[Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up

2008-10-22 Thread Al Wolfe
Scott,
You are of course correct about hooking the PA directly to the battery, 
there being no reason to disconnect it.

There are undoubtedly many good reasons to consider a more sophisticated 
disconnect method than the simple relay circuit described when the ulimate 
in power saving is needed. However, I wonder what percentage of the folks on 
this list have the technical acumen to design a circuit like this, let alone 
trying to gather all the parts for it.

The cutout circuit of the solar charge controller you mention does look 
interesting and the kit for $55 might easily be adaptable to be used in a 
repeater disconnect application.

However, I still feel that the extremely simple relay circuit I 
described will do the job as it has for me in several applications for many 
years. With only three or four parts there is very little to fail. When the 
box it up on the hill I don't want to have to run up there every time there 
is a nearby lightning strike.

The 100 ma. figure is typical of some of the Rat Shack relays. There are 
many that pull much less current available.

Al, K9SI


  Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up
Posted by: Scott Zimmerman [EMAIL PROTECTED] scottn3xcc
Date: Tue Oct 21, 2008 8:34 am ((PDT))

 If you are concerned about your batteries lasting as long as possible when
 running on backup, I would NOT use a relay. Even at 100ma of current draw,
 that's a LOT of current in a backup / solar situation. Since the RF PA 
 only
 draws current when in transmit, (Class 'C') you can hook it directly to 
 the
 battery all the time when line voltage is not present. This can be done
 easily with normally closed contacts on a relay that is fed from the AC
 line.

 Have a look at the cutout circuitry of this solar charge controller:
 http://www.solorb.com/elect/solarcirc/spc3/

 They use a voltage comparator to do the switching. I would think a circuit
 could be designed that simply used a 10V zener diode and a transistor to
 feed the power FET. Probably until you would go through all of that, you
 could have the comparator circuit built and ready to go.

 The moral of the story is that a comparator and power FET switch would 
 draw
 FAR less current than using a relay coil. You could also set the 
 comparator
 EXACTLY where you want the circuit to turn off. Be sure that the 
 hysteresis
 resistor is a small enough value so that when the circuit cuts out with 
 the
 transmitter active, it won't turn back on when the battery voltage 
 recovers.
 Of course, this could be tailored to taste.

 Scott

 Scott Zimmerman
 Amateur Radio Call N3XCC
 474 Barnett Rd
 Boswell, PA 15531

 - Original Message - 
 From: Al Wolfe [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Tuesday, October 21, 2008 9:15 AM
 Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up


 Don,
Low battery voltage shut-down can be done quite simply using three or
 four parts: a normally open contact relay, a resistor, and a cap. The
 battery goes to one side of the N. O. contact and the load (repeater?),
 power supply, and relay coil to the other N. O. contact. The other side 
 of
 the coil goes to ground via a resistor. The resistor value is determined
 empirically and should be selected so that the relay will drop out at
 about
 ten volts or whatever you decide is the minimum useful voltage. Use a
 variable DC supply to determine the proper resistance value.

You should be able to find a 12 volt relay that needs less than 100 
 ma.
 through the coil. An appropriate resistance might be 22 or 27 ohms for
 this
 relay.

A 1000 MFD cap should be in parallel with the resistor so that when
 power is restored from the power supply, full voltage is applied to the
 relay coil for a time to energize it. The resistor also lowers the power
 used by the relay to a degree. The ubiquitous chatter diode across the
 relay
 coil is a good idea as well.

I have used this method for several applications at work and it is
 virtually fool proof.

 Good luck,
 Al, K9SI



Now the question and  I have not seen this talked about   I would
 assume  all I would need is a Normally closed Relay and as the Voltage
 dropped below a Certain Level it would open and  just break the
 connection to the Battery back up ,  Is this the way to do it


Thanks


Don KA9QJG



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up

2008-10-22 Thread Camilo So
Any body know what is the name of relay that have a gear on the side, every 
time the relay energize once it turn the gear and lock the relay position from 
normally close
to open and open to close, I have one of the relay that work that way long time 
ago, maybe its still available today.

73
Camilo


  - Original Message - 
  From: Al Wolfe 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, October 22, 2008 10:25 AM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up


  Scott,
  You are of course correct about hooking the PA directly to the battery, 
  there being no reason to disconnect it.

  There are undoubtedly many good reasons to consider a more sophisticated 
  disconnect method than the simple relay circuit described when the ulimate 
  in power saving is needed. However, I wonder what percentage of the folks on 
  this list have the technical acumen to design a circuit like this, let alone 
  trying to gather all the parts for it.

  The cutout circuit of the solar charge controller you mention does look 
  interesting and the kit for $55 might easily be adaptable to be used in a 
  repeater disconnect application.

  However, I still feel that the extremely simple relay circuit I 
  described will do the job as it has for me in several applications for many 
  years. With only three or four parts there is very little to fail. When the 
  box it up on the hill I don't want to have to run up there every time there 
  is a nearby lightning strike.

  The 100 ma. figure is typical of some of the Rat Shack relays. There are 
  many that pull much less current available.

  Al, K9SI

   Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up
   Posted by: Scott Zimmerman [EMAIL PROTECTED] scottn3xcc
   Date: Tue Oct 21, 2008 8:34 am ((PDT))
  
   If you are concerned about your batteries lasting as long as possible when
   running on backup, I would NOT use a relay. Even at 100ma of current draw,
   that's a LOT of current in a backup / solar situation. Since the RF PA 
   only
   draws current when in transmit, (Class 'C') you can hook it directly to 
   the
   battery all the time when line voltage is not present. This can be done
   easily with normally closed contacts on a relay that is fed from the AC
   line.
  
   Have a look at the cutout circuitry of this solar charge controller:
   http://www.solorb.com/elect/solarcirc/spc3/
  
   They use a voltage comparator to do the switching. I would think a circuit
   could be designed that simply used a 10V zener diode and a transistor to
   feed the power FET. Probably until you would go through all of that, you
   could have the comparator circuit built and ready to go.
  
   The moral of the story is that a comparator and power FET switch would 
   draw
   FAR less current than using a relay coil. You could also set the 
   comparator
   EXACTLY where you want the circuit to turn off. Be sure that the 
   hysteresis
   resistor is a small enough value so that when the circuit cuts out with 
   the
   transmitter active, it won't turn back on when the battery voltage 
   recovers.
   Of course, this could be tailored to taste.
  
   Scott
  
   Scott Zimmerman
   Amateur Radio Call N3XCC
   474 Barnett Rd
   Boswell, PA 15531
  
   - Original Message - 
   From: Al Wolfe [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
   Sent: Tuesday, October 21, 2008 9:15 AM
   Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up
  
  
   Don,
   Low battery voltage shut-down can be done quite simply using three or
   four parts: a normally open contact relay, a resistor, and a cap. The
   battery goes to one side of the N. O. contact and the load (repeater?),
   power supply, and relay coil to the other N. O. contact. The other side 
   of
   the coil goes to ground via a resistor. The resistor value is determined
   empirically and should be selected so that the relay will drop out at
   about
   ten volts or whatever you decide is the minimum useful voltage. Use a
   variable DC supply to determine the proper resistance value.
  
   You should be able to find a 12 volt relay that needs less than 100 
   ma.
   through the coil. An appropriate resistance might be 22 or 27 ohms for
   this
   relay.
  
   A 1000 MFD cap should be in parallel with the resistor so that when
   power is restored from the power supply, full voltage is applied to the
   relay coil for a time to energize it. The resistor also lowers the power
   used by the relay to a degree. The ubiquitous chatter diode across the
   relay
   coil is a good idea as well.
  
   I have used this method for several applications at work and it is
   virtually fool proof.
  
   Good luck,
   Al, K9SI
  
  
  
   Now the question and I have not seen this talked about I would
   assume all I would need is a Normally closed Relay and as the Voltage
   dropped below a Certain Level it would open and just break the
   connection to the Battery back up , Is this the way

RE: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up

2008-10-22 Thread Jeff DePolo
 Any body know what is the name of relay that have a gear on 
 the side, every time the relay energize once it turn the gear 
 and lock the relay position from normally close
 to open and open to close, I have one of the relay that work 
 that way long time ago, maybe its still available today.
  
 73
 Camilo

Latching relay, still readily available.

--- Jeff WN3A



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up

2008-10-22 Thread Mike Morris WA6ILQ

There are single coil and two coil relays that us a
mechanism to accomplish a latching function.
Any full-line relay catalog will show them.

I've seen the one-coil version called an impulse relay,
a rotary relay, a latching relay and a few other choice
names when the mechanism gets dirty and doesn't
work.

Mike WA6ILQ

At 09:20 AM 10/22/08, you wrote:
Any body know what is the name of relay that have a gear on the 
side, every time the relay energize once it turn the gear and lock 
the relay position from normally close
to open and open to close, I have one of the relay that work that 
way long time ago, maybe its still available today.


73
Camilo


- Original Message -
From: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Al Wolfe
To: mailto:Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.comRepeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, October 22, 2008 10:25 AM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up
Scott,
You are of course correct about hooking the PA directly to the battery,
there being no reason to disconnect it.
There are undoubtedly many good reasons to consider a more sophisticated
disconnect method than the simple relay circuit described when the ulimate
in power saving is needed. However, I wonder what percentage of the folks on
this list have the technical acumen to design a circuit like this, let alone
trying to gather all the parts for it.
The cutout circuit of the solar charge controller you mention does look
interesting and the kit for $55 might easily be adaptable to be used in a
repeater disconnect application.
However, I still feel that the extremely simple relay circuit I
described will do the job as it has for me in several applications for many
years. With only three or four parts there is very little to fail. When the
box it up on the hill I don't want to have to run up there every time there
is a nearby lightning strike.
The 100 ma. figure is typical of some of the Rat Shack relays. There are
many that pull much less current available.
Al, K9SI
 Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up
 Posted by: Scott Zimmerman 
mailto:n3xcc%40repeater-builder.com[EMAIL PROTECTED] scottn3xcc

 Date: Tue Oct 21, 2008 8:34 am ((PDT))

 If you are concerned about your batteries lasting as long as possible when
 running on backup, I would NOT use a relay. Even at 100ma of current draw,
 that's a LOT of current in a backup / solar situation. Since the RF PA
 only
 draws current when in transmit, (Class 'C') you can hook it directly to
 the
 battery all the time when line voltage is not present. This can be done
 easily with normally closed contacts on a relay that is fed from the AC
 line.

 Have a look at the cutout circuitry of this solar charge controller:
 
http://www.solorb.com/elect/solarcirc/spc3/http://www.solorb.com/elect/solarcirc/spc3/ 



 They use a voltage comparator to do the switching. I would think a circuit
 could be designed that simply used a 10V zener diode and a transistor to
 feed the power FET. Probably until you would go through all of that, you
 could have the comparator circuit built and ready to go.

 The moral of the story is that a comparator and power FET switch would
 draw
 FAR less current than using a relay coil. You could also set the
 comparator
 EXACTLY where you want the circuit to turn off. Be sure that the
 hysteresis
 resistor is a small enough value so that when the circuit cuts out with
 the
 transmitter active, it won't turn back on when the battery voltage
 recovers.
 Of course, this could be tailored to taste.

 Scott

 Scott Zimmerman
 Amateur Radio Call N3XCC
 474 Barnett Rd
 Boswell, PA 15531

 - Original Message -
 From: Al Wolfe mailto:k9si%40arrl.net[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: 
mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.comRepeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com

 Sent: Tuesday, October 21, 2008 9:15 AM
 Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up


 Don,
 Low battery voltage shut-down can be done quite simply using three or
 four parts: a normally open contact relay, a resistor, and a cap. The
 battery goes to one side of the N. O. contact and the load (repeater?),
 power supply, and relay coil to the other N. O. contact. The other side
 of
 the coil goes to ground via a resistor. The resistor value is determined
 empirically and should be selected so that the relay will drop out at
 about
 ten volts or whatever you decide is the minimum useful voltage. Use a
 variable DC supply to determine the proper resistance value.

 You should be able to find a 12 volt relay that needs less than 100
 ma.
 through the coil. An appropriate resistance might be 22 or 27 ohms for
 this
 relay.

 A 1000 MFD cap should be in parallel with the resistor so that when
 power is restored from the power supply, full voltage is applied to the
 relay coil for a time to energize it. The resistor also lowers the power
 used by the relay to a degree. The ubiquitous chatter diode across the
 relay
 coil is a good idea as well.

 I have used this method for several applications

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up

2008-10-22 Thread Mike Morris WA6ILQ
At 07:25 AM 10/22/08, you wrote:
Scott,
 You are of course correct about hooking the PA directly to the battery,
there being no reason to disconnect it.

 There are undoubtedly many good reasons to consider a more sophisticated
disconnect method than the simple relay circuit described when the ulimate
in power saving is needed. However, I wonder what percentage of the folks on
this list have the technical acumen to design a circuit like this, let alone
trying to gather all the parts for it.

Just buy a LVD module (or a solar charge controller module that has
LVD built in).
Or build the one from the link that was posted.  Or dig through the QST
back issues.  They had an article on one and a parts kit was available.

 The cutout circuit of the solar charge controller you mention does look
interesting and the kit for $55 might easily be adaptable to be used in a
repeater disconnect application.

No might easily be adaptable about it.  Just hook the Astron to the
solar panel input, the repeater system (less PA deck) to the load terminals
and the battery to the battery terminals.  Adjust the Astron to the proper
float voltage to minimize the heat generation in the charge 
controller section..

 However, I still feel that the extremely simple relay circuit I
described will do the job as it has for me in several applications for many
years. With only three or four parts there is very little to fail. When the
box it up on the hill I don't want to have to run up there every time there
is a nearby lightning strike.

Most of the solar equipment that I've seen has been designed for that
situation.  Sunny states like Texas and Florida that get lots of lightning
also have lots of solar installations and the solar equipment manufacturers
wouldn't be in business if they didn't offer a product that would stand up
to a distant strike.
.
And you can monitor the status of the unit remotely so if it glitches
you know it. There are points in the circuit you can tap and feed to
digital inputs on the repeater controller.  For example, the courtesy
beep can change from a simple beep to a morse B when you are
on battery.

 The 100 ma. figure is typical of some of the Rat Shack relays. There are
many that pull much less current available.

But can they handle 10a of DC current?  I've seen relays that will handle
10a of AC but only 2a of DC, others that are rated at 10a AC or DC.
I've found that, in general, the higher the DC contact current the larger
the coil.

People have opinions, and I respect yours.   Simple and elegant is good,
but it has to meet the requirements.  And minimizing the 24x7 energy
drain from the battery when the power is off is primary.

My opinion is that once the AC power is off I'd rather NOT waste the
available battery charge feeding as much energy to the LVD relay coil
as I do the receiver and the controller combined (or depending on the
relay coil, as much as twice that).  Power outages can last minutes
or they can last weeks.  Or, as some areas of Louisiana learned after
Katrina,  months.

Al, K9SI

Mike WA6ILQ



[Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up

2008-10-21 Thread Al Wolfe
Don,
Low battery voltage shut-down can be done quite simply using three or 
four parts: a normally open contact relay, a resistor, and a cap. The 
battery goes to one side of the N. O. contact and the load (repeater?), 
power supply, and relay coil to the other N. O. contact. The other side of 
the coil goes to ground via a resistor. The resistor value is determined 
empirically and should be selected so that the relay will drop out at about 
ten volts or whatever you decide is the minimum useful voltage. Use a 
variable DC supply to determine the proper resistance value.

You should be able to find a 12 volt relay that needs less than 100 ma. 
through the coil. An appropriate resistance might be 22 or 27 ohms for this 
relay.

A 1000 MFD cap should be in parallel with the resistor so that when 
power is restored from the power supply, full voltage is applied to the 
relay coil for a time to energize it. The resistor also lowers the power 
used by the relay to a degree. The ubiquitous chatter diode across the relay 
coil is a good idea as well.

I have used this method for several applications at work and it is 
virtually fool proof.

Good luck,
Al, K9SI



Now the question and  I have not seen this talked about   I would 
 assume  all I would need is a Normally closed Relay and as the Voltage 
 dropped below a Certain Level it would open and  just break the 
 connection to the Battery back up ,  Is this the way to do it


Thanks


Don KA9QJG

 



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up

2008-10-21 Thread Scott Zimmerman
If you are concerned about your batteries lasting as long as possible when 
running on backup, I would NOT use a relay. Even at 100ma of current draw, 
that's a LOT of current in a backup / solar situation. Since the RF PA only 
draws current when in transmit, (Class 'C') you can hook it directly to the 
battery all the time when line voltage is not present. This can be done 
easily with normally closed contacts on a relay that is fed from the AC 
line.

Have a look at the cutout circuitry of this solar charge controller:
http://www.solorb.com/elect/solarcirc/spc3/

They use a voltage comparator to do the switching. I would think a circuit 
could be designed that simply used a 10V zener diode and a transistor to 
feed the power FET. Probably until you would go through all of that, you 
could have the comparator circuit built and ready to go.

The moral of the story is that a comparator and power FET switch would draw 
FAR less current than using a relay coil. You could also set the comparator 
EXACTLY where you want the circuit to turn off. Be sure that the hysteresis 
resistor is a small enough value so that when the circuit cuts out with the 
transmitter active, it won't turn back on when the battery voltage recovers. 
Of course, this could be tailored to taste.

Scott

Scott Zimmerman
Amateur Radio Call N3XCC
474 Barnett Rd
Boswell, PA 15531

- Original Message - 
From: Al Wolfe [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, October 21, 2008 9:15 AM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Shutting Down Battery Back up


 Don,
Low battery voltage shut-down can be done quite simply using three or
 four parts: a normally open contact relay, a resistor, and a cap. The
 battery goes to one side of the N. O. contact and the load (repeater?),
 power supply, and relay coil to the other N. O. contact. The other side of
 the coil goes to ground via a resistor. The resistor value is determined
 empirically and should be selected so that the relay will drop out at 
 about
 ten volts or whatever you decide is the minimum useful voltage. Use a
 variable DC supply to determine the proper resistance value.

You should be able to find a 12 volt relay that needs less than 100 ma.
 through the coil. An appropriate resistance might be 22 or 27 ohms for 
 this
 relay.

A 1000 MFD cap should be in parallel with the resistor so that when
 power is restored from the power supply, full voltage is applied to the
 relay coil for a time to energize it. The resistor also lowers the power
 used by the relay to a degree. The ubiquitous chatter diode across the 
 relay
 coil is a good idea as well.

I have used this method for several applications at work and it is
 virtually fool proof.

 Good luck,
 Al, K9SI



Now the question and  I have not seen this talked about   I would
 assume  all I would need is a Normally closed Relay and as the Voltage
 dropped below a Certain Level it would open and  just break the
 connection to the Battery back up ,  Is this the way to do it


Thanks


Don KA9QJG




 



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