Manning Formula
11-06-2009, 11:18 AM
Hey guys, my usual place is over in the plumbing section but I have very simple (personal) hvac question.
I have an old house with a new Trane 2.5 ton heat pump in the basement. It's wired into one of those old brown Rheem rectangular thermostats.
Now, I don't know a whole lot about hvac, but I do know when something isn't right.
For the past week or so, I've been setting my thermostat at 67 or so, with the heat on. It does ok right there, but i'd like to set it lower. When I do turn it down, even a hair, it'll come on only during the night and run the auxiliary/emergency heat the entire time it's on. If I turn it down to 65 or 64 during the day while i'm at work, it won't run all day, leaving it to catch up as soon as it gets cold and I understand that this can also be bad (economically)
Is this a thermostat issue, or am I missing something here? I obviously don't want the auxiliary heat to come on at all. How do I prevent this? I'm trying to be as economical as possible here, not as warm as possible if you catch my drift.
I have an old house with a new Trane 2.5 ton heat pump in the basement. It's wired into one of those old brown Rheem rectangular thermostats.
Now, I don't know a whole lot about hvac, but I do know when something isn't right.
For the past week or so, I've been setting my thermostat at 67 or so, with the heat on. It does ok right there, but i'd like to set it lower. When I do turn it down, even a hair, it'll come on only during the night and run the auxiliary/emergency heat the entire time it's on. If I turn it down to 65 or 64 during the day while i'm at work, it won't run all day, leaving it to catch up as soon as it gets cold and I understand that this can also be bad (economically)
Is this a thermostat issue, or am I missing something here? I obviously don't want the auxiliary heat to come on at all. How do I prevent this? I'm trying to be as economical as possible here, not as warm as possible if you catch my drift.