Relays: Difference between revisions
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*SPST - 50A UL listed $35 [https://www.automationdirect.com/adc/shopping/catalog/relays_-z-_timers/solid_state_relays/ad-ssr650-dc-280a] | *SPST - 50A UL listed $35 [https://www.automationdirect.com/adc/shopping/catalog/relays_-z-_timers/solid_state_relays/ad-ssr650-dc-280a] | ||
=Mechanical vs Solid State= | |||
*Mechanical, 15A, draws 1W [https://cdn.automationdirect.com/static/specs/78relays.pdf] | |||
=More= | =More= |
Revision as of 22:22, 15 April 2023
Types
- SPDT - switches between 2 devices, one pole. [1]
- DPDT - switches between 2 devices, 2 pole [2]. Electromechanical example [3]
- SPST - 50A UL listed $35 [4]
Mechanical vs Solid State
- Mechanical, 15A, draws 1W [5]
More
- common relay and pinout - [6]
Power Draw
A solid state relay will draw .1W on the driving side, but the load side loses significant power (1V drop). 20W loss when running a 20A load - significant through the day. If solar, that is good, but if we are night-time converting, power loses are not so good at this level.
May want a mechanical relay. Sainsmart relay is 15-20mA at 5v to energize. And no voltage drop on the power side, as it's not going through a transistor like in a solid state relay.
5v-15A 120v relay boxes - [7]
Life
- Life of a relay is decent. [8]
- Can be a good long term solution where cycling happens only once or few times per day in off-grid power control automation