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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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On 16 Mar 2018 11:30:59 +0000 (GMT), Theo
wrote: T i m wrote: On 15 Mar 2018 19:37:12 +0000 (GMT), Theo wrote: I'd spend £ 2.19: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/12V-Batte.../232102823975? That looks interesting. Any idea if there are any instructions that cover the two pots Theo? No idea, but I think I saw LM358 on a picture somewhere. That suggests it is just a comparator circuit and you can work out what it does from the layout. Voltage thresholds and (therefore) any hysteresis maybe? I'd ignore the rather complicated schematic about charging they show, I had. ;-) and just understand that it has a power supply port, a comparator input port, and a set of relay contacts. So that layout is what I was suggesting re the LVD I mentioned, the load and sense paths managed separately? It wouldn't take very long to experiment with what the comparator inputs and pots do. It depends if they are raw or 'damped' like the one I was playing with. It made it quite difficult to accurately bench-set the trigger threshold (even ignoring the voltage variation because of different loads on the measure and the battery etc). Nothing stopping one pulling the cap they probably use for that whilst calibrating it though? Not to stop anyone doing a project of course, but buying one of these and repurposing it is cheaper than buying the bits. Quite! I would often rather tweak something that already exists (or even assembling a kit) than to start from scratch. The other thing I'm thinking of doing is powering the relay (or the voltage sense input) from a separate supply, rather than the generic input connections. That's because if you have a reasonable load even though the heaviest cables you can fit into those connectors you still get some voltage drop variance, if you are running different loads (as I was when doing battery capacity discharge tests). Alternatively, you could use the onboard relay to drive larger external relay(s) and so 'offload' most of the load current completely. It also depends how you want to handle the load of the relay. On my digital widget (VAC-1030A) the 30A relay takes just under 100mA, so energy consumption is about 1W continuous. Whilst not much when say discharging a battery at 5A, it might if discharging a smaller battery or over a longer time. You could do something with bistable relays, but would need to ensure there's enough energy available for the final disconnect. If you wanted to ensure the final load (inc the HD relays, if powered by the load and included in the calculations etc) was constant then you could power two, having one in both the output states (you could use two single pole c/o relays as a two pole switch or switch the +ve of a battery between charge or discharge paths)? Cheers, T i m |
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