Look at the directions again and swap the wires you hooked up that are for the temp output, you have them switched
yes
Air conditioner. One heats the interior of the house; the other cools it.
A boiler heats water to a safe heating temperature, often 180 degrees or so, and when a thermostat calls for heat, circulating pumps move the water from the boiler to the radiators where it heats the air surrounding the radiant surface, causing localized convective heating as well as some amount of conductive and radiant heat transfer. others have said: Stratification HEAT goes to the cold.
Typically a baseboard heating system. Consisting of a boiler, pump, piping, and a heat exchanger like aluminum fins.
A back boiler is a heating unit installed behind a fireplace that heats water for central heating or domestic hot water, often using the heat from a fire or gas. It is commonly used in older homes as a space-saving and efficient heating solution.
sounds like a bad thermostat even though it is replaced
needs a thermostat
Is the fan functioning?
A thermostat works on a bi-metal strip. The strip consists of two different metals that contract and expand at different rates. This causes the strip to bend as it heats up or cools down. This action triggers the thermostat to switch an appliance on or off.
A thermostat works on a bi-metal strip. The strip consists of two different metals that contract and expand at different rates. This causes the strip to bend as it heats up or cools down. This action triggers the thermostat to switch an appliance on or off.
As the Mercury is heated it expands and as is cools it contracts. It is used because it also heats and cools in even intervals that are easy to track in a metric system.
the thermostat heats up and is spring loaded when there is enough heat it will close and stop the heating element, when it cools it opens again and turns the heat back on, hope this helps
As the Mercury is heated it expands and as is cools it contracts. It is used because it also heats and cools in even intervals that are easy to track in a metric system.
yes
flush the system and change thermostat,this should fix problem. I flushed mine and i changed coolant and thermostat,it is now fine.
You do not say which vehicle has this problem, but it is pointing toward an air lock problem You may need to bleed the cooling system
both the water and soil heats up but the soil heats up rapidly and the water heats up slowly. If it cools down the soil cools down faster and the water cools down slower.