2ndGearRubber
Well-known member
Very ignorant of HVAC, so excuse my lack of terminology.
My home has intermittently become VERY cold, in the 60s, despite the thermostat being set to 72F as usual. Issue being the thermostat is displaying the sensed interior temp as being 75F, and is running the AC aggressively in an attempt to meet the 72 degree target.
Originally this was happening last month, and I changed the batteries in my White-Rodgers 1F86-244 thermostat. My guess was that the sensing element the thermostat uses to sense current interior temp was inside the thermostat, and perhaps old/weak batteries were contributing to drift in the reading.
The issue has since come up again, the thermostat being set to 72, and reading an interior home temp of 75 despite me being very cold. I removed the batteries again, and the system defaults back to 78F as the sensed temp when they are reinstalled. Then the system corrects downwards towards what is probably the correct temp within the home at 71F (don't have an IR thermometer handy). This occurs within less than 5min of removing the batteries so there's no chance the temp of the hose dropped 4 degrees.
Previously the batteries I removed were leaking slightly with minor corrosion on the terminals, which I cleaned. There seems to be no damage to the terminals and corrosion/acid did not appear to reach anywhere else. It appears the thermostat sensing element is drifting. Does this seem like a logical conclusion? I have not checked for voltage drops between the battery area and the circuit board, but expect to find none as the contacts are still bright an shiny. Thus it seems to me the correct option is to replace the thermostat assembly? It appears all of the temp sensing elements are contained within it, and if it has good batteries it's simply a matter of the unit having failed?
Thanks in advance.
My home has intermittently become VERY cold, in the 60s, despite the thermostat being set to 72F as usual. Issue being the thermostat is displaying the sensed interior temp as being 75F, and is running the AC aggressively in an attempt to meet the 72 degree target.
Originally this was happening last month, and I changed the batteries in my White-Rodgers 1F86-244 thermostat. My guess was that the sensing element the thermostat uses to sense current interior temp was inside the thermostat, and perhaps old/weak batteries were contributing to drift in the reading.
The issue has since come up again, the thermostat being set to 72, and reading an interior home temp of 75 despite me being very cold. I removed the batteries again, and the system defaults back to 78F as the sensed temp when they are reinstalled. Then the system corrects downwards towards what is probably the correct temp within the home at 71F (don't have an IR thermometer handy). This occurs within less than 5min of removing the batteries so there's no chance the temp of the hose dropped 4 degrees.
Previously the batteries I removed were leaking slightly with minor corrosion on the terminals, which I cleaned. There seems to be no damage to the terminals and corrosion/acid did not appear to reach anywhere else. It appears the thermostat sensing element is drifting. Does this seem like a logical conclusion? I have not checked for voltage drops between the battery area and the circuit board, but expect to find none as the contacts are still bright an shiny. Thus it seems to me the correct option is to replace the thermostat assembly? It appears all of the temp sensing elements are contained within it, and if it has good batteries it's simply a matter of the unit having failed?
Thanks in advance.