Re: Furnace (non) operation
Reply #15 –
I think the Hunter thermostats are like a lot of electronics and change models frequently. I don't think the brand is all that important. What I remember is that these are standard house thermostats which normally run on 24 volts AC. Many thermostats rely on this voltage to run (no batteries required because the 24 VAC comes from the furnace). The Hunters were unique in that they required two AA batteries and used relays to make contacts for control. Since our RV furnaces are are 12 volts a standard house thermostat (no batteries) would not work. To sum up, any house style thermostat that uses batteries to run should work - that's what I remember. I would be good if anyone else can confirm.
The hardest part about changing to a Hunter is figuring out the wiring. I did it by finding which wire is 12 volts (supply) and tracing out the circuit on the old thermostats and then testing. My coach has both the AC and furnace on the same thermostat. Some coaches have separate thermostats for each (I think mid 1990's due to the Coleman Penguin AC's unique ribbon cable control)
The other big advantage of the electronic thermostat (Hunter) is it controls the temperature swing much, much better - and they don't even cost much ($20 for one w/out a timed temperature function)