thekman
Electrical
- Sep 3, 2009
- 90
By putting 208v on a 200v primary/24v sec. transformer (250VA) I get 25v @ ~10 amps. I put a bridge rectifier on the output and get roughly 22V, which is fine. If my input voltage is 50Hz rather than 60Hz, is the power output reduced any?
In addition to several LED's, my main load is (4) 24VDC solenoid valves with a 1.3A rating on them, with varying duty cycles....for testing, maybe 50%.
I'm guessing my 120 "lumps" being reduced to 100 'lumps' would not be significant enough as seen by the valves to make a difference, but I've got a ghost in the machine...
I noticed that the failure occurred when it was cooler outside, which I figured meant the valve had to work harder to 'warm up', in addition to the hydraulic fluid being cooler, therefore slightly more viscous (although our ME thinks the viscosity is not changing much-not that big of an ambient temp difference....10-15 deg. F)
Lastly, I was thinking maybe after the initial firing of the valves, they may have built up a field that had to be overcome (back EMF) on subsequent firings.
All this considered, why would there be NO problem 95% of the time??
In addition to several LED's, my main load is (4) 24VDC solenoid valves with a 1.3A rating on them, with varying duty cycles....for testing, maybe 50%.
I'm guessing my 120 "lumps" being reduced to 100 'lumps' would not be significant enough as seen by the valves to make a difference, but I've got a ghost in the machine...
I noticed that the failure occurred when it was cooler outside, which I figured meant the valve had to work harder to 'warm up', in addition to the hydraulic fluid being cooler, therefore slightly more viscous (although our ME thinks the viscosity is not changing much-not that big of an ambient temp difference....10-15 deg. F)
Lastly, I was thinking maybe after the initial firing of the valves, they may have built up a field that had to be overcome (back EMF) on subsequent firings.
All this considered, why would there be NO problem 95% of the time??