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Honeywell Chronotherm III (furnace only/no AC) Wiring

wanhanii
Community Member

I have 2 cables exiting the wall - both each have 1 RED, 1 GREEN and 1 WHITE. The 2 WHITE go to W terminal, the 2 GREEN go to the G Terminal and the 2 RED go to the R terminal - I am uploading a picture. Honeywell Chronotherm IIIHoneywell Chronotherm III

 

13 REPLIES 13

wanhanii
Community Member

My belated question is how do I hook these wires up to the Nest ? Also, the picture posts upside down - I resized it but it still posts upside down.

Houptee
Silver Product Expert
Silver Product Expert

Do you know if the wires go all the way back to the furnace doubled up like that?

You will need to go look at what is connected to the furnace and post a pic.

Also you are going to need a C common wire connected to the common of the 24 v transformer at the furnace so if they ran double wires all the way back to the furnace you could use one of the wires as C since you do not need 2 reds and 2 whites only one wire per terminal on the nest.

So post some pics of furnace where the thermostat wires are connected and we can try and help you.


Houptee -- NJ Master HVAC Licensed Contractor

Jhonleanmel
Community Specialist
Community Specialist

Hey folks, 

We appreciate your help here, @Houptee.
@wanhanii, I wanted to follow up and see if you are still in need of any help. Please let me know if you are still having any concerns or questions from here, as I would be happy to take a closer look and assist you further.

Thanks,
Mel

Hi - I'm on hold until I can determine and identify what wires run from the old thermostat to the furnace. I'm sure this is not a new problem. I need advice on how to ID the wires terminated to G, R and W at the old thermostat to the furnace terminal block.

wanhanii
Community Member

IMG_0355.jpegwire from thermostatwire from thermostatfurnacefurnace

wanhanii
Community Member

Hi Houptee - I posted more pictures. I think I have to ohm out each wire one by one in order to determine which ones go to R/G/W terminals. What puzzles me is why they ran two cable (two sets of wires) then when it goes to the furnace terminals they pull off one set (actually they connected the wires to a cable stub with the correct colors. Well, if you have any advice pls give it - thank you

Houptee
Silver Product Expert
Silver Product Expert

This is a heating only system with no air conditioning correct?

The blue wire nuts is where the cable goes to the thermostat. How many different color wires are in the cable going up to the thermostat?

Is there a blue wire not connected? If yes then connect it with a wire nut to the blue going to the furnace and then you can later connect it to the screw in the furnace marked C common. Don't do that yet wait until you see if the blue goes to the old thermostat. 

If you have it both ends you can proceed to install the nest. 

Turn off the power switch to the furnace before connecting any wires because if they touch it can blow the fuse on the furnace board.


Houptee -- NJ Master HVAC Licensed Contractor

wanhanii
Community Member

Hi Houptee - as you can see from my first photo at the thermostat location, I have 2 R, 2 G and 2 W wires connected to the R, G and W terminals. At this point, I have to assume that the the two cables leaving the thermostat go in the same direction down to the furnace. This is the 3rd furnace we've had in 34 years. However, from my posted pictures, it appears to be same two cables connected at the thermostat arriving out of the wall at the furnace. It is at this point that furnace installers made a jumper to go into the furnace and used twist downs to make the connection from the two old cables down to one jumper.  The single cable jumper then goes into the furnace and the R, G and W wires are correctly connected.

My question at this point is do I connect the Nest (at the thermostat end) using the 2 R, 2 G and 2 W as is currently the case ? Will the Nest accept two wire ends per screw-down ?

If the answer is no, then somehow I will need to isolate the one cable of the two that is eliminated (not connected) via the twist-on transition to the jumper at the furnace. Any advice on how to do that will be welcome.

Please let me know and thank you so much for your advise.

Markjosephp
Community Specialist
Community Specialist

Hello @wanhanii,

 

I'm sorry for the late reply, and I know it's been a while, but I wanted to ensure that everything was covered here.

Checking your system's control board, it appears to be Nest compatible. However, with the wires connected to your thermostat, it can be confusing which wires to use. With this, I'd suggest contacting a local pro in your area to service your system.

 

Feel free to let us know if you have more questions.

 

Thanks,

Mark

aatienza
Community Specialist
Community Specialist

Hey there,

 

I just wanted to follow up to see if you still need our help. Please let us know as we would be happy to answer any questions you may have. 
 

I appreciate the help, everyone.

 

Thanks,

Archie

aatienza
Community Specialist
Community Specialist

Hello there,

 

Just checking in to make sure that you've seen our responses. Please let me know if you have other questions or concerns as I will be locking this in 24 hours if I won't hear back from you again. Feel free to start a new thread and we'll be happy to help.
 

Thanks,

Archie

wanhanii
Community Member

I tried to take good pictures, however, you know how it goes. Hope they help. I have my theories about what to do next, but I am anxious to see what others in the community post.

Currently not happy with the way people install this stuff.

Jeran
Community Specialist
Community Specialist

Thank you for helping out on this thread, Houptee and Jhonleanmel!

Hey there wanhanii,

I'm just checking up on this thread, do you have any more questions or need any additional help? 

Best regards,
Jeran