Installing 24 volt WiFi Thermostat on millivolt stoves

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Why not just hook up a 24 Volt transformer to RC And C this will power the thermostat just fine!
Take the jumper out from RC And RH, Hook up a wire from RH and W back to the pellet stove to make the stove work and you are done. No need for relays etc.
This is safe for millivolt stove? Do all thermostats have the jumper?
 
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stoves are not primary sources of heat. They are stoves and are considered decorative appliances. How you choose to use your stove is up to you. Yes, the system I have put forward would work on a gas stove too that uses a millivolt signal, though I'm not 100% how a gas stove generates the millivolt signal.

On a gas stove the millivolt signal is generated by the pilot light acting on a thermocouple which makes a voltage that lets the gas valve open. Once the pilot light is established then a thermostat closes its contacts the gas valve will open. It works the same as the proof of fire thermocouple works on a Quad. I don't know of any pellet stoves that use a pilot light so they don't require a millivolt thermostat. Any switch closure should work, be it a dry contact thermostat, relay or even timer. At least that's the way it is with my Quad.Same thing for a gas stove with a standing pilot, any dry contact will make it come on. Intermittent pilots are a different story.
 
This is safe for millivolt stove? Do all thermostats have the jumper?

The R and C provide the power for the thermostat. Inside the thermostat are small relays that open and close based on the thermostat settings. The R and RH are jumpered because in a typical heating system everything is running off of one transformer so it saves running an extra power wire to RH. So if you remove the jumper you end up with a switch between RH and W and when the stat calls for heat that switch closes and it's not connected to anything but the wires that you connect to RH and W. So yes it's safe to do that on a millivolt stove.
 
That's fine so long as the run to the stove is short from the tstat. You cannot reliably send a millivolt signal very far that's why we use 24v

I remember reading the directions one time that if you increase the wire size to #14 wire the max length was only 75 feet for a Honeywell millivolt system.
This usually isn't an issue in residential settings but in a commercial settings it can be a problem.
Just out of curiosity are these really Millivolt controls in Pellet stoves or does the thermostat just open and close a circuit on the control board?
Haven't seen a lot of Pellet stoves but out of the dozen brands I've been into not a one has a Thermopile in it to create a millivolt signal.
I suspect that Millivolt compatible Thermostat is specified because they want a dry contact to control the Pellet Stove?
 
Say that I can power the WIFI thermostat, with 24vac. Can I use a relay to convert my WIFI thermostat heat control output line signal, on R and W I think, to control my millivolt fireplace circuit?

I have a millivolt circuit that runs from the fireplace to a wall switch. The switch turns my fireplace flame on and off. I want the thermostat to do this in the future.

Anyone know where I can find the perfect relay for this?
 
Say that I can power the WIFI thermostat, with 24vac. Can I use a relay to convert my WIFI thermostat heat control output line signal, on R and W I think, to control my millivolt fireplace circuit?

I have a millivolt circuit that runs from the fireplace to a wall switch. The switch turns my fireplace flame on and off. I want the thermostat to do this in the future.

Anyone know where I can find the perfect relay for this?
Use the parts I outlined. It will work.
 
I remember reading the directions one time that if you increase the wire size to #14 wire the max length was only 75 feet for a Honeywell millivolt system.
This usually isn't an issue in residential settings but in a commercial settings it can be a problem.
Just out of curiosity are these really Millivolt controls in Pellet stoves or does the thermostat just open and close a circuit on the control board?
Haven't seen a lot of Pellet stoves but out of the dozen brands I've been into not a one has a Thermopile in it to create a millivolt signal.
I suspect that Millivolt compatible Thermostat is specified because they want a dry contact to control the Pellet Stove?
That is correct. Whatever the distance is to the stove we have to double it for send and return
 
Found this on another site.
Hello, I am new here...:)...I own a Osburn 5000 pellet stove and I bought a Nest 3 gen thermostat....
1. From stove I got 2.5 - 3.5 V
2. Nest request 24 V
can I do same like in pictures, is safe for my pellet stove or I do need a relay too?
thank you
 
I am new to this board. I have been reading this thread and trying to understand this. I am truly a novice . I have a vacation home that I recently purchased. It has a SCI CEM24 talking thermostat. It requires a landline to communicate with. Since I do not want a landline I have been experimenting with a gateway that connects my wiring with a cell phone. The thermostat will answer but will not recognize the tones from the cellphone. This thermostat controls a gas fireplace insert. I bought a Honeywell wifi thermostat as in the OP but was told by customer service that it won't work because it has a millivolt contact. My question is to do the conversion as described, I already have an R and a C wire at the thermostat. What would I need to do from there?
 
I just bought Harman XXV stove. This thing works like a champ. I would like to have the stove connected to wi-fi. There are two option described in this thread. One is Honeywell Thermostat and Ecobee Stat-02. I was wondering if I could use Ecobee3 model in one of the the options.
 
I just bought Harman XXV stove. This thing works like a champ. I would like to have the stove connected to wi-fi. There are two option described in this thread. One is Honeywell Thermostat and Ecobee Stat-02. I was wondering if I could use Ecobee3 model in one of the the options.
Yes, but when temp is achieved on the stove it will error #4 and go to shut down mode. It will start back up when the call comes back and the error will go away till the tstat is satisfied again. No harm will come to the stove, it's just that Harman uses a thermistor that always has a circuit. When the tstat opens the circuit opens and the error shows up.
 
Yes, but when temp is achieved on the stove it will error #4 and go to shut down mode. It will start back up when the call comes back and the error will go away till the tstat is satisfied again. No harm will come to the stove, it's just that Harman uses a thermistor that always has a circuit. When the tstat opens the circuit opens and the error shows up.
Harman has a technical bulletin on how to use their stoves with a T-stat. They suggest to make the set temp on the T-stat to 95 Deg and then set the stove to the desired room temp.
I connect the Lowe's Iris T-stat with swing setting set to 2 degrees and connect the 2 wires in series to one of the room probe wires on my workshop's Harman Advance. Then I can manually turn the stove on and off with my iPhone or use a schedule and see what the temp in the room is on my iPhone. It works very well unless the stove runs out of pellets, then I have to reset the stove. :)
 

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Looking at wiring diagram in the OP does the 24v wire goes Rh, W and C in the thermostat?
Could you mind drawing a wiring diagram to connect the iris in series with the room probe?
 
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Looking at wiring diagram in the OP does the 24v wire goes Rh, W and C in the thermostat?
Could you mind drawing a wiring diagram to connect the iris in series with the room probe?
Cannot use a 24v T-Stat unless you build a relay.
A millivolt T-Stat connected to Rh & W works well.

Here is the Harman Bulletin:)
https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/thermostat-to-harman-p43.152720/#post-2049693

Here is my diagram
https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads...stat-to-the-avalon-astoria.72930/#post-921673
 
I bought the RTH 8500 Tstat on the Black Friday deals at 80 bucks hoping to work with out any issue if I do the wiring as drawn in OP. XXV stove did not work when I connected the relay directly to the male disconnects where the room temp sensing probe was connected, the stove did not turn on when it called for heat. I double checked all the the wiring and also did a continuity check to make sure relay is working properly. It was wired properly but still stove did not turn on. I was desperate to make this work and connected my room temp probe in series with the relay ( this post mention in by Don) combing with the other setup in the OP. 3 hrs later everything looks to be working fine with Wifi tstat. Thanks smwilliamson and don2222.
 
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I bought the RTH 8500 Tstat on the Black Friday deals at 80 bucks hoping to work with out any issue if I do the wiring as drawn in OP. XXV stove did not work when I connected the relay directly to the male disconnects where the room temp sensing probe was connected, the stove did not turn on when it called for heat. I double checked all the the wiring and also did a continuity check to make sure relay is working properly. It was wired properly but still stove did not turn on. I was desperate to make this work and connected my room temp probe in series with the relay ( this post mention in by Don) combing with the other setup in the OP. 3 hrs later everything looks to be working fine with Wifi tstat. Thanks smwilliamson and don2222.

Although my t-stat on the P43 isn't wifi, I have it set up with the temp prove in series and it works great. I set the stove temp at 75 and my thermostat at what I want the temp to be (68-69 currently) and it works great. I did find that when hooked up this way, I cannot use room temp / manual with the stove, which is what I would normally do in the extremely cold weather. However, if I want to run the stove constantly, with a constant high fan, I just put it in stove temp / auto and use the feed rate to modulate the temp in the house.
 
Hi I am new here. I have a Napoleon NPS45 pellet stove. I find it frustrating reading up on what the definition of a millivolt system is and how easy the stove plugs into my Honeywell rth2310b and works fine as it would not work if the power was out. I am looking to install an ecobee3 lite but would use a nest or lyric whatever would work. I have a goodman furnace/airhandler that is only wired to the thermostat Rh and W at this point for forced hot air. I would like to run a new 5 wire line from the furnace to the new thermostat so that I can utilize the fan as well as have the Y and Rc for central air at some point. It would also include a C wire so that I can power the thermostat from there. I would then want to wire the pellet stove as well but would want it to be the primary heat source as pellets are cheaper than propane with the inefficient furnace. from use a wiring diagram I think it would just need to plug the stove into W and Rh of the ecobee and wire the furnace to w2 to make it the second stage or emergency heat. I am sure it doesn't work that way so I would also like to know what kind of relay I would need. I am guessing if I can use the power from the furnace to power the thermostat that I wouldn't need the transformer for power. Any information is greatly appreciated.