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  • #69889

    partrg
    Participant

    Hi,

    I have an OpenSprinkler OS3.2-DC. Over the last few months nearly every solenoid coil (24VAC) in my system has failed. As each one failed I replaced it, but now the new ones are starting to fail! Input voltage on the controller is 12VDC.

    I have attached a picture of my system. It includes some relays which switch lights (one 12VDC and the other 24VAC) and a water pump (24VDC).

    Anyone got any ideas what might be causing this or how I might go about trouble shooting the problem??

    Many thanks

    Attachments:
    #69909

    Water_my_lawn
    Participant

    Why are you applying DC voltage to your AC solenoids? This is likely to put too much current
    through the coils.

    #69949

    Ray
    Keymaster

    The DC-powered OpenSprinkler is designed to work with 24VAC sprinkler valves as well. The way it works is to simulate the behavior of solenoid valves under AC. Specifically it generates a relatively high impulse voltage to engage the valve, then lowers it to input voltage to provide holding current.

    From your picture it looks like you also use wired Ethernet module? I think the problem is that under 12VDC input voltage, there is quite a bit of power dissipation — the DC controller uses a linear regulator to drop the input voltage to 5VDC. With wired Ethernet module, the current consumption is quite high (about 250mA), so this produces a power dissipation of (12-5)*0.25 = 1.75 Watt power dissipation, which probably burned out the linear regulator. The DC-powered controller usually should work with a low-voltage input adapter, the ones we include here for the US market is 7.5VDC. So while it can accept 12VDC, the problem is that 12VDC plus the wired Ethernet module becomes a problem. I apologize for the issue because we didn’t anticipate this usage situation when designing the controller.

    So the short term solution is to use a lower-voltage adapter, like 7.5VDC or 9VDC. We will be redesigning the DC driver board to use a switching regulator which would work much more efficiently with high input voltage.

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