Raspy
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2006
- Messages
- 1,636
- Location
- Smith Valley, Nevada
- Tractor
- NH TC29DA, F250 Tremor, Jeep Rubicon
Raspy, you almost answered me question - now hold on, you cain't just say you don't like Nest - ye gotta tell us why. I've been researching them high dollar Nests since they first came out. I like the idea of being able to control it from anywhere for our other house. What don't ye like about them?
oh, and sorry about old Thoreau, but hey, here we are on high tech computers online and wantin' to be like that old boy...:thumbdown:
I've been out for a few days, sorry for the delay.
I can tell you a bit about the Nest thermostat.
First thing is that people buy them because they are spectacularly beautiful. People get captured and want one for that reason. Only later do they begin to look at the features and operation of the thing.
The original ones were worse than the new ones because they have tried to compensate for the problems. I've actually been wanting to consult with them and have a couple of connections with people that have friends or relatives working there. I've been cautioning people that want one and I am reluctant to install any of them. I've actually pulled a couple back out because they could not be made to perform well.
I have a very specific use for thermostats because I'm in the radiant heating business. I design, repair and install systems and have for 35 years. For all that time I've been trying to arrive at the perfect design and operational program.
Everyone used to say that in-slab radiant systems should just be set and left alone. That they responded very slowly and should not be programmed or turned up and down. This is not the case. If you do that, the system will run as needed all night and stay at the set point. Then in the morning when the day begins to warm up, cooking starts, people are up walking around and the lights go on, etc, the house will continue to warm up and overshoot the set point by 10 or 15 degrees. After being off all day and the slab gradually cooling, evening comes and the temp drops. By the time the system comes back on it's too late and the temp drops below the set point and doesn't recover until late at night. Bottom line: If you have a constant setting you have a wildly fluctuating room temp. If you program the thermostat with 4 settings per day you even out the temp, reduce the bill and make the house much more comfortable.
Nest uses room temp for it's calculations. If it determines that you walk by it a 7AM each day, it decides to make the house warm at 7AM. To do this with radiant it keeps turning the system on earlier and earlier until it achieves that goal. Pretty soon it's on too much at night getting ready for the morning and the overshoot problem gets worse and worse The bill goes up and the comfort goes down.
The proper way to heat in the morning is to set the stat to come on 1 hour before you get up and turn down when you get up. Not when you leave, but when you get up. This gives the floor a shot of heat to greet your feet, but doesn't overheat the house.
This is a brief overview of the problem and Nest is working on it to measure the overshoot and cut the heat early, but that doesn't work because the morning warm floor greeting is compromised.
The next thing is that they are power stealing thermostats and cannot work without finding 24 volts. Some systems don't have that available or the wiring is not adequate. Usually it is, but not always and it means we have to supply a separate 24 volt supply to the stat and not interfere with the system operation. Sometimes it requires that a relay be installed.
People buy the beauty. They are captivated. And that's the funny part. Somehow, more beautiful must mean much better performance.
If you have a simple forced air system with one zone and you have a very predictable schedule, good, it will work fine. If you want to marvel at the fancy thing on the wall, in that previous example, all the better. They are pretty.
But if you want a cost effective thermostat and have other things to do, or if you have radiant heating, you may not be very well served by Nest. And that's too bad. It was designed by folks that really don't get how heating works. Young aggressive engineers that don't have enough real world experience in that area, but do know how to make a spectacular wall display. And part of their goal is to connect your home to their office and monitor your performance. This will give them a chance to warn you of possible problems, share in your savings, report to the utility if your system is less efficient than your neighbors, etc. A much bigger picture than simply providing a product to you, to be your little helper there on the wall.
All this and I haven't even tied in how to operate a solar system in conjunction with a gas system and the thermostat requirements for that.