Question on relays for fridge fermentation control | HomeBrewTalk.com - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Community.

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk by donating:

  1. Dismiss Notice
  2. We have a new forum and it needs your help! Homebrewing Deals is a forum to post whatever deals and specials you find that other homebrewers might value! Includes coupon layering, Craigslist finds, eBay finds, Amazon specials, etc.
    Dismiss Notice

Question on relays for fridge fermentation control

Discussion in 'Fermenters' started by pithed, Oct 28, 2012.

 

  1. #1
    pithed

    New Member

    Posted Oct 28, 2012
    Hi all,

    I am converting a wine cooler (vinotemp vt24) to be controlled with relays by a microcontroller using some of the excellent builds on this site. I am using the standard solid state relays by Fotek (the ones I have are rated 25 amps). The trouble is that they work fine when I use them to interrupt the AC at the power cord, using a receptacle in a job box etc.., as has been detailed on this site, but when i use one in place of the mechanical thermostat it works for a minute or so then kicks in the compressor overload protection switch (clicking sound).

    I have tested the current draw when using each setup and the power cord setup consistently draws 1.5 amps after an initial 5-6 amp start up. When i switch to the thermostat setup it draws 5-6 amps until it shuts down. Anyone have any idea why this is? I admit that I have almost zero experience with AC circuits and much much more with DC so I am using this as a learning tool but am frustrated that I can't figure out what is going on. Do the relays have too much voltage drop when used in that part of the circuit? Since the power cord version works ok I will use it but it would have been a much cleaner build without.

    Any insight at all would be greatly appreciated as I am spending too much time on this right now and not enough time brewing. Thanks!

    edit: pictures of build/problem:
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
     
  2. #2
    FlatcapBrew

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 29, 2012
    Your wiring is missing the start winding of your compressor causing the high amp draw maybe?
     
  3. #3
    day_trippr

    We live in interesting times...

    Posted Oct 29, 2012
    [edit]Nevermind, I just took a look at the control circuits on my two brew fridges and the keezer and there ain't no sign of a transformer anywhere. So all of that startup and run current goes through the thermostat points. Woof!

    Cheers!

    [another edit] What's the ON resistance for that SSR?
     
  4. #4
    pithed

    New Member

    Posted Nov 1, 2012
    I could not find any on resistance info and I am now going through a tutorial on AC circuits to figure this out. The on voltage value is given as >3 v if that helps? I will just go ahead a keep it plugged in to the job box circuit until I can make sense of it.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page

Group Builder