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RE: [AVR-Chat] Re: ADC Vref

2007-12-14 by Philippe Habib

Would a heavy duty starter solenoid from a diesel truck do the job for you?
I had a project a few years ago where the truck part was less than 1/4 the
cost of the commercial part.

-----Original Message-----
From: AVR-Chat@yahoogroups.com [mailto:AVR-Chat@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf
Of Steven Hodge
Sent: Friday, December 14, 2007 9:54 AM
To: AVR-Chat@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RE: [AVR-Chat] Re: ADC Vref

 

>12V? I^2R losses will eat you alive! 48V would be better, but I'll
>assume you're stuck with it.

You got it.   Boat electrical is moving (very slowly) to higher voltages,
but I'm stuck with the legacy 12 V.

>Turning off this monster will be interesting.

Well, the actual thruster control circuitry which came with the unit does
this.  It uses solenoids and handles the actual turning on/off of the motor.
All I have to do is provide 2 active-low signals, one for each direction
(port or starboard).   And, as I said, protect those solenoids from
(literally) melt-down.

However, I separately need to have, for safety reasons, a remote means of
enabling/disabling the local thruster battery power, ie, a "battery
disconnect switch".   This is the "other story" I mentioned.    I could use
a commercial mechanical switch but these cost around $100 and, more
important, it would be difficult to access.  Hence the "remote" part.

This switch only has to carry the 400 A, not make or break it.   One can buy
from the thruster company a remote switch to do this, but it costs around
$800  (yes, that is no typo).   Commercial solenoids that can carry 400 A
continuous do not exist insofar as I can tell.  The best I have found is 250
A, so two of these in parallel would work, but the cost would still be $250
for two of them.   Thus I'm making my own using eight IRF2804 mosfets in
parallel.  I've used one of these quite successfully for a few years now for
a 45 A load.  These mosfets can carry up to 75 A continuous and have an
incredibly low on-resistance of only 2 milliohms.   These babies hardly get
warm at all with 45 A flowing through them.  I put heat sinks on but I'm not
convinced they are necessary.  I use Micrel 5014/5015 drivers with them.

Thanks for everyone's help.   This forum is looking to be very helpful, like
the boat ones I am on.  I hope I can reciprocate sometime.

Steve



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



 
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