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#1
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I'm looking for a source of new latching relays.
Coil needs to be 12 to 24 volt and contacts of 10 amps at 120 volts AC. The catch is I don't want any dual coil type relays. I have an application in which I want a contact closure on the coil to turn the relay on and another closure will turn it off again. I would even be receptive to a solid-state module that would give me the pulse on / pluse off action that I could use to control a relay. Randy BC |
#2
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randy wrote:
I'm looking for a source of new latching relays. Coil needs to be 12 to 24 volt and contacts of 10 amps at 120 volts AC. The catch is I don't want any dual coil type relays. I have an application in which I want a contact closure on the coil to turn the relay on and another closure will turn it off again. I would even be receptive to a solid-state module that would give me the pulse on / pluse off action that I could use to control a relay. Randy BC http://www.kussmaul.com/091-98-12.html http://www.weisd.com/store2/CD%20692-24.html http://www.broadcast.harris.com/prod...sku=RDLST-LCR2 -- John Popelish |
#3
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randy wrote:
I'm looking for a source of new latching relays. Coil needs to be 12 to 24 volt and contacts of 10 amps at 120 volts AC. The catch is I don't want any dual coil type relays. I have an application in which I want a contact closure on the coil to turn the relay on and another closure will turn it off again. I would even be receptive to a solid-state module that would give me the pulse on / pluse off action that I could use to control a relay. Randy BC http://www.kussmaul.com/091-98-12.html http://www.weisd.com/store2/CD%20692-24.html http://www.broadcast.harris.com/prod...sku=RDLST-LCR2 -- John Popelish |
#4
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I'm looking for a source of new latching relays.
Coil needs to be 12 to 24 volt and contacts of 10 amps at 120 volts AC. The X10 Appliance modules contain a latching relay. At about $10 a piece this might be your best choice. The last time I looked at one of these, what I found wasn't a latching relay in the usual sense. It's a solenoid which drives a rotating two-position switching thingie. There isn't a separate "set" and "reset" coil. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#5
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I'm looking for a source of new latching relays.
Coil needs to be 12 to 24 volt and contacts of 10 amps at 120 volts AC. The X10 Appliance modules contain a latching relay. At about $10 a piece this might be your best choice. The last time I looked at one of these, what I found wasn't a latching relay in the usual sense. It's a solenoid which drives a rotating two-position switching thingie. There isn't a separate "set" and "reset" coil. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#6
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I have a bunch of 15 or 20 amp latching relays that were used in house
wiring. But they do have 2 coils. One to latch and one to unlatch. 24 vac coils. 73 Gary K4FMX On Mon, 12 Apr 2004 22:32:04 -0500, randy wrote: I'm looking for a source of new latching relays. Coil needs to be 12 to 24 volt and contacts of 10 amps at 120 volts AC. The catch is I don't want any dual coil type relays. I have an application in which I want a contact closure on the coil to turn the relay on and another closure will turn it off again. I would even be receptive to a solid-state module that would give me the pulse on / pluse off action that I could use to control a relay. Randy |
#7
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I have a bunch of 15 or 20 amp latching relays that were used in house
wiring. But they do have 2 coils. One to latch and one to unlatch. 24 vac coils. 73 Gary K4FMX On Mon, 12 Apr 2004 22:32:04 -0500, randy wrote: I'm looking for a source of new latching relays. Coil needs to be 12 to 24 volt and contacts of 10 amps at 120 volts AC. The catch is I don't want any dual coil type relays. I have an application in which I want a contact closure on the coil to turn the relay on and another closure will turn it off again. I would even be receptive to a solid-state module that would give me the pulse on / pluse off action that I could use to control a relay. Randy |
#8
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This type of relay would work depending on the coil voltage. However
I would guess that voltage is also 120 volt. What I am trying to do is have the ability to switch 4-5 different lights (150-1000 watt) from several locations within the same building without all the hassle of 2 and 3-way switches. My plan is to have a relay bank that these lights would source from (total wire run of 60-75 feet) then have small low voltage/current pushbutton switches activate the relays. 4-5 small pushbuttons could control any light in the building from that location. I have thought about X10 but have also read more bad than good about the wierd things they do or don't do. Randy I'm looking for a source of new latching relays. Coil needs to be 12 to 24 volt and contacts of 10 amps at 120 volts AC. The X10 Appliance modules contain a latching relay. At about $10 a piece this might be your best choice. The last time I looked at one of these, what I found wasn't a latching relay in the usual sense. It's a solenoid which drives a rotating two-position switching thingie. There isn't a separate "set" and "reset" coil. |
#9
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This type of relay would work depending on the coil voltage. However
I would guess that voltage is also 120 volt. What I am trying to do is have the ability to switch 4-5 different lights (150-1000 watt) from several locations within the same building without all the hassle of 2 and 3-way switches. My plan is to have a relay bank that these lights would source from (total wire run of 60-75 feet) then have small low voltage/current pushbutton switches activate the relays. 4-5 small pushbuttons could control any light in the building from that location. I have thought about X10 but have also read more bad than good about the wierd things they do or don't do. Randy I'm looking for a source of new latching relays. Coil needs to be 12 to 24 volt and contacts of 10 amps at 120 volts AC. The X10 Appliance modules contain a latching relay. At about $10 a piece this might be your best choice. The last time I looked at one of these, what I found wasn't a latching relay in the usual sense. It's a solenoid which drives a rotating two-position switching thingie. There isn't a separate "set" and "reset" coil. |
#10
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randy wrote in message . ..
I'm looking for a source of new latching relays. Coil needs to be 12 to 24 volt and contacts of 10 amps at 120 volts AC. The catch is I don't want any dual coil type relays. I have an application in which I want a contact closure on the coil to turn the relay on and another closure will turn it off again. I would even be receptive to a solid-state module that would give me the pulse on / pluse off action that I could use to control a relay. Randy BC All latching relays have a dual coil setup, with a mechanical latching arrangement on the armature. If you want just one coil, you need a simple flip/flop driving a transistor whose collector load is the relay coil. Lots of example circuits in the Handbook of Electronic Circuits Vols 1-7. Gary Hildebrand WA7KKP |
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