Sensi Lite Smart Thermostat Review (New 2023 Model!)

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  • čas přidán 30. 06. 2024
  • In this video we review the new Sensi Lite Smart Thermostat which was launched in spring 2023. It's an economical wifi smart thermostat that does not require a common wire.
    Sensi Lite Smart Thermostat: amzn.to/440nryC
    (VIDEO) How To Install Sensi Lite Smart Thermostat: • How To Install Sensi L...
    In this video we review the Sensi Lite Smart Thermostat which is a wifi smart thermostat that allows you to remotely control it from your phone. It's price point at launch is under $100 which makes it one of the lowest cost smart thermostats on the market. The Sensi Lite Smart Thermostat also does not typically require a common wire or C wire for installation which makes it compatible with a large number of HVAC systems and does not require the need to wire up an additional C wire if you don't have one.
    The Sensi Lite Smart Thermostat takes about 15-20 minutes to install and easy to wire up with traditional HVAC systems and heat pumps.
    The Sensi Lite Smart Thermostat also works with Alexa and Google Home voice assistants so you can control it with your voice. In my experience the Sensi Lite Smart Thermostat has been a reliable easy to use Smart Thermostat that doesn't break the bank.
    *Links included may be affiliate links which help support this channel.
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Komentáře • 31

  • @psycardis
    @psycardis Před rokem +3

    The O/B thermostat is actually for the reversing valve on a Heat Pump system. This model does not support humidification, or dehumidification.

  • @rkgsd
    @rkgsd Před 4 měsíci +5

    Why haven't other manufacturers come out with Wi-Fi thermostats that don't require a C-wire?

    • @joshuagonzalez5752
      @joshuagonzalez5752 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I’m glad I’m not the only one annoyed by that C-Wire 🤦‍♂️

  • @brendaweber-zufall7959
    @brendaweber-zufall7959 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I have a variable speed fan. How do I set my device to make sure the higher speed fan is on? Great video. Thank you

  • @willw7743
    @willw7743 Před 6 měsíci

    Thanks for the review. Was looking to see if this could be used without internet and it appears not since you can’t control the schedule.

  • @Private-GtngxNMBKvYzXyPq
    @Private-GtngxNMBKvYzXyPq Před měsícem

    Thank you!

  • @sweeperdave1
    @sweeperdave1 Před 19 dny

    Thanks for this.

  • @MOHAMMEDCHAGHLIL
    @MOHAMMEDCHAGHLIL Před 5 měsíci

    hi, is it compatible with R and Rc system? i dont see Rc terminal, thanks

  • @inve
    @inve Před 7 měsíci +1

    I loved your Sensi Touch review because going through the app menu allowed me to verify it offers Temperature Limits, but you didn’t do that with this one, ugh. Does the Lite offer Temperature limits and lockout feature? Ie. For AirBnb or light commercial, being able to put a schedule and temp limits is critical, so someone doesn’t set the heater to 90* and then leave for the day.

    • @jallen418
      @jallen418 Před 6 měsíci

      I cannot find this info either

    • @inve
      @inve Před 6 měsíci

      @@jallen418 I bought 7 of them and can verify that the Lite DOES have High (Heater), Low (AC), and Auto (both heater & AC) Limits. Additionally, you can lockout the controller all together and set schedules for each item; Heat, AC, Auto to the minute and any day. You can also control what’s displayed and see a report for each unit.

  • @mairena1962
    @mairena1962 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I think that I need to change the batteries but the faceplate us NOT coming out. I have quite short wires on the connection so I am afraid to pull hard on the faceplate. Please help. Thank you!

    • @rkgsd
      @rkgsd Před 4 měsíci +3

      Since the face isn't screwed on, you just need to pull harder.

  • @doublet91
    @doublet91 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I use this for heat only. No C wire. Each time furnace kicks on the display goes black and app says thermostat offline. Display comes back on shortly after and all shows it reconnects. Anyone else and is there a fix?

    • @FontMasterFlex
      @FontMasterFlex Před 4 měsíci +1

      probably use a c wire to power it while the heat is on...

  • @Sean-hh8fr
    @Sean-hh8fr Před 26 dny

    Did you tell everyone here that usung the two AAA batteries you need replace them every several days?

  • @davek5899
    @davek5899 Před rokem

    I'm in the market to buy a smart thermostat and I'm presently deciding between the Sensi Lite for $89 and the Amazon Smart thermostat for $79. Which would you recommend?

    • @SerenoOunce
      @SerenoOunce Před rokem +2

      Sensi is a sub brand of Emerson (White Rogers), who happens to manf roughly half the electronics for all HVAC systems. Basically splitting the market-share with Honeywell (Resideo).
      Amazon is fine for my kindle or budget FireTV. For anything HVAC I assume turn to the professionals. And anything 'smart' is going to be Alexa compatible anyway.

    • @dmitripogosian5084
      @dmitripogosian5084 Před 10 měsíci +2

      For me an absolutely critical feature is battery backup, and I am astonished that many smart thermostats (seems like all Honeywells for instance) do not have one. One of the main reasons for me to have WIFI connected thermostat is to be able to monitor the state of heating while I am away. And one of the modes of furnace failure is electrical. Without battery backup and only C-wire power that will kill the thermostat, and its ability to send alert and monitor the temperature remotely. (This what happened to me this winter, when furnace tripped the breaker, and was without electricity as house cooled and pipes got frozen). I am not sure about Amazon, but Sensi Smart (not Sensi smart touch) and now seems Sensi Lite are one of few that do have battery backup. BTW Amazon smart thermostat seems to be Honeywell inside

    • @carloscamacho6133
      @carloscamacho6133 Před 5 měsíci

      You would also need battery backup for your WIFI router and modem to get any alerts. Keep that in mind. @@dmitripogosian5084

  • @thrivinglittles
    @thrivinglittles Před rokem +1

    👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @_0O0O0O0_
    @_0O0O0O0_ Před 7 měsíci

    Do you talk like this IRL?

  • @bigd9260
    @bigd9260 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Garbage.. do not buy. Spend $10 more and get the regular sensi smart thermostat.
    I have tried 3 of these so far and every time I get "provisional error" when I tried to set it up on wifi. 3 different routers, 2 different phones (android and apple), all of them I get an error. The apple does not say provisional error but it fails to set it up and I forget the exact error. Could I open ports in the router and stand on my head to get these to work? Might these work right out of the box for some depending on your phone and router combo?
    Maybe.... but time is money and the regular sensi smart thermostats work every time. A 80 year old customer is not going to go through hoops to get thermostat connected, they need to just work out of the box or its a no go. I ended up just throwing the 3 I got into the trash. I got them for free as a trial anyway and I wont be using any more of them. If anybody from emserson is listening..... there is some kind of software issue with these you need to sort out.

    • @karliedavis1318
      @karliedavis1318 Před 5 měsíci +1

      That model requires c wire

    • @rkgsd
      @rkgsd Před 4 měsíci

      So you threw electronics into the trash where it will take 600 years to decompose instead of putting it into the recycle bin at least.

  • @kulaak-krii
    @kulaak-krii Před rokem +1

    Great video! I have a Brivis 2 wire thermostat with one wire into "A" and one wire into "B". It's so basic it's just on or off, closing or opening the switch in the thermostat. I just have no way to know which connectors those two wires go into on this Sensi Thermostat.
    Here's what I have: i.postimg.cc/7HMx0wwz/20230523-130751.jpg

    • @SerenoOunce
      @SerenoOunce Před rokem +1

      For 2 wire heat only you only use R(Rh) and W

    • @dmitripogosian5084
      @dmitripogosian5084 Před 10 měsíci +1

      As being said, one goes to R(Rh), the other W. For simple thermostat it does not matter which is which, since it just closes the connection as a switch. Often (as in my case), both wires are even of the same color, and nobody bothered to track which is which. If you will have 3-wire connection with added C wire, it become matter which wire goes to R and which to W, since those thermostats take voltage for power between R and C, and consistent 24 V are between R and C on the furnace since R and C go basically straight to transformer, while between W and C voltage may be absent or intermittent.