Submitted by Nurs3Rob t3_zxsxjt in tifu

Okay so the title kinda spills it but I'll tell the story all the same. TLDR at the bottom.

This story actually did happen today, actually just a little while ago, so the shame is still deep in my heart. It starts this morning while I was attempting to adjust the temperature in my house and my thermostat just up and dies. I tried to fix it but it's done for. No heat or A/C until it's fixed and since this is south Texas we kind of needed both today. But I'm relatively handy so we'll just buy a new one and fix this.

We end up spending the day out just doing family stuff and along the way I pick up a new thermostat. I opted for a fancy wifi enabled smart device type thing that not only looks cool but can apparently read my mind and make sure the house is always at the proper temperature. I have some doubts about its telepathic powers but it looks cool so I bought it.

We got home around dinner and I get straight to work. First things first I watch a video online on how to install it. Unfortunately my house has older wiring so there are some extra steps but it seems easy enough. I decide to head up to the attic to install the first part. This ends up requiring my wife's help due to small spaces but she's good with tools and able to squeeze into the space required so we get that wired up pretty quickly. Next we head back downstairs to wire up and install the actual thermostat which goes really quickly and we're ready to flip the breaker on and......nothing. Just nothing.

The next hour is spent rechecking and rewiring everything we've just done. There are 10,000 trips up and down the stairs. My hand starts getting chafed from the number of times I've flipped the breaker on and off to check things. My brother in law, who's a general contractor in another state, is called and consulted. He has interesting but ultimately not helpful thoughts. Finally I cave and call my HVAC guy. Thank you Jesus he's nearby and although on his way somewhere he'll u-turn and come see me real quick.

My guy, we'll call him Saul, finally pulls up. It's late, I'm tired, and everybody is miserable. But Saul is an HVAC genius who's been bailing me out for 15 years so we're good. I explain to Saul what's going on and we head inside. He does a quick check over of the thermostat, wiring seems okay, but there's no power running to it. He heads up to the attic. It's not even 10 seconds later and "hey, did you try closing this door switch before you powered it on or no?"

My jaw drops....the door switch.

Now for the uninitiated the door switch is a switch that cuts power the furnace when the side panel is opened. It's a safety thing so you're not in there working on live electrical parts. I'm familiar with the overall concept but hadn't considered that my furnace had one. I'd also left the panel wide open the whole time because I never close stuff back up until I'm sure my work is good. It's kind of a bad habit.

He pushes the switch in and everything comes to life. So now the problem is fixed but I'm definitely an idiot. Saul calls down that he'll check over my wiring real quick before he closes everything up. I'm hoping he takes his time so that I can come up with something good to tell my wife. That hope is dashed about 20 seconds later when I hear my wife from the other room: "Hey (big brother), it was the door switch. He needed to put the side panel back on first." There may or may not have been laughing IRL but there definitely was in my head. Saul comes down from the attic and announces it all looks good. I sheepishly ask how much and he declines payment. "I'll just tack it on the next time you have a problem." It's generous of him and eases the sting a bit. I see Saul out, put away my tools, and slink off to my office to eat a cold dinner and share my shame online.

TLDR: Replaced house thermostat. Didn't work. Ended up calling professional who shows up and points out that there's a switch on the furnace that needs to be closed in order for it to get power. Much shame for missing little thing.

59

Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

PaulOPTC t1_j225gtv wrote

I’m an electrician,

We were working with a kitchen and bath company.

This couple had been living in their house for 10 years. They finally wanted to redo the kitchen because half of the outlets never worked and they have had to run extension cords for all of their appliances.

Turns out the GFCI kitchen countertop outlet was tripped and just needed to be reset.

One click, would have saved them from 10 years of running extension cords for appliances

40

Revenge_of_the_User t1_j22yuls wrote

Moved into a house. Roomie calls me downstairs because she wanted to go out the basement door because she cant get it open.

I give it a yank. Nope, its closed. But the way it moves -

I wordlessly reach over and slide a little gate lock open thats clearly visible just above the knob and open the door. Total time spent: 5 seconds.

She facepalmed so hard, all i could say was "man, i wish all my problems were that easy to solve."

11

Nurs3Rob OP t1_j24jcwy wrote

I had to call an electrician once over the GFCI outlets in my kitchen. One tripped and I couldn't get it working again. Turns out I have like three in a row on the same circuit, which I've been told is unnecessary, and when one trips they cascade. Electrician only charged me like $50 to explain all that which I thought was fair.

1

myleftone t1_j226mas wrote

We had a contractor tell us over the phone to check the switch (in this case the burner safety switch by the cellar door), or he could come over to check it, for the minimum charge.

Contractors just know. It’s been Christmas, mothers-in-law have visited, and they tend to mess with everything. It turned out one of them was looking for the kitchen lights.

They also fucked up the fridge temp as usual (trying to get ice) and the universal remote. It took too long to program and I’m not going through that again.

12

ThePresidentsNipples t1_j22ekkw wrote

Sir I think you're confusing raccoons for in-laws, its quite common actually.

14

canyousayexpendable t1_j234usa wrote

Nah, man. My FIL brought a screwdriver to our house and tightened the screws on all our doorknobs. It was mostly fine, except he tightened the screws so much on the sliding glass door latches that the door was hard to open/close. I thought it was a weird thing to do to someone else's house, but it was just the beginning...

6

AcrobaticSource3 t1_j224pqn wrote

How much did this knowledge cost you?

4

Nurs3Rob OP t1_j24kb43 wrote

About 3 hours and some shame. Not the most expensive lesson I've had.

2

BGJohnson329 t1_j22edx5 wrote

No worries, it happens. I've been in a lot of different industries and seen everything. And even after seeing all of that, I find myself doing it too. I bet you won't forget next time though!

2

splithoofiewoofies t1_j23b5ff wrote

My keyboard stopped working one day so I sent it in and got it back with a note that said "keyboard lock (f7) reactivated"

I just had to press f7.

2

OkVolume1 t1_j23fkq3 wrote

I called our gas company over once thinking we had a leak when in essence it was just the stickies cat turd my cat had ever done.

2

Zahrad70 t1_j23xe8s wrote

Contracting gig in the 90’s with one of my best regular clients at the time. Printer issue. Works fine for about half the company, is about 80% for everyone else. Ad agency. Their main color printer. Kind of a big deal. 3 DAYS at roughly $100/hr plus a 90 minute rush hour commute.

…it was a dip switch. “Click. Problem solved.” I basically refused to bill them for $2000 of my time out of shame.

2

Fabi3848 t1_j243kpj wrote

Rest assured that this happens quite often, it certainly wasn't the first time for the guy you hired.

2

MeatShield12 t1_j24fyxi wrote

Former electrician here. My in-laws never realized that the outlets in half their basement were on a switch. I was over one time, realized it, and offered to tie the switch through so the outlets were always on.

1

DannkHippo t1_j25nety wrote

I do HVAC/R. You wouldn't believe how often this happens.

Gotta check that things are plugged in and the switch is switched.. Job security, I guess..

1

Nurs3Rob OP t1_j27huhm wrote

It was kind of funny in the long run. I just felt bad for my HVAC guy because he detoured from another job to come fix this.

He did say my wiring was 100% correct and my only mistake was not knowing about the door switch. So I guess I did okay overall.

1