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How to wire a thermostat for cooling to a regular house hold outlet.

t33to

Member
Hey guys, I'm hoping to create a thermostat that I can plug into an existing power outlet, that will activate another outlet when a certain temperature is reached. Much like a thermostat in your house, but I want to be able to plug anything I want into it, be it a fan, a/c, light w/e. I went and purchased a Honeywell CT31A and I'm already lost in setting this kind of thing up. It is a 4 wire system and the wires are labelled Y,G,R and W...

This thermostat does heating or cooling (controlled via a switch), and it has a Fan (Auto/On) switch which I'm not positive what it's purpose is.

Any tips in the right direction are muchly appreciated.
 
N

NOYB

Can't help you there but next time look at a Johnson Controls A419. It's a SPDT 15A commercial grade unit for 120/240VAC and they have a 24VDC also. I wire em up to a 4x 120 outlet box so 2 plugs on above Set Point and the other 2 are on below Set Point. They use em in stuff like commercial refrigeration units. Digital control, set the differential, etc. Only like $65 +ship at a place like mcmaster-carr.com.

http://cgproducts.johnsoncontrols.com/MET_PDF/125188.PDF
 

geopolitical

Vladimir Demikhov Fanboy
Veteran
I'd second the A419. I've used one before. There are numerous other brands of 120/240v (depending on where you are in the world) 10-15A thermostats out there. Most can be wired to heat or cool or both.

Bad news, that CT31A is a 24v thermostat. That's going to be a bit of a pain to wire to control a standard outlet. Return it if you can and get a "line voltage" (120/240 depending on country) thermostat.
 

t33to

Member
I'd second the A419. I've used one before. There are numerous other brands of 120/240v (depending on where you are in the world) 10-15A thermostats out there. Most can be wired to heat or cool or both.

Bad news, that CT31A is a 24v thermostat. That's going to be a bit of a pain to wire to control a standard outlet. Return it if you can and get a "line voltage" (120/240 depending on country) thermostat.

Ahh crap. Ok, I'll return it.
So I'm looking for a themostat that does 120v from 120v input?
 

petemoss

Active member
Geo,
No, I've never hooked it up. Someone had a thermostatically controlled exhaust fan in his
grow room and recommended that. It turned on the fan if the temp hit 85F. Below 85, it could turn on a heater, for example.
 
N

NOYB

I know units like that are cheap but I like the digital control of a more expensive unit like the A419. The A319 was analog but you could change the NTC thermistor, the A419 has a PTC, and you get basically an immediate acting thermostat to control swings better. There are some A319's still around but almost twice the cost of a 419.
 
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