From Newsgroup: sci.electronics.repair
In sci.electronics.repair, on Tue, 24 Jun 2025 09:45:43 -0500, Fred <
fred@farkle.com> wrote:
My upstairs thermostat is a Robertshaw thermostat vintage 1980.
Yesterday I noticed it was getting a bit warm, and found that the
thermostat had failed to turn on the AC. I switched the thermostat to
Off, then exercised the control dial back and forth a few times, and
after that it has worked fine with no problem.
The thermostat is a TX400 or CM260, and in place of a mercury switch, it >uses a sealed reed switch and a magnet that's mounted at the end of a
coil spring.
Would it be a fair assumption that the problem yesterday was the reed
switch just not making good contact -
When I thought this was a mercury switch, before I read it a second
time, I thought it likely a wire to the swtich had broken where it
flexed. Even good wire could break after 45 years. But a reed switch
changes the odds towards a failed switch. If you didn't do it nicely
like thixs, you absolutely should turn the AC on manually in some way.
What happens if you use measure the voltage across the reed swithc when
the temp and setting calls for AC. It should be zero or teeny-weeny if
the switch is good. But 12v if the switch is no good at all. Rotate the setting to as low as it goes and make sure the vom registers the same.
Or short the right two contacts of the switch with a screwdriver blade
and a) see if ther'e s a spark, b) if the AC goes on.
it's wearing out after 45 years.
It seems unlikely that it would be something at the AC end, but I don't
know much about how that works.
I just wonder if I should preemptively replace the thermostat, or wait
for it to mess up again, which may never happen.
YOu coudl run aq couple wires behind the switch across the AC terminals
with a toggle or slide switch at the end, wnad wne it doesn't go on when
it should, you could turn it on manaully and be sure that the AC is
really working.
Bear in mind that my oil furnace takes a minute or two or more to turn
on aftr it's powered up, and even then, it's only the burner that starts
right away, the ciruclation fan doesn't start until the burner gets hot
enough (and that fan continues after the burner turns off. The first
half of this effect is probably less if it's already powered on and the thermostat sets it on, .
But I don't remember or never knew if AC starts promptly when the
thermostat tells it to.
Does anyone have a recommendation on a simple non-programmable Heat/Cool >thermostat? Or a brand to avoid?
FWIW
https://www.ebay.com/itm/277091077135 $55 -S&H after all t hese
years
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