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James Sweet James Sweet is offline
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Default AC Circuit Problem (voltage - resistor)

wrote:
I have an AC circuit problem I need help with. At my mother's
boyfriend's house he has a furnace with air conditioner/heat pump
attached. When he bought the house natural gas prices were lower then
electricity and he had the heat pump disconnected but there still is a
flow shutoff valve attached to the air conditioner/heat pump that is
operated by a solenoid. The solenoid is normally energized but the
voltage suppied to it exceeds the normal recommended operating voltage
and gets very hot. The unit is an ALCO Controls, Coil Type DMG, 24
volts, 7 watts, 50 - 60 Hz. The computer in the furnace is supplying 26
to 28 volts.

What I would like to do is attach a power resistor to reduce the
voltage. The assumption I would like to make is the highest voltage to
the solenoid would be 30 volts. The solenoid will activate at as low of
a voltage as 17 volts. I would like to add a resistor that will take
the 30 volts and reduce the voltage to 24 volts.

How do I go about computing the value for the resistor? Is there a
better way of going about this than using a resistor?

FYI: The reason the voltage is so high is the line voltage is 133 to
138 volts. It is then stepped down by a transformer. The secondary
output of the transformer is the passed through a relay, control by a
computer, to the solenoid.

Thanks In Adavnce,
Derek



Just wire it up without a resistor, 28 volts is fine for a 24 volt
nominal solenoid.