You may be right on that. I think many use proprietary communication between the wall unit and whatever control unit is used.I don't think a Nest or an Ecobee (or any other 3rd-party thermostat) can be integrated with a minisplit.
You may be right on that. I think many use proprietary communication between the wall unit and whatever control unit is used.I don't think a Nest or an Ecobee (or any other 3rd-party thermostat) can be integrated with a minisplit.
Any updates on the minisplit?So, it's been awhile, but I finally got my Fujitsu minisplit running. One reason it went so slow is that it's at a vacation house, 3+hrs from home, so I only get a chance to work on it a day or two once or twice a month. The other reason is that it took me awhile to convince myself that there were no refrigerant leaks. Using the equipment that my friend lent me, I pressurized this system to 450psi using nitrogen. It seemed to hold fine for several hours, but had then dropped 25psi or so by the next morning; temperature drop could not explain this much loss. But then I came back a month or so later, and it still had 350psi; we reasoned that if there were a leak, it would not have any pressure at all after a month. I re-pressurized it and the exact same thing happened; no discernible loss after 4hrs, but a good bit by the next morning. I finally decided it was the pressure gauge assembly that was the culprit. Called in a local guy to vacuum-pump and commission the system.
First real test was disappointing. It didn't seem to be blowing much hot air. If I hit the "POWERFUL" button on the remote, it blew hot for a few minutes (re-assuring that the thing was at least capable of heating) but then started blowing cool. Consultation with friend revealed that the unit senses room temperature at the air intake (the top of the indoor unit); for some reason I thought it sensed it at the remote, like some other brands do. Friend suggested two things: run the room's ceiling fan (blowing upwards, of course) and adjust the output louvers to make sure none of the hot air was being blown down onto the big piece of furniture just below the indoor unit. The notion was that I was getting "short cycling" due to hotter (than the room as a whole) air getting to the sensor at the intake. It seemed to work. The next night it worked great - plenty of heat, and not so much variation in the temperature and quantity of air output.
So I'm very happy. (Though there's a nagging fear that there's still a VERY slow freon leak - slow enough that it only went down from 450 to 350psi in a month back when I was testing it). Trying to decide if it's worth putting a second one in, into the MBR (I put in a small subpanel to feed the first one). If the house were continuously occupied, it'd be a no-brainer; but as a vacation and occasional rental, maybe not so much.
About a year in, it's working great.Any updates on the minisplit?
The wifi adapter does tell me the outdoor and indoor temperature (I guess it gets the former off the internets) so I can kinda do that myself.Ideally you would have temperature sensors directly coupled to walls and floors and an outdoor temp sensor. An outdoor reset function would adjust the time to turn on the heat pump on the past response speed of the building based on outside temperature.
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