Now I have 3 of these, all working fine. My house is 100 years old and has a newer section that was added about 20 years ago, but none of my thermostats have more than three wire wires plugged in, and there's no real way to run new wires. I have Nest thermostats and use remote sensors because all of my main heating and air conditioning thermostats have been placed in useless spots. Without Common Maker, my nests went offline too often due to low battery, and also seemed to have a hard time learning launch predictions due to consistently poor data. Now that they are constantly connected to the network, they finally regulate the temperature very well. Two traditional manufacturers are for AC thermostats which are on the second floor but the AC goes 3 floors and one controls the old hot water radiators on 2 floors but is in the cool hallway. All thermocouples remain connected to their remote sensors and maintain temperature well. You will need to drill a large 3/4 inch or larger hole in the wall to insert the "transmitter". The more the better if you plan to pull that thing out in the future. Of course you'll want to place this behind the thermostat, but even with the relatively small nest there's plenty of room to hide the hole while still having room to slide the nest up or down to fit the screws into the wood lathe to drift when you have such a tricky wall. . Wires do what's in your own heating or cooling system.
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