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Does this device exist?
My brother's wife wants a small water heater under the kitchen
sink. Not an instant hot water type but one that holds a couple gallons. There is a receptacle under the sink but it also powers the diswasher. I am concerned that if both the dishwasher and the water heater are on at the same time it will pop the breaker. I am looking for a device that will allow the water heater to be on until the diswasher starts drawing a certain amount of current, at which point the power to the heater would be turned off. The power to the dishwasher needs to be on all the time, only the heater should be switched. A switch for the water heater cannot be added. The solution needs to be plug and play and require no input from anyone using the diswasher. It seems to me that something like this must be available but I can't think of what it would be called and my brain is apparently too fuzzy this morning to get google to come up with something for me. I am willing to build the device myself if need be but a purchased product would be better. Thanks, Eric |
Does this device exist?
On Monday, 30 September 2019 16:47:15 UTC+1, wrote:
My brother's wife wants a small water heater under the kitchen sink. Not an instant hot water type but one that holds a couple gallons. There is a receptacle under the sink but it also powers the diswasher. I am concerned that if both the dishwasher and the water heater are on at the same time it will pop the breaker. I am looking for a device that will allow the water heater to be on until the diswasher starts drawing a certain amount of current, at which point the power to the heater would be turned off. The power to the dishwasher needs to be on all the time, only the heater should be switched. A switch for the water heater cannot be added. The solution needs to be plug and play and require no input from anyone using the diswasher. It seems to me that something like this must be available but I can't think of what it would be called and my brain is apparently too fuzzy this morning to get google to come up with something for me. I am willing to build the device myself if need be but a purchased product would be better. Thanks, Eric A relay is all you need. Remove the coil & rewind with a small number of turns of thick wire. Now when enough current goes to the dishwasher, the water heater is turned off. I'd use 2 relays the same, one to experiment, the 2nd for the final unit. NT |
Does this device exist?
https://www.bosch-thermotechnology.u..._Tanks_(1).pdf
It is called a "Point-of-Use" water heater. Now, some Basic Electricity 100: The POU *STORAGE* water heater draws twelve (12) amps at rated nameplate. The typical dishwasher with an exposed internal heating element is rated at eleven (12) amps. We keep a Bosch that does not have an exposed element but does have an on-board flash heater, and so also uses 12 A. There are two solutions that come immediately to mind. Use a at true instant-hot for your sink water - these devices, typically, run under seven (7) amps. Then, even if you feed the dishwasher from the same line, you would be in no danger of popping a 20 A breaker - the minimum that should be in a kitchen in any case. Or, run a second line directly to the dishwasher. Which is the way it should be done in any case. Note that instant-hot water heaters will give you all the hand-use water you want, and nicely support a dishwasher such as it will require minimal use of its on-board heater. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
Does this device exist?
On Mon, 30 Sep 2019 08:48:15 -0700, etpm wrote:
My brother's wife wants a small water heater under the kitchen sink. Not an instant hot water type but one that holds a couple gallons. There is a receptacle under the sink but it also powers the diswasher. I am concerned that if both the dishwasher and the water heater are on at the same time it will pop the breaker. I am looking for a device that will allow the water heater to be on until the diswasher starts drawing a certain amount of current, at which point the power to the heater would be turned off. The power to the dishwasher needs to be on all the time, only the heater should be switched. A switch for the water heater cannot be added. The solution needs to be plug and play and require no input from anyone using the diswasher. It seems to me that something like this must be available but I can't think of what it would be called and my brain is apparently too fuzzy this morning to get google to come up with something for me. I am willing to build the device myself if need be but a purchased product would be better. Thanks, Eric If you are in North America, and that is a "duplex" receptacle, its likeley to be an "appliance" outlet, that is, each side wired to a separate breaker. Check the labelling in the box to find out, or measure the voltage between the two "hot" connectors. 230V means you're good to go. |
Does this device exist?
On Monday, September 30, 2019 at 12:00:14 PM UTC-4, wrote:
A relay is all you need. Remove the coil & rewind with a small number of turns of thick wire. Now when enough current goes to the dishwasher, the water heater is turned off. I'd use 2 relays the same, one to experiment, the 2nd for the final unit. The good folk in Quincy, MA are recoiling in horror! DO NOT EVEN CONSIDER this option, most especially if you have any other living things in your household. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
Does this device exist?
On Mon, 30 Sep 2019 16:27:16 -0000 (UTC), Wond
wrote: On Mon, 30 Sep 2019 08:48:15 -0700, etpm wrote: My brother's wife wants a small water heater under the kitchen sink. Not an instant hot water type but one that holds a couple gallons. There is a receptacle under the sink but it also powers the diswasher. I am concerned that if both the dishwasher and the water heater are on at the same time it will pop the breaker. I am looking for a device that will allow the water heater to be on until the diswasher starts drawing a certain amount of current, at which point the power to the heater would be turned off. The power to the dishwasher needs to be on all the time, only the heater should be switched. A switch for the water heater cannot be added. The solution needs to be plug and play and require no input from anyone using the diswasher. It seems to me that something like this must be available but I can't think of what it would be called and my brain is apparently too fuzzy this morning to get google to come up with something for me. I am willing to build the device myself if need be but a purchased product would be better. Thanks, Eric If you are in North America, and that is a "duplex" receptacle, its likeley to be an "appliance" outlet, that is, each side wired to a separate breaker. Check the labelling in the box to find out, or measure the voltage between the two "hot" connectors. 230V means you're good to go. You may be correct about that being on two circuits. I have my doubts because of the age of the house and because of other flaky things found in his house, but since the wiring SHOULD have been inspected, maybe you are correct. I'll have my brother check. Eric |
Does this device exist?
On Mon, 30 Sep 2019 09:26:17 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: https://www.bosch-thermotechnology.u..._Tanks_(1).pdf It is called a "Point-of-Use" water heater. Now, some Basic Electricity 100: The POU *STORAGE* water heater draws twelve (12) amps at rated nameplate. The typical dishwasher with an exposed internal heating element is rated at eleven (12) amps. We keep a Bosch that does not have an exposed element but does have an on-board flash heater, and so also uses 12 A. There are two solutions that come immediately to mind. Use a at true instant-hot for your sink water - these devices, typically, run under seven (7) amps. Then, even if you feed the dishwasher from the same line, you would be in no danger of popping a 20 A breaker - the minimum that should be in a kitchen in any case. Or, run a second line directly to the dishwasher. Which is the way it should be done in any case. Note that instant-hot water heaters will give you all the hand-use water you want, and nicely support a dishwasher such as it will require minimal use of its on-board heater. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA Point of use water heaters don't provide enough hot water to wash a load of dishes. But a small water heater will. I use one in my shop. My brother is not gonna add another line because of the expense. I can buy a delay relay that is made for shop vacuum systems that is plug and play, but these devices only delay the turning on by 7 seconds of a load. I need to keep ne load off while the other is on. Eric |
Does this device exist?
On Monday, 30 September 2019 17:26:21 UTC+1, wrote:
https://www.bosch-thermotechnology.u..._Tanks_(1).pdf It is called a "Point-of-Use" water heater. Now, some Basic Electricity 100: The POU *STORAGE* water heater draws twelve (12) amps at rated nameplate. The typical dishwasher with an exposed internal heating element is rated at eleven (12) amps. We keep a Bosch that does not have an exposed element but does have an on-board flash heater, and so also uses 12 A. There are two solutions that come immediately to mind. Use a at true instant-hot for your sink water - these devices, typically, run under seven (7) amps. Then, even if you feed the dishwasher from the same line, you would be in no danger of popping a 20 A breaker - the minimum that should be in a kitchen in any case. Or, run a second line directly to the dishwasher. Which is the way it should be done in any case. Note that instant-hot water heaters will give you all the hand-use water you want, and nicely support a dishwasher such as it will require minimal use of its on-board heater. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA An instant water heater that only takes 7A, whether at 110 or 240v, is not going to produce a lot of hot water. Water heating is energy intensive. And no dishwasher here is designed to support hot water intake. NT |
Does this device exist?
On Monday, 30 September 2019 17:30:12 UTC+1, wrote:
On Monday, September 30, 2019 at 12:00:14 PM UTC-4, tabby wrote: A relay is all you need. Remove the coil & rewind with a small number of turns of thick wire. Now when enough current goes to the dishwasher, the water heater is turned off. I'd use 2 relays the same, one to experiment, the 2nd for the final unit. The good folk in Quincy, MA are recoiling in horror! DO NOT EVEN CONSIDER this option, most especially if you have any other living things in your household. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA I see you offer zero basis for this claim. It's just a basic demand management unit. |
Does this device exist?
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Does this device exist?
On Monday, 30 September 2019 21:53:42 UTC+1, Ralph Mowery wrote:
In article , tabbypurr says... And no dishwasher here is designed to support hot water intake. My dishwasher said to hook it to the hot water line. in what country? |
Does this device exist?
In article ,
says... My dishwasher said to hook it to the hot water line. in what country? In the good old USA . https://www.whirlpool.com/content/da...608/installati on-instructions-W10806908-RevC.pdf Copy and paste from online manual. WATER SUPPLY REQUIREMENTS ? This dishwasher has a water heating feature and also requires a connection to a hot water supply line. ? A hot water line with 20 to 120 psi (138 to 862 kPa) water pressure can be verified by a licensed plumber. ? 120°F (49°C) water at dishwasher ? |
Does this device exist?
On Monday, 30 September 2019 22:39:31 UTC+1, Ralph Mowery wrote:
In article , tabbypurr says... My dishwasher said to hook it to the hot water line. in what country? In the good old USA . US washing appliances are quite different to ours. Why I don't know. NT |
Does this device exist?
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Does this device exist?
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Does this device exist?
On Monday, September 30, 2019 at 5:08:11 PM UTC-7, Fox's Mercantile wrote:
On 9/30/19 3:48 PM, wrote: And no dishwasher here is designed to support hot water intake. The breadth of your ignorance never fails to amaze me. My dishwasher in the kitchen connect to the hot ware line. And it will NOT run with cold water. My dishwasher has internal heat for the final rinse (to meet a NSF hot-water final rinse temperature requirement). It worked fine, both washing and rinsing, on cold water (when my water heater was on vacation...) though it is intended to be plumbed into the ho****er line. During the water heater replacement, I removed about 20 feet of rusty iron pipe, replumbed with copper, and the flow is a lot better now. |
Does this device exist?
On 9/30/2019 12:27 PM, Wond wrote:
On Mon, 30 Sep 2019 08:48:15 -0700, etpm wrote: My brother's wife wants a small water heater under the kitchen sink. Not an instant hot water type but one that holds a couple gallons. There is a receptacle under the sink but it also powers the diswasher. I am concerned that if both the dishwasher and the water heater are on at the same time it will pop the breaker. I am looking for a device that will allow the water heater to be on until the diswasher starts drawing a certain amount of current, at which point the power to the heater would be turned off. The power to the dishwasher needs to be on all the time, only the heater should be switched. A switch for the water heater cannot be added. The solution needs to be plug and play and require no input from anyone using the diswasher. It seems to me that something like this must be available but I can't think of what it would be called and my brain is apparently too fuzzy this morning to get google to come up with something for me. I am willing to build the device myself if need be but a purchased product would be better. Thanks, Eric If you are in North America, and that is a "duplex" receptacle, its likeley to be an "appliance" outlet, that is, each side wired to a separate breaker. Check the labelling in the box to find out, or measure the voltage between the two "hot" connectors. 230V means you're good to go. Assuming the wiring is correct: In the USA a standard duplex receptacle is wired for 120 volts. A receptacle wired for 230 (240) will not be a duplex. Ed |
Does this device exist?
On Monday, September 30, 2019 at 4:40:22 PM UTC-4, wrote:
Point of use water heaters don't provide enough hot water to wash a load of dishes. Eric: a) Unless you are using a dishwasher from the POS Manufacturing Company, Hangsen, China, it *DOES NOT NEED* very hot water to operate. The on-board heater (NSF requirement) will manage the difference between incoming water temperature and that necessary to clean the dishes. b) And, if you are using a dishwasher made in the last 3 - 5 years, and from a reputable manufacturer, it will use very little water relative to hand-washing. So, if a POU device will be adequate for doing dishes in the sink, it will be equally adequate to supply a dishwasher. As a point of comparison, our 10-year old Bosch (made in Tennessee) uses less than 4 gallons of water in the "Scrub-Paint-From-a-Board" mode, and about 0.870 KW of energy. Nor do we have to pre-wash the dishes. Anything smaller than cherry and softer than a hard nut will be handled. Advanced for its day, commonplace now. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
Does this device exist?
On Monday, September 30, 2019 at 4:48:09 PM UTC-4, wrote:
An instant water heater that only takes 7A, whether at 110 or 240v, is not going to produce a lot of hot water. Water heating is energy intensive. And no dishwasher here is designed to support hot water intake. Another hip-shot going wild. a) The ECOSmart line here in the USA produces a 7A under-sink unit that produces 1.3 GPM (4.92 LPM) at a 50-degree F (10 C) rise. The idea is not to scald a user (110 F and up). b) Dishwashers rated by the NSF (National Sanitation Foundation) will do the final rinse for a residential dishwasher at 165 F (74 C) minimum. Some go to 180 F as an option. Yes, they are to be required to be connected to the hot water line, if only to reduce stress on the internal heater. http://www.nsf.org/consumer-resource...es/dishwashers Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
Does this device exist?
On Monday, September 30, 2019 at 4:49:08 PM UTC-4, wrote:
I see you offer zero basis for this claim. It's just a basic demand management unit. Nope, no basis whatsoever, other than the National Electrical Code as published by the NFPA out of Quincy, MA. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
Does this device exist?
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Does this device exist?
On Tuesday, October 1, 2019 at 7:59:16 AM UTC-4, Bob Engelhardt wrote:
Well, it may be a very bad idea, but the NEC doesn't cover stuff plugged into receptacles, as this dishwasher is. It does cover kludged relays that control line-voltage appliances. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
Does this device exist?
On Tue, 1 Oct 2019 04:18:49 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Monday, September 30, 2019 at 4:40:22 PM UTC-4, wrote: Point of use water heaters don't provide enough hot water to wash a load of dishes. Eric: a) Unless you are using a dishwasher from the POS Manufacturing Company, Hangsen, China, it *DOES NOT NEED* very hot water to operate. The on-board heater (NSF requirement) will manage the difference between incoming water temperature and that necessary to clean the dishes. b) And, if you are using a dishwasher made in the last 3 - 5 years, and from a reputable manufacturer, it will use very little water relative to hand-washing. So, if a POU device will be adequate for doing dishes in the sink, it will be equally adequate to supply a dishwasher. As a point of comparison, our 10-year old Bosch (made in Tennessee) uses less than 4 gallons of water in the "Scrub-Paint-From-a-Board" mode, and about 0.870 KW of energy. Nor do we have to pre-wash the dishes. Anything smaller than cherry and softer than a hard nut will be handled. Advanced for its day, commonplace now. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA Once again I fail to make myself clear. The water heater is for hand washing dishes, not the diswasher. That's why the heater can be off when the dishwasher is running. In my brother's house dishes are washed more by hand than by dishwasher but bioth get used. Eric |
Does this device exist?
On Tuesday, October 1, 2019 at 10:21:31 AM UTC-4, wrote:
Once again I fail to make myself clear. The water heater is for hand washing dishes, not the diswasher. That's why the heater can be off when the dishwasher is running. In my brother's house dishes are washed more by hand than by dishwasher but bioth get used. Eric Then, even the smallest POU heater will be fine for dishes, as long as the user does not leave it on "BLAST". Keep in mind that the average handwash for two users, one meal, is about 2.75 gallons (10.5 liters) of water. Modern dishwashers use, typically, less than a gallon (2.75 liters). You are over-complicating a rather simple problem. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
Does this device exist?
On Tuesday, October 1, 2019 at 10:21:31 AM UTC-4, wrote:
Once again I fail to make myself clear. The water heater is for hand washing dishes, not the diswasher. That's why the heater can be off when the dishwasher is running. In my brother's house dishes are washed more by hand than by dishwasher but bioth get used. Eric An on-demand system would be perfect for him and take up much less space. Why doesn't your brother want an instant demand heater? If it's electrical draw that exceeds the wiring, I'd just snake in new wiring and a new breaker and use the on demand heater. |
Does this device exist?
On Tue, 01 Oct 2019 01:46:45 -0400, ehsjr wrote:
On 9/30/2019 12:27 PM, Wond wrote: On Mon, 30 Sep 2019 08:48:15 -0700, etpm wrote: My brother's wife wants a small water heater under the kitchen sink. Not an instant hot water type but one that holds a couple gallons. There is a receptacle under the sink but it also powers the diswasher. I am concerned that if both the dishwasher and the water heater are on at the same time it will pop the breaker. I am looking for a device that will allow the water heater to be on until the diswasher starts drawing a certain amount of current, at which point the power to the heater would be turned off. The power to the dishwasher needs to be on all the time, only the heater should be switched. A switch for the water heater cannot be added. The solution needs to be plug and play and require no input from anyone using the diswasher. It seems to me that something like this must be available but I can't think of what it would be called and my brain is apparently too fuzzy this morning to get google to come up with something for me. I am willing to build the device myself if need be but a purchased product would be better. Thanks, Eric If you are in North America, and that is a "duplex" receptacle, its likeley to be an "appliance" outlet, that is, each side wired to a separate breaker. Check the labelling in the box to find out, or measure the voltage between the two "hot" connectors. 230V means you're good to go. Assuming the wiring is correct: In the USA a standard duplex receptacle is wired for 120 volts. A receptacle wired for 230 (240) will not be a duplex. Ed Where I am, the hardware is the same. The installer simply breaks out the connector tab between the 'hots'. |
Does this device exist?
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Does this device exist?
On Tue, 1 Oct 2019 07:47:32 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Tuesday, October 1, 2019 at 10:21:31 AM UTC-4, wrote: Once again I fail to make myself clear. The water heater is for hand washing dishes, not the diswasher. That's why the heater can be off when the dishwasher is running. In my brother's house dishes are washed more by hand than by dishwasher but bioth get used. Eric Then, even the smallest POU heater will be fine for dishes, as long as the user does not leave it on "BLAST". Keep in mind that the average handwash for two users, one meal, is about 2.75 gallons (10.5 liters) of water. Modern dishwashers use, typically, less than a gallon (2.75 liters). You are over-complicating a rather simple problem. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA Actually, I'm not. They tried a small instant hot heater. It did not provide enough hot water. They saw the small water heater I use in my shop and they think it is perfect. It just draws too much current to be used at the same time a dishwasher is heating. Eric |
Does this device exist?
On Tue, 1 Oct 2019 07:49:46 -0700 (PDT), John-Del
wrote: On Tuesday, October 1, 2019 at 10:21:31 AM UTC-4, wrote: Once again I fail to make myself clear. The water heater is for hand washing dishes, not the diswasher. That's why the heater can be off when the dishwasher is running. In my brother's house dishes are washed more by hand than by dishwasher but bioth get used. Eric An on-demand system would be perfect for him and take up much less space. Why doesn't your brother want an instant demand heater? If it's electrical draw that exceeds the wiring, I'd just snake in new wiring and a new breaker and use the on demand heater. Sheesh! He is not gonna run a new wire. I already said that. It is not an easy task. Power would need to come down from the attic. Eric |
Does this device exist?
On Tuesday, October 1, 2019 at 3:19:33 PM UTC-4, wrote:
Actually, I'm not. They tried a small instant hot heater. It did not provide enough hot water. They saw the small water heater I use in my shop and they think it is perfect. It just draws too much current to be used at the same time a dishwasher is heating. The solution is, then, contained in how you stated the problem. a) A tankless POU water heater uses current only when flowing. b) A dishwasher wants hot water to feed it, but it does not require it to function properly. NSF regulations see to that. c) If your brother is able to restrain himself to not running hot water to the sink except when the dishwasher is OFF, just go with a larger tankless device. They come (in the US) up to 18 A at 120 V. Under your sink, run the tankless heater to a separate dispenser - some even come that way. Use the regular hot water line to feed the dishwasher, and the cold line to feed the sink. Note that separate dispenser devices will make water hot enough for tea or instant coffee at one setting, then dial back to sub-scalding temperatures for washing use. Handy little things. Ultron comes to mind as a brand name. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
Does this device exist?
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Does this device exist?
On Monday, September 30, 2019 at 11:47:15 AM UTC-4, wrote:
My brother's wife wants a small water heater under the kitchen sink. Not an instant hot water type but one that holds a couple gallons. There is a receptacle under the sink but it also powers the diswasher. I am concerned that if both the dishwasher and the water heater are on at the same time it will pop the breaker. I am looking for a device that will allow the water heater to be on until the diswasher starts drawing a certain amount of current, at which point the power to the heater would be turned off. The power to the dishwasher needs to be on all the time, only the heater should be switched. A switch for the water heater cannot be added. The solution needs to be plug and play and require no input from anyone using the diswasher. It seems to me that something like this must be available but I can't think of what it would be called and my brain is apparently too fuzzy this morning to get google to come up with something for me. I am willing to build the device myself if need be but a purchased product would be better. Thanks, Eric Googling "small water heater 120V" I got a bunch of stuff, here's a 6 gallon one. https://www.supplyhouse.com/AO-Smith...c-Water-Heater Is that what you want? George H. |
Does this device exist?
On Tuesday, 1 October 2019 13:03:58 UTC+1, wrote:
On Tuesday, October 1, 2019 at 7:59:16 AM UTC-4, Bob Engelhardt wrote: Well, it may be a very bad idea, but the NEC doesn't cover stuff plugged into receptacles, as this dishwasher is. It does cover kludged relays that control line-voltage appliances. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA such demand management is perfectly legal here. |
Does this device exist?
On Wednesday, October 2, 2019 at 6:58:54 AM UTC-4, wrote:
such demand management is perfectly legal here. The US has three levels of "management" for electrical (and other) devices: a) The National Electrical Code (NEC): This regulates hard-wired systems and switchgear, and how peripheral devices are connected to the system - such as light fixtures and other devices not plugged in. A hard-wired relay would be considered "switchgear" and therefore covered. b) UL (Underwriters Laboratory) - this is a 'family' of such bodies, of which UL is the most prevalent: UL regulates those devices that connect to the system above, and has to do with (among many other things) grounding, electrical safety, loading, and so forth. This applies to stand-alone (complete) devices. Note that such devices are "LISTED", not "approved". c) UR (Recognized): This applies to individual components within a system - such as a relay in a control, or similar. That part does not stand alone. but may be replaceable. So, if one has a UL device of several parts, one fails, then that part *must* be replaced with a UR part to retain the UL listing. Why it matters: There is this funny thing called "insurance". And if one has property insurance, and reads the fine print, it will refer to things meeting code and being properly inspected and so forth. It will also refer to 'connected devices' or any number of other words for whatever one has to plug into the wall as being "listed". Should that hand-made relay you are referring to cause a fire and cause damage such that the property owner makes a claim - and should the insurance inspector (and there will be one) determine that the cause was this unlisted/unrecognized device - OOPS! Either the Company will not pay, or if it does, it will then immediately cancel the policy. And the property owner will be quite challenged to get insurance in the future at any reasonable cost. Nothing that was done was "illegal". And Code Violations are not "illegal". Just stupid. Something you continue not to understand. And the advice you give continues to suffer for it. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
Does this device exist?
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Does this device exist?
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Does this device exist?
On Wednesday, October 2, 2019 at 8:47:23 AM UTC-4, Wolfgang Allinger wrote:
No, it wouldn't work. Normal relays working with DC coils. You need a very special relay designed for AC coils. Very rare and likely expensive. Not rare. But certainly expensive, by a factor of 3 to 5. The difference, at the simplest level, is that the AC-coil relay has two coils (transformer) such that the second is producing current as the first is 'collapsing', thereby holding the contactor in place instead of "chattering". That is, as stated, the simplest description of a not-simple configuration - hence the cost. https://www.techwalla.com/articles/d...-dc-relay-coil Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
Does this device exist?
In article ,
says... No, it wouldn't work. Normal relays working with DC coils. You need a very special relay designed for AC coils. Very rare and likely expensive. Not rare. But certainly expensive, by a factor of 3 to 5. The difference, at the simplest level, is that the AC-coil relay has two coils (transformer) such that the second is producing current as the first is 'collapsing', thereby holding the contactor in place instead of "chattering". That is, as stated, the simplest description of a not-simple configuration - hence the cost. https://www.techwalla.com/articles/d...-dc-relay-coil Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA BS They are not rare or is the price that much different. For example a plug in relay that is almost identical except for the coil voltage and current As listed in a Mouser catalog. KRPA-11AG-120 $ 22 120 Volt AC coil 10 amp contacts KRPA-11DG-24 $ 16 24 Volt DC coil 10 amp contacts. That so called second coil is really just a thick piece of copper at the top of the coil. Large AC contactors often have similar pieces of copper on the laminations. I worked in a plant that had hundreds if not thousands of relays similar to those. Part were AC coils and part were DC coils. Now solid state 'relays' are often used in switching AC circuits off and on. We used many of those also. |
Does this device exist?
On Tuesday, October 1, 2019 at 3:22:56 PM UTC-4, wrote:
On Tue, 1 Oct 2019 07:49:46 -0700 (PDT), John-Del wrote: On Tuesday, October 1, 2019 at 10:21:31 AM UTC-4, wrote: Once again I fail to make myself clear. The water heater is for hand washing dishes, not the diswasher. That's why the heater can be off when the dishwasher is running. In my brother's house dishes are washed more by hand than by dishwasher but bioth get used. Eric An on-demand system would be perfect for him and take up much less space. Why doesn't your brother want an instant demand heater? If it's electrical draw that exceeds the wiring, I'd just snake in new wiring and a new breaker and use the on demand heater. Sheesh! He is not gonna run a new wire. I already said that. It is not an easy task. Power would need to come down from the attic. Eric Don't ya just love people who change the invariants of a problem to 'solve' it? Is there a reason that the hot water heater+tank needs to be under the sink? Would it be possible to mount the heater under the floor under the sink and run a pipe up to the sink? Might allow wiring in a space that is more accessible. |
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