Showing posts with label controller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label controller. Show all posts
Friday, November 7, 2014
Solar Hot Water Panel Differential Pump Controller
This circuit optimises the circulation of heated water from solar hot water panels to a storage cylinder. It achieves this by controlling a 12V DC pump, which is switched on at a preset temperature differential of 8°C and off at about 4°C. This method of control has distinct advantages over some systems that run the pump until the differential approaches 0°C. In such systems, the pump typically runs whenever the sun shines. A small 10W solar panel charging a 12V SLA battery is sufficient to run the controller. Most commercial designs use 230VAC pumps, which of course don’t work when there is a power outage or there is no AC power at the site.
Temperature sensors TS1 & TS2 are positioned to measure the highest and lowest water temperatures, with one at the panel outlet and the other at the base of the storage cylinder. The difference between the sensor outputs is amplified by op amp IC1d, which is configured for a voltage gain of about 47. As the sensors produce 10mV/°C, a difference of 8°C will produce about 3.76V at the op amp’s output (pin 14). The output from IC1d is fed into the non-inverting input (pin 10) of a second op amp stage (IC1c), which is wired as a voltage comparator. The op amp’s inverting input (pin 9) is tied to a reference voltage, which can be varied by trimpot VR3. When the voltage from IC1d exceeds the reference voltage, the output of the comparator (pin 8) swings towards the positive rail.
A 10MW resistor feeds a small portion of the output signal back to the non-inverting input, adding some hysteresis to the circuit to ensure positive switching action. A third op amp stage (IC1b) acts as a unity-gain buffer. When the comparator’s output goes high, the buffer stage switches the Mosfet (Q1) on, which in turn energises the pump motor. Mosfet Q1’s low drain-source on-state resistance means that in most cases, it won’t need to be mounted on a heatsink. The prototype uses a Davies Craig EBP 12V magnetic drive pump, which draws about 1A when running and is suitable for low-pressure hot water systems only (don’t use it for mains-pressure systems as it may burst!). For mains-pressure systems, the author suggests the SID 10 range of brass-body magnetic drive pumps from Ivan Labs USA.
Solar Hot Water Panel Differential Pump Controller Circuit Diagram
Setup:Each LM335 temperature sensor and its associated trimpot is glued to a small copper strip using high-temperature epoxy. It is then waterproofed with silicon sealant and encapsulated in heatshrink tubing. Standard twin-core shielded microphone cable can be used for the connection to the circuit board. Before sealing the two units, adjust their trimpots to get 2.98V at 25°C [(ambient temperature x .01) + 2.73V] between the "+" and "-" terminals. When both have been adjusted, clamp them together and allow their temperatures to stabilise for a few minutes. Next, measure the output voltage from the differential amplifier (IC1d), which should be close to 0V. If not, tweak one of the pots until it is.
Separate the two and warm the panel sensor (TS1), monitoring the output of IC1d. You should see a marked increase in voltage, remembering that an 8°C difference between the sensors should give an output of about 3.76V. The pump switch-on point is set by VR3 and can be adjusted over a practical range of about 4-10°C differential (1.88-4.70V). Adjust VR3 to get about 3.8V on pin 9 of IC1c as a starting point. If set too low and the panels are located far from the cylinder, much of the heat will be lost in the copper connecting pipes. On the other hand, if set too high and the weather is mostly cloudy, then the pump will not switch on very often, as the panels will not get hot enough. For best results, use copper pipes for the panel plumbing and insulate them with tubes of closed-cell foam.
As the pipes cool down between pump operations, small diameter pipes of 15mm are more efficient than larger sizes as they contain less static water. In practice, the pump in the author’s setup switches on for about 30 seconds every 4-5 minutes. As the Davies pump shifts 13 litres/minute, it displaces the heated water from a single panel in about 14 seconds. There is a thermal lag in the sensor readings, so after the pump stops, the temperature difference will keep decreasing for 40 seconds or so as the panel sensor cools down and the cylinder sensor heats up.
Labels:
controller,
Differential,
Hot,
Panel,
pump,
Solar,
water
Friday, September 5, 2014
ERROR CODES PIONEER DDJ ERGO V DJ Controller
Error Codes Display & Jog Dial Rotation Load Adjustments _ Pioneer DDJ-ERGO-V DJ Controller

ERROR CODES DISPLAY
When abnormalities are detected during the time of carrying out power supply ON, or operation, it displays by LED.

How to Enter JOG Load Measurement Mode
* To enter this mode, while holding the F2 and F3 buttons on the Deck A/C side pressed, set the Power switch to ON.
* During this mode, the KEYLOCK LEDs on both sides are lit. (Hold the two buttons pressed until the opening display terminates.)
* The load (light or heavy) on the JOG dial when it is turned can be objectively judged in this mode.
How to Measure
# When the JOG dial is rotated swiftly in this mode, the maximum speed and time required for slowdown, as defined below, are measured. When the maximum speed reaches 7 times normal speed or higher, time required for slowdown is calculated then evaluated as to whether or not it is within the specified range, then the result will be indicated by the LEDs.
# Either rotation direction, clockwise or counterclockwise, is okay.
Maximum speed:
Maximum speed with normal speed defined as when one rotation takes 1.8sec
Time required for slowdown: Time required for the rotation speed to slow down from 3 times to 1.5 times normal speed.
To measure the time required for slowdown, the maximum speed must be 7 times normal speed or higher.
If the maximum speed does not reach 7.0 times normal speed, the JOG LEDs flash three times as a warning.
The number of measurements up to the fourth time is indicated by the LEDs.
First measurement finished: HOT CUE 1 lit
Second measurement finished: HOT CUE 2 lit
Third measurement finished: HOT CUE 3 lit
Fourth measurement finished: HOT CUE 4 lit
Judgment
After four measurements of time required for slowdown are finished, the mean value of the four measurement results is calculated and judged as to whether or not it is within the specified range. The result will be indicated with the LEDs.
The specified range is 100 ± 40 msec.
OK: VINYL lit
NG (lighter): LOOP OUT lit
NG (heavier): LOOP IN lit
The 5th time or subsequent measurement can be performed, but the number of times of measurement is not indicated with the LEDs. The mean value of the results of all the measurements is calculated, and its result will be indicated with the LEDs.

POWER-SAVING MODE
If a drop in voltage for VBUS power is detected, a power-saving mode will be automatically established, limiting the headphones maximum output level.
Two types of power-saving mode are provided, as shown below.

CLICK ON THE PICTURES TO ZOOM IN
Sunday, August 31, 2014
Fan controller with LM 741
This is fan controller schema diagram.This schema can operate the fan automatically.Here we have used supply from the transformer’s auxiliary 12V winding.we have used famous Ic LM 741 here

Note
# Build this on a PCB
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)