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donderdag 24 november 2011

Honeywell RTH7600D Touchscreen 7-Day Programmable Thermostat

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Honeywell RTH7600D Touchscreen 7-Day Programmable Thermostat
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Honeywell  RTH7600D Touchscreen 7-Day Programmable Thermostat

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The customized settings add luxury to your home while affording you valuable savings on your energy bill. View larger.


Enjoy the freedom of this thermostat's pre-programming features to fit your different daily needs. View larger.
Convenient and Efficient for At-Home Comfort
Offering the ability to program each day differently and to customize temperatures for four periods per day, this thermostat makes it easy to heat or cool your home for optimum comfort. It features exclusive Honeywell Smart Response Technology and a feature that enables auto changes from heating to cooling, which continually adjust the pre-heating or cooling of your home for effective results and precise comfort control within one-degree F of your desired temperature.

A straightforward, green backlit display and easy-to-use touchscreen keep operation and programming simple. And this display is easy to read, even in dimly lit rooms and hallways.

An Easy Way to Save Energy and Money
If programmed as directed, this thermostat provides the ability to save up to 33 percent on annual heating and cooling costs (savings may depend on geographic region and energy usage).

For added convenience, the thermostat unit can be run using battery power or using power from your heating/cooling system, giving you the option of permanently eliminating battery changes.

Convenient, Intelligent Features and Broad Compatibility
This thermostat delivers permanent day and time settings that are even maintained during power outages, and it offers the option of automatically adjusting for Daylight Savings Time as well as a filter-change reminder function that can help you keep your heating-cooling system operating at its best.

This thermostat is compatible with a broad range of 24-volt heating and air-conditioning systems, including both single-stage and multi-stage heating and cooling systems, heat pumps with and without auxiliary (back-up) heat, gas fireplaces, and heating-only or cooling-only systems. It is not compatible with electric baseboard heat (120 to 240 volts). 

The thermostat is backed by a one-year limited warranty.

About Honeywell
With more than 120 years of trusted reliability, Honeywell International is a diversified technology and manufacturing leader, serving customers worldwide with aerospace products and services; control technologies for buildings, homes, and industry; automotive products; turbochargers; and specialty materials.

What's in the Box
One Honeywell RTH7600D seven-day programmable touchscreen thermostat, wire labels, wall anchors, mounting hardware, and an installation and user guide.
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Honeywell RTH7600D Touchscreen 7-Day Programmable Thermostat Features

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IMAGE OF Honeywell  RTH7600D Touchscreen 7-Day Programmable Thermostat

Honeywell  RTH7600D Touchscreen 7-Day Programmable Thermostat

Honeywell RTH7600D Touchscreen 7-Day Programmable Thermostat
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Model Of Item : RTH7600D
Product Brand :
Honeywell

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Honeywell  RTH7600D Touchscreen 7-Day Programmable Thermostat



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Honeywell RTH7600D Touchscreen 7-Day Programmable Thermostat
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Customer Review :

Honeywell programmables are the Cadillac of tstats : Honeywell RTH7600D Touchscreen 7-Day Programmable Thermostat


About a year earlier, I purchased and installed a
Lux Tx9000Ts Touchscreen 7-Day Programmable Thermostat. It's a good thermostat and has many similar features. My house has two zones with central heat and air conditioning, and I felt that the Honeywell was best distinguished to my second zone. While both are good thermostats, there are some sublime differences.

Both thermostats are described in detail by their respective manufacturers, and both offer flexibility with the potential to schedule four temperature settings for each day of the week. Both have touch screen displays that can show whole information and allow you to convert settings with relative degrees of ease. Both fall short in some areas, and both exceed the other in some ways.

An prominent feature for any thermostat is ease of use, the potential for a user to convert the temperature without reading a user manual, and the potential to schedule the thermostat without a confusing array of steps. Primary thermostats have a singular knob or lever that allows a user to point a line or arrow to a definite temperature. Ironically, both of these thermostats have situations where even raising or lowering the temperature by a few degrees can be a show stopper for an untrained user.

The Lux model has a clean and concise user interface. It has a pleasant seeing blue Lcd touch screen with larger numbers and less crowding. It has a isolate button for back lighting. It displays the current temperature, and touching the temperature lets you see the set point and up and down arrows to override it. The problem with that is that despite its elegant appearance, not seeing the set temperature leaves untrained users at a loss. When I was out of town, someone else resident of the home had a party and nobody there could outline out how to start the air conditioning. The temperature had been left on hold. Since the button for the light is not on the touch screen itself, it's easy to miss by somebody searching the screen for it.

By contrast, the Honeywell has a busier screen with more information. It displays both the room temperature and the set temperature. The up and down arrows are all the time visible. Touching the screen once lights up the unit. The down side to the latter feature is that the first press of any button will not perform its function until the unit lights up. That's potentially confusing, but not a show stopper. The feature on the Lux is preferable for somebody who knows how to use it, but the Honeywell is best for typical users.

One of the reasons I bought this unit is that it works with heat and air conditioning and does not need to be switched from one to the other. As the seasons cool down, the local temperature drops down to the mid to low 50s, Fahrenheit. But I still get days when the afternoon sun will raise the temperature of some rooms to over 80 degrees. If the air conditioner is needed in the evening, the room is comfortable on its own at bed time, and the heat is needed in the morning, the Honeywell seems to make the most sense. The catch, however, it the conception of the set temperature. If you want Ac to go on when the temperature is above 80 and you want heat to go on when the temperature is above 66, the thermostat can deal with it fine. If the temperature is outside of that range, it's clear which set point is relevant.

But if the temperature is within that range, there are two concurrent set points, but only one is shown. Given the temperatures mentioned, after the Ac cools the room to under 80 degrees, 80 will show as the set point. If the room heats up, the Ac will go back on at that point. If you want the room cooler, you can override the temperature with the down arrow. If the temperature drops to 65 degrees, the displayed set point will be 66 degrees and the heat will go on. All that is sensible, but what if the temperature drops to 67 degrees overnight and you want to override it to 70 degrees? The up and down arrows come to be useless. Of course the temperature can be changed, but just as with the other thermostat, a situation is created where somebody not familiar with the thermostat will be unable to convert the temperature. If you had set it to go up to 70 degrees when you woke up, but got out of bed an hour early, seeing yourself unable to perform a uncomplicated task could be frustrating. If I could suggest one convert to Honeywell, it would be to be able to touch the set point temperature when the Hvac is not running, to toggle it between displaying the heat and cool set point temperatures.

Both thermostats work well and are easy to use if you read the manual. Many one-time settings for the Honeywell want cycling straight through cryptic code numbers and setting a value for each of them, manufacture things easy with a hand-operated but impossible without one. On the Honeywell, setting the year, month and date will allow the unit to know the day of the week. But the date is never displayed on the screen in general use, which raises the interrogate of why you are not plainly asked to specify the current weekday at setup time. Knowing the date allow the thermostat to keep track of daylight recovery time, so it's finally for a purpose. But having a uncomplicated way of displaying (and changing) the date would have made sense. Setting things on the Lux is generally easier overall, but on a day to day basis, the goal is to rarely need any user interaction.

Both thermostats keep track of filter usage, but the Lux keeps track of the number of hours that the system was in use. It also give the user more information about modern energy usage in general. The Honeywell keeps track of the number of days of use between filter changes. If you have days with limited or no usage as well as days with heavy usage, holding track of hours of use makes much more sense. seeing a message saying "Filter usage count 86 hours" is less ambiguous than one saying "filter 39 days."

From a functional standpoint, both thermostats work well. If you've read the manuals, chances are that you will do well with either. The Honeywell has a more nicely presented professional seeing manual, but it also needs one more than the Lux. Both have annoying quirks, and both have strengths over the other. In an environment with seasonal changes and big temperature swings, having a thermostat like the Honeywell can be an advantage. It has Smart Response technology to keep track of how long it takes to get the room to the set temperature so it can get there at the set time, rather than merely going on at the set time and taking however long it takes. That could be an advantage depending on how long your system takes to heat or cool, and depending on temperature range settings.

Either one of these thermostats could work quite well, but the Honeywell is theoretically closer to the greatest goal of "set it and forget it."



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