching wires together
icehouse  
#8 Posted : Saturday, November 29, 2008 2:43:07 PM(UTC)
icehouse

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gaber79  
#9 Posted : Sunday, November 30, 2008 4:11:18 AM(UTC)
gaber79

Rank: Member

Groups: Registered
Joined: 8/15/2008(UTC)
Posts: 7

Thank you for the help. I will be working on it today with the new diagrams and information. I will write back with the results.
Thank you all.
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