I'll check tomorrow on mine. 2 and 4 are connected to V+ and V- internally, you left these floating with 1 and 3 connected to the load (ind. board) right? Mine is working properly, I ran a twisted pair from pin 1,3 direct to the ind board terminals with nothing else connected, so pin 1 and V+ at ind board are always connected, pin 3 and V- are open till the relay kicks on.
I see yours shows 48v with the relay/contactor off, I don't have an LED mine sits at 15v, using a SPST relay on the gnd leg, your diagram shows a DPST maybe that's the difference.
I never tried to hook up an LED I figured the ammeter was telling me status already.
If all else fails you can run the LED off the 120v contactor coil power with 2 diodes and a big resistor. Sorta inelegant and some higher heat dissipation than normal but it works.
Do you mean +VS and -VS? I left them open when +S and -S we hooked to the load. Its possible the +S/-S won't work in your case with the DPST cutting off both V+ and V- from the sense lines, try them looped +VS to +S, -VS to -S and see if it comes back to life. If it knows its on but it sees zero voltage on the +S maybe it goes into fault? The load voltage sense really isn't necessary anyways, we're using short load wires of big enough gauge not to have significant drops.
I do know in order for it to output you need 13 and 14 looped, 5 and 6 looped (voltage control), at least 2v to the current control pin 7. If it goes into fault the PS status LED goes from green to red and I see 5v on the voltmeter. Things that will trip a fault are under voltage (~5v) or too low of a voltage limit or current limit control voltage (below 2v), over voltage (~55v) and over current (over 20A). In order to recover from a fault condition you have to switch it off for long enough to discharge the caps, a momentary switch off it won't recover.
Cool. Next step current control!
Hi Bert,Need help......
Finished the coolant loop so finally fired up the induction board for the first time.
Before i could even see what went on i blew the fuse on the low voltage side.
Replaced with a time delay fuse and fired up again with an empty coil.
In a few seconds i blew the second fuse but this time i could see what happened.
So my setup for who did not follow my build :
*Powered by two microwave oven transformers with primaries in series and rewound secondaries, also in series with an output of about 40 vdc after the rectifier
*Va meter with unit on (no power to induction board) reads v=41 a=0.35
So when the relay switches power to the induction board the voltage drops quickly to about 6 volt and the amps ramp up to over 40a.
then the fuse popped..
What is going on?
I knew that voltage would drop with load applied but this much??I did not even have brass in the coil..
Did i fry the board also? (The ebay add says 20a max.)
Thanks in advance,
Bert
Hi Bert,
Sounds like a short to ground or possibly your coils are touching; though I'm not sure coils touching would create the short to ground symptoms. Might check for stray metal bits or solder from your build.
Without a wiring diagram I wouldn't even want to guess, besides I think AC is magic and doesn't really exist
Possibly a bad or backwards diode in the rectifier section?
Don't know if this helps with trouble shooting but I just
disconnected the induction board and hooked up a regular 60w light bulb instead.
Ran the cycle and got the following meter readings;
unit on standby: 40.7v 0.38a
bulb on: 39.9v 0.63a
Fixed the problem. Super easy. Just had to move the S+ and S- connections to input of the DPST relay instead of the output. This gives the power supply a solid voltage reference prior to annealing and will still sense the load when the contacts close and annealing is taking place. Also solves the issue of the annealing LED illuminating early!
I'll post new electrical drawing after I update with my "as built"
Next challenge...finish my feed hopper! Gotta love the journey![]()
Just a wonder.
If the control relay is wired to power the transformer, power source or whatever, it won't work.
The control relay must be after the DC power source.
In other words, the power supply to the induction board must be up and running at the time of connection.
My two cents.
Here's the updated drawing per my "as built". PM me if you'd like the TinyCad file. I'm also working the final parts list and can include that when complete. Still working on the hopper; need to machine a few parts on my mini CNC.
View attachment 1001018
OH my gosh !!!!!! Sheeeeeesh..... I'm looking at your drawing, just shaking my head. How the GinaErick has grown. The talent that is out there is unreal. My hat is off to all you inventors/ innovators.
David... anyway to get a picture of your "mini" CNC ? sounds interesting