nest Learning thermostat Installation And Configuration Manual page 31

Thermostat
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What if Nest isn't getting enough power from W or Y and the consumer doesn't have a Common
("C") wire installed?
While we find that in the vast majority of homes Nest can charge its built in battery power sharing from the
regular heating and cooling wires, a few installations require a common wire to bring power to Nest without
interfering with the normal operation of the heating and cooling system.
What are the symptoms of a power sharing issue?
In conventional heating and cooling or cooling only systems:
Cooling is always on or on intermittently when Nest is not calling for cooling.
Cooling does not activate when Nests calls for cooling.
Cooling intermittently deactivates while Nest is still calling for cooling.
In conventional heating only systems:
Heating is always on or on intermittently when Nest is not calling for heating.
Heating does not activate when Nests calls for heating.
Heating intermittently deactivates while Nest is still calling for heating.
There is a unusual noise coming from the customer's heating system.
In heat pump systems:
Heating or cooling is always on or on intermittently when Nest is not calling for it.
Heating or cooling does not activate when Nest calls for it.
Heating or cooling intermittently deactivates while Nest is still calling for it
In these situations, Nest can't successfully charge from the Y or W wires without interfering with the
normal operation of the heating and cooling system. There are three options; these changes should only be
made by professionals.
Use a spare wire as common wire
Ordinarily you can solve the problem by turning an unused wire in the thermostat wire bundle into a
common wire.  Simply connect one end of the the spare or unused wire to the Common ("C") terminal in the
HVAC controller and the other end to Nest's C connector.
Add a resistor to an existing Y or W wire
We've found that many Y and W wire circuits that cannot supply enough power can be strengthened by
bridging the Common terminal at the HVAC equipment to W or Y through a 220-ohm, 5W resistor.
In a heat-only system, you need to bridge from common C to W. In a HVAC system with a Y wire, you must
bridge from common C to Y. (Nest can only charge from W when Y is not connected.)
Nest Learning Thermostat installation & configuration guide
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