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240volt switch used with 12volts?
any reason I cannto use this
"COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a motor? -- Vass |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
Vass wrote:
any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a motor? Can't see any problem as long as it can cope with the DC amps. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
"Vass" wrote in message . uk... any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a moto The voltage needs to be higher than the supply so a 240V switch should be fine on 12V. All switches have different ratings for AC and DC switching. In general you need to look at the maximum current it will switch to see if it will break that current without welding itself. The current will be significantly lower for DC switching. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
"dennis@home" wrote in message ... "Vass" wrote in message . uk... any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a moto The voltage needs to be higher than the supply so a 240V switch should be fine on 12V. All switches have different ratings for AC and DC switching. In general you need to look at the maximum current it will switch to see if it will break that current without welding itself. The current will be significantly lower for DC switching. cool, ta -- V |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 11:21:18 +0100, "Vass" wrote:
any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a motor? It all depends on the motor. The switch is rated at 6A AC (3A AC on inductive loads) On DC that rating will probably be less than 1 Amp. The switch capability depends upon its current handling capability and the current breaking capacity of the switch. It is the second which is much lower at AC than DC. A pneumatic switch may also have a relatively slow switching action, this will derate it more on DC. Motors are inductive loads and generate high current sparks at switch off.. You can protect the switch to some extent by fitting a snubber across it - 0,1mfd and a 47R resistor in series. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
In article ,
Vass wrote: any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a motor? How much current does the motor take? Motors are inductive devices which produce back EMF when switched off and likely to cause arcing on an AC switch - unless very small. -- *Suicidal twin kills sister by mistake. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
Vass wrote:
any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a motor? Three possible reasons. 1/. Current is excessive for the contacts. Motors on 12v take big startup currents and generate nasty flyback voltages when the current is cut.. 2/. Contacts are not designed to suppress a DC arc. AC tends to kill the arc a bit quicker, as there are periods of 'no voltage' 3/. Its a solid state switch designed for AC only..;-) |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message ... Vass wrote: any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a motor? Three possible reasons. 1/. Current is excessive for the contacts. Motors on 12v take big startup currents and generate nasty flyback voltages when the current is cut.. 2/. Contacts are not designed to suppress a DC arc. AC tends to kill the arc a bit quicker, as there are periods of 'no voltage' 3/. Its a solid state switch designed for AC only..;-) any other ideas then, I need people to casually switch on as they walk by and it run for a short while -- Vass |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 16:38:47 +0100, "Vass" wrote:
any other ideas then, I need people to casually switch on as they walk by and it run for a short while The switch you are looking at isn't electronic so it will work happily on 12V. Whether the contacts will survive depends on the motor rating - if you can let us know what it is you can get a more precise answer. If not you can always use the switch to switch a relay and the relay to control the motor. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
In message , "dennis@home"
writes "Vass" wrote in message .uk... any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a moto The voltage needs to be higher than the supply so a 240V switch should be fine on 12V. Did you mean rated voltage there, braniac ? With high current low voltage applications on mains switched, you can get a build up on the contacts which, over time, increases the contact resistance. You can also get switch burn due to the back emf stored in the motor windings on switch off -- geoff |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
In article ,
Vass wrote: "The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message ... Vass wrote: any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a motor? Three possible reasons. 1/. Current is excessive for the contacts. Motors on 12v take big startup currents and generate nasty flyback voltages when the current is cut.. 2/. Contacts are not designed to suppress a DC arc. AC tends to kill the arc a bit quicker, as there are periods of 'no voltage' 3/. Its a solid state switch designed for AC only..;-) any other ideas then, I need people to casually switch on as they walk by and it run for a short while Use the switch to operate a relay with 12 volt coil. A car 30 amp one would be ideal - the coil on those draws about 0.1 amp. They're about a fiver in Halfords - or pennies from a breaker. -- *Remember not to forget that which you do not need to know.* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
"geoff" wrote in message ... In message , "dennis@home" writes "Vass" wrote in message t.uk... any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a moto The voltage needs to be higher than the supply so a 240V switch should be fine on 12V. Did you mean rated voltage there, braniac ? I meant what I said. With high current low voltage applications on mains switched, Did you mean mains switches there, braniac? Hint.. don't start nit picking when your English is so poor. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
Vass wrote:
"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message ... Vass wrote: any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a motor? Three possible reasons. 1/. Current is excessive for the contacts. Motors on 12v take big startup currents and generate nasty flyback voltages when the current is cut.. 2/. Contacts are not designed to suppress a DC arc. AC tends to kill the arc a bit quicker, as there are periods of 'no voltage' 3/. Its a solid state switch designed for AC only..;-) any other ideas then, I need people to casually switch on as they walk by and it run for a short while Don't get me wrong, it may work. It may not work for long. It may not work at all. What you concoct to do this depends on your skills and what stuff you have to hand. Id probably do something with a CMOS chip, a resistor and a capacitor and a power transistor. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message ... Don't get me wrong, it may work. It may not work for long. It may not work at all. What you concoct to do this depends on your skills and what stuff you have to hand. skills? 50-50 stuff - zero Id probably do something with a CMOS chip, a resistor and a capacitor and a power transistor. Whoosh! Will try the push button, its only got to work for 3 weeks. -- Vass |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
In article ,
Vass wrote: Will try the push button, its only got to work for 3 weeks. If you gave details of the motor it might be possible to make an educated guess. -- *I don't work here. I'm a consultant Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Vass wrote: Will try the push button, its only got to work for 3 weeks. If you gave details of the motor it might be possible to make an educated guess. I would guess that its the wheel chair motor he is attaching to his turntable. It shouldn't take much power as its low geared and lightly loaded from what has been posted in the other thread. Probably 1-4 amps. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
"dennis@home" wrote in message ... "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Vass wrote: Will try the push button, its only got to work for 3 weeks. If you gave details of the motor it might be possible to make an educated guess. I would guess that its the wheel chair motor he is attaching to his turntable. It shouldn't take much power as its low geared and lightly loaded from what has been posted in the other thread. Probably 1-4 amps. absolutley no writing on the motor or gearbox, so I have no idea sorry should have said -- Vass |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
"dennis@home" wrote in message
... "geoff" wrote in message ... In message , "dennis@home" writes "Vass" wrote in message et.uk... any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a moto The voltage needs to be higher than the supply so a 240V switch should be fine on 12V. Did you mean rated voltage there, braniac ? I meant what I said. With high current low voltage applications on mains switched, Did you mean mains switches there, braniac? Hint.. don't start nit picking when your English is so poor. To be fair, your post was ambiguous, I assume you meant "The RATED voltage OF THE SWITCH needs to be higher than the supply so a 240V switch should be fine on 12V."? |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
"Toby" wrote in message ... "dennis@home" wrote in message ... "geoff" wrote in message ... In message , "dennis@home" writes "Vass" wrote in message news:zMGdnT33l4qD2PnXnZ2dnUVZ8jOdnZ2d@eclipse. net.uk... any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a moto The voltage needs to be higher than the supply so a 240V switch should be fine on 12V. Did you mean rated voltage there, braniac ? I meant what I said. With high current low voltage applications on mains switched, Did you mean mains switches there, braniac? Hint.. don't start nit picking when your English is so poor. To be fair, your post was ambiguous, I assume you meant "The RATED voltage OF THE SWITCH needs to be higher than the supply so a 240V switch should be fine on 12V."? It wouldn't have made much sense in another random context. However geoff is a pita that just likes to try and score points even though he isn't very good at it. As you can see he understood what I posted but feels the need to try and make out he knows more. I don't know why he does this but its his problem to work on. I don't expect him to take the hint either as its too subtle and he won't understand it. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
On Tue, 21 Jul 2009 09:09:06 +0100, "dennis@home"
wrote: It shouldn't take much power as its low geared and lightly loaded from what has been posted in the other thread. Probably 1-4 amps. Wheelchair motors loaded can draw 20 -40 amps, they are usually rated at 250W continuous and 500W peak. Although they won't draw anything like this in the application contemplated they also have horrible switching spikes. If it is a wheelchair motor I'd be inclined to put a relay on the switch (a very simple job) and switch the motor on the relay contacts. If you salvage (or buy) a "standard" Bosch type car relay the contacts will be numbered. Connect relay contact 86 to bty negative. Connect one terminal of the pneumatic switch to bty positive. Connect the other terminal of the pneumatic switch to relay contact 85 Connect relay contact 87 to battery positive. Connect the motor negative to battery negative. Connect motor positive to relay contact 30. These relays all use standard Lucar blade connectors. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
"Peter Parry" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Jul 2009 09:09:06 +0100, "dennis@home" wrote: It shouldn't take much power as its low geared and lightly loaded from what has been posted in the other thread. Probably 1-4 amps. Wheelchair motors loaded can draw 20 -40 amps, they are usually rated at 250W continuous and 500W peak. Although they won't draw anything like this in the application contemplated they also have horrible switching spikes. ooerrr, do I run the risk of electrocuting Joe Public? -- Vass |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
Vass wrote:
Wheelchair motors loaded can draw 20 -40 amps, they are usually rated at 250W continuous and 500W peak. Although they won't draw anything like this in the application contemplated they also have horrible switching spikes. ooerrr, do I run the risk of electrocuting Joe Public? No. OK, long answer: 12v continuous isn't anywhere near enough to even feel - unless Joe is keen on chewing the wires - and any back EMF switching spikes won't have enough power to give you more than a tingle. Won't even hurt. Andy |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
In message , "dennis@home"
writes "Toby" wrote in message ... "dennis@home" wrote in message ... "geoff" wrote in message ... In message , "dennis@home" writes "Vass" wrote in message news:zMGdnT33l4qD2PnXnZ2dnUVZ8jOdnZ2d@eclipse .net.uk... any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a moto The voltage needs to be higher than the supply so a 240V switch should be fine on 12V. Did you mean rated voltage there, braniac ? I meant what I said. With high current low voltage applications on mains switched, Did you mean mains switches there, braniac? Hint.. don't start nit picking when your English is so poor. To be fair, your post was ambiguous, I assume you meant "The RATED voltage OF THE SWITCH needs to be higher than the supply so a 240V switch should be fine on 12V."? It wouldn't have made much sense in another random context. However geoff is a pita that just likes to try and score points even though he isn't very good at it. As you can see he understood what I posted but feels the need to try and make out he knows more. I don't know why he does this but its his problem to work on. I don't expect him to take the hint either as its too subtle and he won't understand it. Dennis, dennis, dennis - you're just a **** -- geoff |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
"geoff" wrote in message ... Dennis, dennis, dennis - you're just a **** You are just upset because I hate really stupid people and poor drivers and you fall into both categories. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
On Tue, 21 Jul 2009 16:52:38 +0100, "Vass" wrote:
ooerrr, do I run the risk of electrocuting Joe Public? No - but you do need to take care that the drive shaft is reasonably protected, a wheelchair motor (if that is what you are using) has a lot of torque and is more than powerful enough to ingest small children who get clothes entangled in it. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
In message , "dennis@home"
writes "geoff" wrote in message ... Dennis, dennis, dennis - you're just a **** You are just upset because I hate really stupid people and poor drivers and you fall into both categories. I'm not upset, neither am I stupid, or a poor driver You're just a **** -- geoff |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
In message , geoff
writes In message , "dennis@home" writes "geoff" wrote in message ... Dennis, dennis, dennis - you're just a **** You are just upset because I hate really stupid people and poor drivers and you fall into both categories. I'm not upset, neither am I stupid, or a poor driver You're just a **** At least a ****'s useful -- Kenny |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
Vass wrote:
"Peter Parry" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Jul 2009 09:09:06 +0100, "dennis@home" wrote: It shouldn't take much power as its low geared and lightly loaded from what has been posted in the other thread. Probably 1-4 amps. Wheelchair motors loaded can draw 20 -40 amps, they are usually rated at 250W continuous and 500W peak. Although they won't draw anything like this in the application contemplated they also have horrible switching spikes. ooerrr, do I run the risk of electrocuting Joe Public? No. You might at the worst give someone a nasty belt though. A stalled electric motor is a bit like a car ignition coil primary. You can get a couple of hundred volts spike if you break the circuit. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
Andy Champ wrote:
Vass wrote: Wheelchair motors loaded can draw 20 -40 amps, they are usually rated at 250W continuous and 500W peak. Although they won't draw anything like this in the application contemplated they also have horrible switching spikes. ooerrr, do I run the risk of electrocuting Joe Public? No. OK, long answer: 12v continuous isn't anywhere near enough to even feel - unless Joe is keen on chewing the wires - and any back EMF switching spikes won't have enough power to give you more than a tingle. Won't even hurt. I beg to differ, having played with a Meccano motor and a train transformer in my youth. The back emf is several hundred volts. A LOT more than a tingle. I jumped across te bedroom and banged my knee. Ok its not quite in the 'hold that plug while I test the spark on that 2-stroke' league, but its still a jolt to be reckoned with.. Andy |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
dennis@home wrote:
"geoff" wrote in message ... Dennis, dennis, dennis - you're just a **** You are just upset because I hate really stupid people and poor drivers and you fall into both categories. Ah, no, That's YOU dennis. |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
geoff wrote:
In message , "dennis@home" writes "geoff" wrote in message ... Dennis, dennis, dennis - you're just a **** You are just upset because I hate really stupid people and poor drivers and you fall into both categories. I'm not upset, neither am I stupid, or a poor driver You're just a **** A teflon coated one.... -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
"Peter Parry" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Jul 2009 16:52:38 +0100, "Vass" wrote: ooerrr, do I run the risk of electrocuting Joe Public? No - but you do need to take care that the drive shaft is reasonably protected, a wheelchair motor (if that is what you are using) has a lot of torque and is more than powerful enough to ingest small children who get clothes entangled in it. thanks for concern, but button is over the fence, the turntable is not accessible to anyone but me -- Vass |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
In message , The Natural Philosopher
writes ooerrr, do I run the risk of electrocuting Joe Public? No. You might at the worst give someone a nasty belt though. A stalled electric motor is a bit like a car ignition coil primary. You can get a couple of hundred volts spike if you break the circuit. But surely the switch will be built in such a way that it's at least difficult to touch the live parts? As long as the OP takes care to enclose the wiring and switch terminals I don't think he's got much to worry about and wouldn't the back emf from an interrupted circuit on a spinning motor be higher (seems to make sense but I'm wondering)? -- Clint Sharp |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
In message , Kenny writes
In message , geoff writes In message , "dennis@home" writes "geoff" wrote in message ... Dennis, dennis, dennis - you're just a **** You are just upset because I hate really stupid people and poor drivers and you fall into both categories. I'm not upset, neither am I stupid, or a poor driver You're just a **** At least a ****'s useful Hmm, yes - maybe he was right about my use of English, I need a more derogatory term, but even a pile of steaming **** is useful as fertilizer. -- geoff |
240volt switch used with 12volts?
On Jul 20, 8:39*am, "dennis@home"
wrote: "Vass" wrote in message . uk... any reason I cannto use this "COLUMBUS 400 PNEUMATIC TIME DELAY SWITCH" on a 12volt battery to a moto The voltage needs to be higher than the supply so a 240V switch should be fine on 12V. All switches have different ratings for AC and DC switching. In general you need to look at the maximum current it will switch to see if it will break that current without welding itself. The current will be significantly lower for DC switching. Ahem! Do you mean to say "The current 'rating' of the switch will be lower if used to switch off/on DC amps. Especially so since the DC amps are via a motor with inductive windings". |
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