First time I've heard of this.

hbiss

EC, New York NEC: 2017
Location
Little Falls, New York NEC: 2017
Occupation
EC
A relative just told me that when they walked up to their new Honeywell (from HD) thermostat and touched it to change the temperature, there was a small static zap from their finger. Wood floors with throw rugs. Ever since then they had to replace the batteries about every two weeks. You would think that these things would be more resistant to static discharge. Never thought you would have to wear a wrist strap to change the temperature.

So, now I see they bought a WiFi version to replace it so they don't have to touch it. :rolleyes:

Let's see how long that's gonna last.

-Hal
 
I have 5 Honeywell WiFi stats and never had an issue with carpeting, wood floors and throw rugs. Even though a few of them are only a year or two old they are an older model. Is this something shiny and new for Honeywell?
 
I don't see how a static discharge would cause battery drain. Maybe a wiring issue could if its designed to get it primary power from the HVAC equipment,

You are probably only getting part of the information.
 
I have 5 Honeywell WiFi stats and never had an issue
No. This was a standard non-programmable non-WiFi that crapped out.
I don't see how a static discharge would cause battery drain
I can see it screwing up the microcontroller making the thermostat draw power from the batteries continuously instead of "power robbing". Though I have had thermostats run only on its batteries like during the summer months when the heating system was shut down and they never said they required replacement. Matter of fact I have a new one for somebody (not like that one) sitting on my desk that I put batteries into so I could program it. Been sitting for about a month and it is still working.

But, yes, I can see the electronics getting messed up. Kinda like lightning, you can never predict what it will do. Have a close strike and watch what doesn't work anymore.

You are probably only getting part of the information.
I'm the first one to say that but I really doubt it. Isn't much to this.

-Hal
 
Microcontrollers and the like have ESD protection diodes on the IO pins. These are supposed to shunt zaps away from the delicate IO circuitry to the power rails.

I could imagine a protection diode getting zapped just a touch too and becoming conductive when it shouldn't be, or gate oxide on an IO transistor getting damaged, or something similar that leads to increased parasitic current flow. So that the over-all function remains the same, but with increased power consumption
 
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