Ok, thanks for your concern and advice. Does this capture what you mean? Will this work?
Many thanks
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Nope... Amperage is best measured on the output side so you know exactly how much amperage is going to the element... Same for voltage... At least that's how I measure voltage and amperage...varocketry wrote:Sambedded:
Ok, thanks for your concern and advice. Does this capture what you mean? Will this work?
Many thanks![]()
Yes. As about amperage metering - it's absolutely doesn't matter if you put input or output wire through that transformer ring. In both cases it will show you same data.varocketry wrote:Sambedded:
Ok, thanks for your concern and advice. Does this capture what you mean? Will this work?
Many thanks![]()
Either Triac will do the job just fine as both are rated substantially higher than their duty cycle will demand...Messina wrote:This has been asked before but I dnt think it was answered compleatly. To what effect will replacing the 40amp 600V Triac with a 600V 25amp triac? I realize the larger the more durable. "Bigger=better". Guess my question is "is the extra bulk necisary for how the circuit works?
for my situation I know I'm only dealing 15amps and I have the 25amp triacs.
Either your wired it incorrectly or your SSR is broken.Barnstorm wrote: I have 240v at the element regardless of where the potentiometer is set, and it doesn't regulate the element. Everything is wired correctly. Any thoughts?
!
Simple enough, turn the power off connect alligator clips to your multi-meter and turn the power back on.varocketry wrote:RRG:
Agreed. I plan to mount everything to a 1x6 board to assemble and test this next time.
I am not at all comfortable reaching inside the small ammo box enclosure when there's live 220vac flowing.
Call me chicken!
Thanks.
All the members that try to help people like it when things are kept basic. Much easier to trouble shoot, and it's less likely that the person asking for help will just give up in frustration. Working with 220v can be dangerous. Just saying...varocketry wrote:OUCH! I guess I'm put in my place. That felt real helpful.
You say there is no SSR... then what is the doohickey with the knob on it, pray tell? And FWIW, the contactor is just added, unnecessary expense.varocketry wrote:Sambedded:
Ok, this is different and there's some confusion, apparently, as there's NO SSR in my schematic. That's a CONTACTOR shown in the diagram.
So, given that, perhaps there is no issue with the way it's used in my diagram? Correct?
Both have absolutely same functionality. And theoretically there is no major differences (just different brands). But in reality when buying SSR from China you have a big risk to get counterfeit product.varocketry wrote: 1. What is the difference in these two devices in this use (PSR-25 vs SSR).
One costs $44 and the other $8.
Should not be if it has real 25A rating. But if we are talking about Chinese SSR very often they overrate their products. So buying SSR-40 you can expect that it hopefully will work reliably at 25A.2. 5500w/240v = 22.92 Amps. The PSR-25 is rated at 25 Amps. Any issue here?
Brand? Model number?cal805 wrote:Having a problem with wiring my SSR it's wired up correct but turning the knob / pot, I get no change in voltage nor amps. Anybody else get a brand new ssr that was broken out of the box?
So at 18A constant load at 240vac this would equate to 4320W... I can't seem to find an immersion element greater than 3000W here in the UK. Do you think this would suffice for my 25L Boiler as it would only draw 12.5A at 3000W?The rated constant load is 18A but can peak at 25A max. At 240vac this corresponds to 4000va
This ^^^F6Hawk wrote:I could be wrong, but I believe the right leg of your potentiometer needs to be connected to the middle leg.