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Constant Duty Relay .... NOT
Moderator: -Scott-
Constant Duty Relay .... NOT
After frying the second constant duty relay in 6 months in my patrol I am looking for something a litle more "Constant"...
It's wired to switch the power to the fridge in the back and the max it ever switches is a bloody Waeco fridge on and off. Left the fridge on overnight and came back to a hot fridge and a relay that clicks but wont pass voltage at all
Anyone know of a better solution than the Ingrams style, steel cased things?
Something electronic perhaps....
Cheers
Dan
It's wired to switch the power to the fridge in the back and the max it ever switches is a bloody Waeco fridge on and off. Left the fridge on overnight and came back to a hot fridge and a relay that clicks but wont pass voltage at all
Anyone know of a better solution than the Ingrams style, steel cased things?
Something electronic perhaps....
Cheers
Dan
whats the current rating on the fridge?
can you use a 70 A narva relay,
like this http://www.narva.com.au/Switches_Relays_1.html
has wide pins on it for the line and load though, so you need the big lugs for them. 68012 is the part no.
can you use a 70 A narva relay,
like this http://www.narva.com.au/Switches_Relays_1.html
has wide pins on it for the line and load though, so you need the big lugs for them. 68012 is the part no.
I likely used the wrong terminology in saying "Relay"
What I use is a 100amp constant duty solenoid to switch power via a 6 B&S cable to the back of my patrol (It runs a 50lt Waeco which pulls perhaps 10-12 amps at full load at a guess)
Just got me beat why these solenoids seem to fry inside a few months with relatively light useage.
What I use is a 100amp constant duty solenoid to switch power via a 6 B&S cable to the back of my patrol (It runs a 50lt Waeco which pulls perhaps 10-12 amps at full load at a guess)
Just got me beat why these solenoids seem to fry inside a few months with relatively light useage.
It sounds like it would be the coil frying, not the contacts for the heavy power.
I would be more inclined to use a relay if you are only ever going to be putting 10-12A on it. Even a 30A horn relay should be fine; I use these for headlights all the time and they have never failed me.
But anyway a 70A hella or narva relay as suggested by mickyd would easily do it, just make sure you get a good quality one.
[Lately I have been opening up relays I buy (when I need them to be reliable) and checking their operation. Many of them have the contacts a little bit out of alignment so instead of a nice flat contact point they are only in contact on the edge, and this leads to scorching etc. It's shitty that you have to do it but it's worth it. Another issue I have seen is that the contact arm sits too far from the electromagnet, so the magnet is much less effective than it should be, meaning the spring has to be weaker than it should be. A little bit of bending and adjusting the contact arm, and shortening the spring, and a fairly pissweak relay becomes really snappy. I had to do this to fix a relay that was staying on due to a weak spring.]
Jason
I would be more inclined to use a relay if you are only ever going to be putting 10-12A on it. Even a 30A horn relay should be fine; I use these for headlights all the time and they have never failed me.
But anyway a 70A hella or narva relay as suggested by mickyd would easily do it, just make sure you get a good quality one.
[Lately I have been opening up relays I buy (when I need them to be reliable) and checking their operation. Many of them have the contacts a little bit out of alignment so instead of a nice flat contact point they are only in contact on the edge, and this leads to scorching etc. It's shitty that you have to do it but it's worth it. Another issue I have seen is that the contact arm sits too far from the electromagnet, so the magnet is much less effective than it should be, meaning the spring has to be weaker than it should be. A little bit of bending and adjusting the contact arm, and shortening the spring, and a fairly pissweak relay becomes really snappy. I had to do this to fix a relay that was staying on due to a weak spring.]
Jason
This is not legal advice.
What about simply using a heavy duty switch? You'd have less drain on your battery then too as there isn't a relay/ solenoid coil constantly energised (relays usually draw at least 0.3A; solenoids most likely even more?)
Something like this : http://www.jaycar.com.au/productView.as ... BCATID=264
If the link doesn't work go to www.jaycar.com.au and search for SK0955 - 12VDC 30 Amp switch.
Some others worth a look are : ST0574 , ST0579
Something like this : http://www.jaycar.com.au/productView.as ... BCATID=264
If the link doesn't work go to www.jaycar.com.au and search for SK0955 - 12VDC 30 Amp switch.
Some others worth a look are : ST0574 , ST0579
David
What sort of horn relay? I tried to use one for a spotlight once, and it lasted only a few hours before the coil fried. I figured it was because horn relays would only be intended for (very) intermittent operation.chimpboy wrote:Even a 30A horn relay should be fine; I use these for headlights all the time and they have never failed me.
Scott
That's a really good idea and I am embarrassed I didn't think of it as well.murcod wrote:What about simply using a heavy duty switch? You'd have less drain on your battery then too as there isn't a relay/ solenoid coil constantly energised (relays usually draw at least 0.3A; solenoids most likely even more?)
Something like this : http://www.jaycar.com.au/productView.as ... BCATID=264
If the link doesn't work go to www.jaycar.com.au and search for SK0955 - 12VDC 30 Amp switch.
Some others worth a look are : ST0574 , ST0579
This is not legal advice.
Just the standard 30A ones from jaycar... they call them horn relays but they are just ordinary relays. I've never ahd any problems with them, is that the type you tried?NJ SWB wrote:What sort of horn relay? I tried to use one for a spotlight once, and it lasted only a few hours before the coil fried. I figured it was because horn relays would only be intended for (very) intermittent operation.chimpboy wrote:Even a 30A horn relay should be fine; I use these for headlights all the time and they have never failed me.
Scott
Jason
This is not legal advice.
No, the one I tried was in a metal can, with screw terminals. Haven't seen any like it for years, they all seem to be the Hella style cube. I guess I'm just a little edgy about using anything designated "horn" relay.chimpboy wrote:Just the standard 30A ones from jaycar... they call them horn relays but they are just ordinary relays. I've never ahd any problems with them, is that the type you tried?
Jason
A simple bipolar transistor should suffice, if you get it to saturate. But you'll need a base resistor and a flywheel diode too, and then you have to assemble and mount it all somehow.mickyd555 wrote:anyone have any ideas on using an SCR or similar??
And solid state relays can fail short circuit, so you may not notice it hasn't switched off until your battery is flat.
Hella style relays are so easy.
Scott
You are right ...murcod wrote:You can buy solid state relays. I'm fairly sure Jaycar had them advertised as while back?
http://www.jaycar.com.au
CAT. NO. SY4086
Not sure if they are rated for constant duty or not but may be worth an ask?
Beats me why these howling great metal canned things keep nuking themselves
Google to the rescue- all the spec from the manufacturer.
http://www.hongfa.com/product/pdf/HFS33 ... d2a7f17a04
BTW the Jaycar one appears to be the D400D version (RHS column in specs sheet.) Some of the specs are a bit of a worry eg. max voltage drop of 2.4V!?
http://www.hongfa.com/product/pdf/HFS33 ... d2a7f17a04
BTW the Jaycar one appears to be the D400D version (RHS column in specs sheet.) Some of the specs are a bit of a worry eg. max voltage drop of 2.4V!?
David
2.4v is a bit too much drop to be useful.... I would use a standard 30A spotlight type relay however, getting crimp style terminals for those small relays to suit a howling great 6B&S cable might prove difficult.
I tested the solenoid tonight with my lamp... no voltage on the "output" side, smacked it with the handle of a screwdriver and the bastard worked. Powered up after the above percussive maintenance she was shagged again
I tested the solenoid tonight with my lamp... no voltage on the "output" side, smacked it with the handle of a screwdriver and the bastard worked. Powered up after the above percussive maintenance she was shagged again
These SSRs use a FET as the switching device, which have a "residual" resistance when they're turned on. You're looking at the 400V version, with a 0.24 ohm resistance and 10A rating - that's where the 2.4V comes from.
Look at the 30V version. There's a 100A rating with 3.5 milliohm resistance. You'll drop less than 35mV for every 100W of load. This is a much nicer proposition, but I still prefer the good old simple mechanical relay.
Slug, your solenoids have shitty contacts - throw them away. Buy one of the common Hella/Narva relays with a 30A rating and see how that goes.
Cheers,
Scott
Look at the 30V version. There's a 100A rating with 3.5 milliohm resistance. You'll drop less than 35mV for every 100W of load. This is a much nicer proposition, but I still prefer the good old simple mechanical relay.
Slug, your solenoids have shitty contacts - throw them away. Buy one of the common Hella/Narva relays with a 30A rating and see how that goes.
Cheers,
Scott
continious duty relays
we use at work coal hearse continous duty relays they are super super heavy duty bout 100amps continous with 200 burst very very good and never fail
bit $$ but well worth it
personally i would stay away with electronics too easy for complications keep it simple thats the go
my two cents any way
bit $$ but well worth it
personally i would stay away with electronics too easy for complications keep it simple thats the go
my two cents any way
continious duty relays
just a heavy duty 12v coal hearse is the go Slug
Re: continious duty relays
Nice one blokemgundle wrote:just a heavy duty 12v coal hearse is the go Slug
Once I figured the correct spelling I found the buggers via google, found the distributor in the NT and managed to snavvel one reasonably cheaply. Apparently oil filled so they dont arc and burn
Thanks again
Dan
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