Re: Current-sense AC over a threshold



On Apr 25, 5:49 am, "Arfa Daily" <arfa.da...@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Gareth Magennis" <sound.serv...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message

news:Bw5Qj.15740$244.6022@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx





"James Sweet" <jamessw...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:Kn4Qj.6369$Mm1.4242@xxxxxxxxxxx

One thing to watch out for is the hysteresis in these devices.  The
device I pointed out will turn the fan on at 30 degrees, but it won't go
off again until the temperature drops to 20.  If your room is warmer
than that it will never turn off!

Gareth.

Could build something. I recall seeing some temperature controller
circuits that used a diode as the sensing element. Should be easy to
adjust the hysteresis by selecting component values.

Well this is the range of those devices:

http://uk.farnell.com/jsp/level5/module.jsp?moduleId=en/212166.xml

Note that the opening and closing temperatures on some of them are the
wrong way around, but I reckon that the normally open switch that will
switch on the fan at 55 degrees C and turn it off at 35, part no. 1006853,
would be ideal.  55 degrees is not going to cook any electronics and it is
unlikely that room temperature is ever going to get to 35.  Case solved,
one component, no design work required, and extremely reliable.

Gareth.

If you do go down that route, I think that the sensor needs to be inside
whichever piece of your equipment generates the most heat (with the
attendant potential electrical safety issues which that may cause on a piece
of kit with a switch-mode power supply ...) because if the temperature is
going to reach 55 deg inside the glass-doored cabinet, then it's going to be
a whole bunch hotter than that inside the equipment, and trust me, that *is*
electronics 'cooking' temperature. Sort of electrolytics on toast if you
like ...  :-)

For me, your original power slave switch idea was the better option.

Arfa

Yes, I think I agree - when I first saw pictures of those thermal
switches, the first thought that occurred to me was: "Now where am I
going to bolt one of these onto my components..." A bit too invasive,
I think, at least for me, but it is a great idea otherwise.
.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Current-sense AC over a threshold
    ... go off again until the temperature drops to 20. ... switch on the fan at 55 degrees C and turn it off at 35, ... that *is* electronics 'cooking' temperature. ...
    (sci.electronics.repair)
  • Re: Current-sense AC over a threshold
    ... switch on the fan at 55 degrees C and turn it off at 35, ... and it is unlikely that room temperature is ever going to get to 35. ... that *is* electronics 'cooking' temperature. ...
    (sci.electronics.repair)
  • Re: Current-sense AC over a threshold
    ... switch on the fan at 55 degrees C and turn it off at 35, ... unlikely that room temperature is ever going to get to 35. ... electronics 'cooking' temperature. ...
    (sci.electronics.repair)
  • Re: Current-sense AC over a threshold
    ... One thing to watch out for is the hysteresis in these devices. ... off again until the temperature drops to 20. ... electronics 'cooking' temperature. ... your original power slave switch idea was the better option. ...
    (sci.electronics.repair)
  • Re: laptop fan problem
    ... prevent the fan from turning it switches off and then restarts itself as it ... If the fan spins on power up, then it isn't being controlled by a simple, mechanical, temperature switch but by electronics, eg a thermistor/diode sensor and a comparator. ...
    (uk.comp.homebuilt)

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