MOV ?? What is it?
mov electronics - Google Search
MOV electronics
A varistor is an electronic component with an electrical resistance that varies with the applied voltage. Also known as a voltage-dependent resistor (VDR), it has a nonlinear, non-ohmic current–voltage characteristic that is similar to that of a diode. ... This type is commonly known as the metal-oxide varistor (MOV).
Varistor - Wikipedia).
Then it might be a nice idea to have the sequencer switch the mains at a voltage peak, both switch-on and switch-off.
You’ll probably want to cover brownout and mains cable disconnect/reconnect like an intermittent mains outage.
Common knowledge on dutch technical schools decades ago. Anyone reading Elektuur/Elektor knew this too.
It seems today some people search for complicated ways to solve non-issues already solved a long time ago. Or, worse, to find a new way of doing things that is way worse than the old method. On this forum one can detect some design errors in designs that are accepted and defended.
Nah, quality and efficiency are boring
It seems today some people search for complicated ways to solve non-issues already solved a long time ago. Or, worse, to find a new way of doing things that is way worse than the old method. On this forum one can detect some design errors in designs that are accepted and defended.
Nah, quality and efficiency are boring
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That is THE modus operandi of mechanical switches. Just suppose you have to switch exactly at zero crossing or otherwise things go wrong A bit like syncing was done by hand in the old days with generators. Sweat in the hands.
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A zero xing SSR does NOT switch on at the zero crossing. It ignites the triac at the zero crossing. That triac takes several msecs to get all fired up, so to say, which places the mains switching point almost smack on the top of the sine wave.
When I started working on the sequencer, with a small microcontroller, I'd switch the triac a couple of msec before the zero xing to neatly switch the load transformer at exact zero crossing. I couldn't understand why those fuses popped, until I discovered that at zero crossing the dV/dT is max and the xformer looks almost like a short.
And so you learn what the professionals learned decades before you!
Jan
When I started working on the sequencer, with a small microcontroller, I'd switch the triac a couple of msec before the zero xing to neatly switch the load transformer at exact zero crossing. I couldn't understand why those fuses popped, until I discovered that at zero crossing the dV/dT is max and the xformer looks almost like a short.
And so you learn what the professionals learned decades before you!
Jan
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