R
Richard Rasker
Hello,
I've been asked to look into a problem with an industrial installation with
3 kVA HV magnetron (microwave oven) transformers, where mains fuses keep
tripping due to the inrush current.
Normally, I'd look into NTC's or power resistors with bypass relays;
however, those solutions are useless in this case, because the magnetron
units are switched off and on very frequently (up to a dozen times a
minute). NTC's need at least a minute to cool down, and power resistors
(e.g. 5 ohms) would be dissipating a few dozen watts this way, even when
bypassed after a mere 100 ms.
So I wonder if it's possible to switch off just the magnetron's cathode
filament instead of the whole supply transformer. Obviously, the relay would
need to be a special type, with at least 6 kV insulation voltage between the
coil and the switching contacts, but for the contact rating itself a few
volts and amperes would suffice.
Does anyone have any experience switching magnetron elements this way?
If so, are there any problems to be expected? And where can I find relays
that can handle the required insulation voltage?
And oh, I also looked into a triac-based solution, but that has its own
snags: the need for zero-crossing current(!) switch-on timing, and bypass
relays to prevent several dozen watts of power dissipation due to the
triac's on-state voltage of up to 1.5 volts @ 16A -- yet this relay in turn
complicates switching off during zero crossing ...
Thanks in advance for any insights,
Best regards,
Richard Rasker
I've been asked to look into a problem with an industrial installation with
3 kVA HV magnetron (microwave oven) transformers, where mains fuses keep
tripping due to the inrush current.
Normally, I'd look into NTC's or power resistors with bypass relays;
however, those solutions are useless in this case, because the magnetron
units are switched off and on very frequently (up to a dozen times a
minute). NTC's need at least a minute to cool down, and power resistors
(e.g. 5 ohms) would be dissipating a few dozen watts this way, even when
bypassed after a mere 100 ms.
So I wonder if it's possible to switch off just the magnetron's cathode
filament instead of the whole supply transformer. Obviously, the relay would
need to be a special type, with at least 6 kV insulation voltage between the
coil and the switching contacts, but for the contact rating itself a few
volts and amperes would suffice.
Does anyone have any experience switching magnetron elements this way?
If so, are there any problems to be expected? And where can I find relays
that can handle the required insulation voltage?
And oh, I also looked into a triac-based solution, but that has its own
snags: the need for zero-crossing current(!) switch-on timing, and bypass
relays to prevent several dozen watts of power dissipation due to the
triac's on-state voltage of up to 1.5 volts @ 16A -- yet this relay in turn
complicates switching off during zero crossing ...
Thanks in advance for any insights,
Best regards,
Richard Rasker