I'm in a two-story home and the thermostat is mounted in the upper story, I'm assuming for convenient wiring access to the unit in the attic. Unfortunately the vast majority of the used living space is downstairs (there are just a couple of rooms upstairs).
As the summer heat is coming on the difference in temp between the up and downstairs is increasing, as I'd expect, but the problem is that given our layout even if the downstairs has been cooled significantly, it may still be hot upstairs where the thermostat is.
What would be ideal is if I could move the thermostat and its sensor downstairs. I'm wondering about the feasibility of either some kind of thermostat that can get temperature from a remote site (wired or wirelessly) or alternately dropping the wiring for the thermostat into the lower story and moving it.
Do thermostats with remote sensors exist and if so, is there anything you would recommend? I'd probably go this route if I can do it without spending an arm and a leg.
Is there anything special I'd need to worry about in terms of extending the wiring? I'm reasonably comfortable with standard electrical work, just wondering if there's any gotchas. Thanks!
As the summer heat is coming on the difference in temp between the up and downstairs is increasing, as I'd expect, but the problem is that given our layout even if the downstairs has been cooled significantly, it may still be hot upstairs where the thermostat is.
What would be ideal is if I could move the thermostat and its sensor downstairs. I'm wondering about the feasibility of either some kind of thermostat that can get temperature from a remote site (wired or wirelessly) or alternately dropping the wiring for the thermostat into the lower story and moving it.
Do thermostats with remote sensors exist and if so, is there anything you would recommend? I'd probably go this route if I can do it without spending an arm and a leg.
Is there anything special I'd need to worry about in terms of extending the wiring? I'm reasonably comfortable with standard electrical work, just wondering if there's any gotchas. Thanks!
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