Hello,
I have a curious little project issue.
I have a bluetooth board with relays on it.
The hi power contacts on the relays do not get power from the board.
For simplicity, I wired the hi power relay points to the same power src. It worked fine at first. About every 20th time a command was sent to the board, it would NOT fire the relay, even though the LED indicated the board recieved the instruction to do so for that specific relay. I would have to reboot it.
I figured the draw from the relays ( which trigger solenoids.. a big draw ) was spiking the board somehow, so I introduced a resistor and zener diode regulator to keep things calm. The meter says it is working and voltage is good, but now firing a relay just once induces the problem. I have to turn it all off and back on before a relay will fire again. The relay power is being tapped at the same source, but upstream of the resistor and diode. That is it really, the only other wires go to a power toggle switch. Why does regulating voltage make it worse?
I have a curious little project issue.
I have a bluetooth board with relays on it.
The hi power contacts on the relays do not get power from the board.
For simplicity, I wired the hi power relay points to the same power src. It worked fine at first. About every 20th time a command was sent to the board, it would NOT fire the relay, even though the LED indicated the board recieved the instruction to do so for that specific relay. I would have to reboot it.
I figured the draw from the relays ( which trigger solenoids.. a big draw ) was spiking the board somehow, so I introduced a resistor and zener diode regulator to keep things calm. The meter says it is working and voltage is good, but now firing a relay just once induces the problem. I have to turn it all off and back on before a relay will fire again. The relay power is being tapped at the same source, but upstream of the resistor and diode. That is it really, the only other wires go to a power toggle switch. Why does regulating voltage make it worse?