how to wire an outside ac unit

First let me say that I'm a newbie and have zero electrical experience. I'm an IT Guy and thought "Hey, its electronic, so I can probably figure it out." I appreciate any feedback/suggestions you folks may offer. I have installed a $20 Honeywell thermostat and the air blows, but not cold. The AC Unit wont kick on outside. This only happened after I installed this new STAT. I have a 5 wire bundle and an additional 2 wire bundle. As you can see from my photos, I have connected 4 of the 5 wires, based on the obvious W to W, R to R, etc etc markings. I do not know if I need to hook up the black. I am almost sure that the reason I do not have the AC Unit kicking on, is due to the 2 wire red and white not being connected. My question is, where do the 2 wire red and white wires connect on the Thermostat? Again, I really appreciate you folks taking the time to reply Everything at the furnace looks good. There seems to be an extra cable at the thermostat, which might be an old abandoned two wire thermostat cable.
You'll also notice the C wire just hanging out, which should be either used or capped off. besides that, everything looks good at the thermostat too. I'd investigate where that abandoned cable goes. I'd start by looking in/near the furnace. But based on what you've shown, I wouldn't suspect the problem is with the wiring.Browse other questions tagged electrical thermostat or ask your own question. 1,472 posts, read 2,686,453 times Originally Posted by seque5tra After they come out and go through all the other factors and so fort and finally get down to replacing (probably repairing) the section of faulty wire... it should stillbe under their minimum charge. But when you call? Cut the soap opera drama and get down to "just the facts" when asking for help. Zippyman, thank you for your insight! Thanks for your help, MrRational. And yes, on the phone I just ask about the cost of the thermostat wire. 1,940 posts, read 6,665,304 times it costs us $100 just to drive a service vehicle from our shop to a customers house.
so take that into consideration before you call someone a crook. 2,322 posts, read 2,396,739 times Originally Posted by southgeorgia Truth be told, some of your colleagues (people in the HVAC business) are crooks. I am shopping around for a contractor to replace the furnace and a/c unit in my home and the disparity in price is astronomical. Some of them just walk into my home and automatically assume they can earn their annual salary off this one gig. what size ac unit for 1000 square feetTotal waste of my time.air conditioning units for your home The job isn't major by any means, one would expect that having an informed customer wouldn't inflame you. 2 ton air conditioner cooling capacityIf it costs your business more than $100 to do a 15 minute repair, the problem isn't the customer, it's your excessive overhead.
An honest contractor doesn't need to gouge on minor repairs - they'll get referrals & repeat business if they show a little mercy once in a while. That kind of repair doesn't require any expensive tools, training, or certification, and it's no more dangerous than replacing a doorbell button - they're both 24 volt systems. It doesn't cost us $100 to do a 15 min repair; that's just for the drive over. this is close to the national average. you need to understand that a service company doesn't get 8 billable hours a day. they won't be worth the money lost. so why is the homeowner calling someone else to do it?To wire air conditioning thermostats, you need to know what types of thermostat your air conditioner needs. Heat Pump and regular air conditioner unit has two differences Ac thermostat. So, decide which one. Here are the tools you need to wire thermostat: Make sure there is no 24 voltage running to the air conditioner thermostat. There should be On/Off switch near the furnace.
So, turn it Off. If you believe you turn the power Off. Try turning the thermostat Fan to ON position. If the fan runs, it means there is still 24 volt power to the thermostat. If the indoor blower doesn’t run, it mean the power to the hvac thermostat is off (presume the blower works correctly). This only turns Off the power to the furnace and air conditioning thermostats. It doesn’t turn the air conditioner condenser power Off. You don’t need to worry about that, I just wanted to mention it. I’ll only cover how to wire a thermostat. 24 volt doesn’t hurt (some people), but it will hurts your air conditioner components if you forgot to turn it OFF. Learning how to wire thermostat is simply and not all people see it that way. So, if you decide to wire your own air conditioner thermostat, you do it at your own risk. There are people, who were successful wiring thermostat and there are also who weren’t. For those who weren’t successful wire thermostat waste thermostat, time, money, and could damage air conditioner parts.
Air conditioning thermostats wire are color coded in white, yellow, green, red, and (C) common wire. I had seen common wires are sometime blue, black or brown. Some thermostat wires that coming from the air conditioner unit with four wires and there is no common wire. These four wires are: W for furnace, R for 24 volt, Y for air conditioner unit and G for blower. If the existing Ac thermostat has four wires coming from your furnace and air conditioner unit, Then your new air conditioner thermostat must have four wires to connect to furnace and air conditioner unit. Whenever you unscrew the air conditioning thermostats from the wall, make sure the thermostat wire doesn’t slip back to the drywall. You could twist thermostat wire to pencil to prevent it from slipping to a drywall. The red wire supposed to have 24 volt (hot wire), but we don’t know if the previous owner use the red wire as the hot wire. They could have mix-match the color code, so be careful. Here how you wire a thermostat.
Remember, in oldest furnace or air conditioner units. The thermostat wire color tends to fade or it does not using the right color code by previous owner or someone. That why it’s best to take the wire from existing thermostat and wire it to the new air conditioning thermostats one by one, instead taking all the thermostat wire and try to figure where it goes. In the Ac thermostat subbase, there’re screws or connector. You connect each wire with the Ac thermostat subbase. Air conditioner thermostat color codedLearning how to wire a thermostat or how to wire a heat pump thermostat is simply. The information peoples lack in wire a home thermostat is the thermostat color coded. Here are lists of thermostat wire color coded to help you with wiring hvac thermostat. R – (Red wire) The red wire goes to the thermostat subbase R terminal. This hot wire directly came from the air handler in split central air conditioner units. If it were a package air conditioner units, it came from outside.
Red wire supposed to have 24 volt in it. In older AC units color tend to fade and the person, who installed the air conditioning thermostats tend not to uses red as the hot wire (24 V). For safety reason, always turn off air handler and outdoor units. Y – (Yellow wire) This wire is from air conditioner units (cooling side); it came from the compressor relay and goes to Y terminal in thermostat subbase. Y2 – (generally blue wire) This is the thermostat wire for second stage of cooling. Y wire is for the first compressor (air conditioner units) and Y2 wire is for the second compressors (air conditioner unit). Y2 wires apply only if you have two air conditioner units running from one AC thermostat. W – (White wire) this is the AC thermostat wire from heating unit. The unit could be furnace, oil or gas furnace, boiler or electric furnace. The W wire goes to W terminal on the subbase of air conditioning thermostats. W2 – (Commonly brown wire) This wire is for second stage heating. For example, Heat Pump needs W2 wire for auxiliary heat, so it uses the W2 terminal for auxiliary heat.
On some furnaces that has low fire and high fire requires W2 terminal to energize by the AC thermostat. G – (Green wire) This wire is in air handler blower if it were a split central air conditioner. It came from fan relay and connects it with G terminal on subbase of AC thermostat. If it were package air conditioner units, this wire would come from outdoor. C – (This is 24 volt neutral wire. I had seen this wire color in black, blue, or brown. So you have to read the electrical diagram) This wire is common wire or ground wire. This wire only applies if homeowners have digital thermostats that require electricity to power the thermostat. The black wire is just to complete the 24 volt circuit for the air conditioning thermostats. O – (Orange wire) This wire only applies to Heat Pump. The orange wire is for reversing valve to energize the Heat Pump in cooling mode. B – (Blue wire or different color wire) I had seen in some Heat Pump unit this wire was black. So, you have to read the air conditioner electrical diagram to determine the exact color.
This is for the Heat Pump reversing valve to energize the unit in heating mode. RC – (Red wire) This wire is hot wire (have volt). This RC wire meant to energize the air conditioner unit for cooling. You would see RC terminal has a jumper with RH terminal in the air conditioner thermostat. The reason there was jumper because the air conditioner unit has a single transformer. If it has two transformers you wouldn’t seen a jumper between RC and RH. RH and RC would have it own individual 24 volt from the transformer. RH – (Red wire) This wire is also hot wire. It’s for heating mode wire. Read RC wire for more information on RH wire. E – (Blue, pink, or different color. Check the thermostat manual or air conditioner diagram for color coded). This wire designed for Heat Pump Emergency Heating. The reason Heat Pump have the emergency heating is if any of the major component in air conditioner fails to run. The homeowners would energize the Emergency Heating. That why air conditioning thermostats has less wire comparing to Heat Pump thermostat.