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RIBs and Thermostats

Written by Noah Smith | Jul 19, 2022 4:00:00 AM

Thermostats are cool. Well, thermostats cool... and heat. Do they do other things? The standard thermostat somehow has more colors of wire than your average rainbow so certainly there are a few features left to uncover. Let's decode those colors and figure out how to turn on a 120V fan with those teeny tiny low voltage wires.

Thermostat Wire Colors

  • Red (R, Rh, Rc) - 24VAC Power
  • Yellow (Y) - Cool Signal
  • White (W) - Heat Signal
  • Green (G) - Fan Signal
  • Black or Blue (C) - 24VAC Common
  • Orange (O) - Reversing Valve Signal for Cooling
  • Dark Blue (B) - Reversing Valve Signal for Heating
  • Light Blue/Other (Y2) - Stage 2 Cool Signal
  • Brown/Other (W2) - Stage 2 Heat Signal
  • No Universal Color (E) - Emergency Heat Signal
  • No Universal Color (X/AUX) - Auxiliary Heat Signal

The control transformer provides 24Vac to the Thermostat. Older systems may not have a common wire, but that common wire is necessary for powering smart thermostats. All the other thermostat wires are applying or removing a 24V signal. For example, if the thermostat is reading the room temperature as higher than desired, it will close the circuit between the Red and Yellow wires. The Yellow wire is sent to the air conditioner's control board, where it completes the circuit of a relay. There are dozens of configurations of wires that may or may not be available at the thermostat, but hopefully this overview is enough to get an idea of the role of a thermostat.

Using RIB for High Voltage and High Current

If we have access to the common wire, putting a volt meter from (G) to (C) we read 24V when there's a call for the fan and 0V when there is no call. Let's say we want to use that signal to turn on and off a 1HP @ 120V make-up air unit. We can use an RIB2401B.

From the RIB2401B datasheet, we can see the RIB will only draw 83mA @ 24Vac from the thermostat green wire. Like magic, now we've turned on a 1HP motor! The same concept can be used for turning on gas valves, boilers, pumps, or just about any HVAC equipment that needs high voltage or high current. For more magic or details on any of our products, please go to our website or contact us directly.

About Functional Devices, Inc.

Functional Devices, Inc., located in the United States of America, has been designing and manufacturing quality electronic devices since 1969. Our mission is to enhance lives in buildings and beyond. We do so by designing and manufacturing reliable, high-quality products for the building automation industry.  Our suite of product offerings include RIB relays, current sensors, power controls, power supplies, transformers, lighting controls, and more.

We test 100% of our products, which leads to less than 1 out of every 16,000 products experiencing a failure in the field.