EricJ Posted December 7, 2020 Report Posted December 7, 2020 (edited) 22 minutes ago, carusoam said: I’m still trying to figure out how the three prong plug checks polarity, before opening the relay though... That's what the diode does. The coil in the relay will only energize (and close the relay) when current flows from the external source through the coil. If the polarity is reversed, the power conductor voltage will be below the ground reference, so the diode will prevent current from flowing backwards through the coil since it will be reverse-biased. Edited December 7, 2020 by EricJ 2 Quote
carusoam Posted December 7, 2020 Report Posted December 7, 2020 +1 for the Yetti drawings... +1 for having an engineer to explain it... Thanks Eric! Go MS! Best regards, -a- 1 Quote
1001001 Posted December 7, 2020 Report Posted December 7, 2020 7 hours ago, carusoam said: -a- I’m still trying to figure out how the three prong plug checks polarity, before opening the relay though... It doesn't, except through the pin sizes. The top pin (as oriented on my 201) is a smaller pin than the other two. The top two pins are wired together and connected to the positive terminal on the power supply. The bottom pin is large (same size as the middle pin) and connected to the negative side. If someone mis-wired the power plug or power supply it could be no fun at all. 1 Quote
N201MKTurbo Posted December 7, 2020 Report Posted December 7, 2020 8 hours ago, carusoam said: +1 for the Yetti with drawings! Thank you! Best regards, -a- I’m still trying to figure out how the three prong plug checks polarity, before opening the relay though... if you hook up the jumper cables backwards, the diode will be reverse biased and no current will flow in the diode. With no current in the diode, the solenoid will not close. 1 1 Quote
Blue on Top Posted January 28, 2021 Report Posted January 28, 2021 This thread is fascinating to me (I'm not an EE). Plus, I needed to post something to stay in the loop on this one. Thanks all y'all Quote
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