Maybe tyrou thought, as I did, that Argentine uses 110v ac supply.
If you use 220v then he has no problem
Regards
John.
Maybe tyrou thought, as I did, that Argentine uses 110v ac supply.
If you use 220v then he has no problem
Regards
John.
"Thermodynamics is a funny subject. The first time you go through it, you don't understand it at all. The second time you go through it, you think you understand it, except for one or two points. The third time you go through it, you know you don't understand it, but by that time you are so used to that subject, it doesn't bother you anymore".
Yeap, I tought so, anyway, no problem to do a 110v version one.
Funny thing we being talking for other people we are the advanced diplomatics
Great, I didn't know that argentina uses 230V
very nice controller there.
if you know what you doing with PIC chips and LCD's you can make a hole lot of things. my last job they designed HF radios they were using some really cool chips, ones where you program the chip to tell it what pin does what, makes routing pcb tracks alot easier, i was only a service tech though, no designing for me, I would like to though.
in a few years i hope to go to university to upgrade me electronics diploma to an engineering degree in instrumentation and control or electrical engineering.
I want 20 please!
It would be awesome if you made a simple temperature monitor like the Crystal Fontz 633.
That would be sick.
Originally Posted by chilly1
one is my birthday present???
And what about something for a 220V fan? :P
Hey wambas, throw that 220v fan to the toilet (not a good idea)
You get what you pay for (anything is posibble)
thanxs, the pcb layout looks neat and well planned.Originally Posted by Golden_Eagle
Very well planned and designed guys. cant wait to use this in my system to replace my
prommy controller. Looking foward to add more temp probes.
I will try to make one of my own
i study electronics (will be going for industrial automation instead of electronics part) so i could make my own .
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very nice, im just wondering what the electronic component is called attached to the heatsink I've seen it before in pc power supplies cant make out what it is.
MOSFET's?Originally Posted by total_assault
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are those triac's on the power board?
arent the things which are bolted to the sinks MOSFET's? that was his Q (as i saw it)Originally Posted by Golden_Eagle
"Monolith" - [ Xeon W3540 (4.22) - Rampage 2 Extreme - 12 GB Ripjaws 1600 - GTX 570 - 120 GB OCZ Vertex - Antec TruePower 750W - Corsair 700D - Apogee XT CPU Block - XSPC 360 Rad ]
Old Box - [ E4600 2.4 @ 3.7ghz (11x335) - P5W-DH - 4gb Gskill @ 893mhz - Radeon 3850 ]
voltage regulators look a lot like mosfets and mosfets are transistorsOriginally Posted by Aphex_Tom_9
Very nice work Golden_Eagle, thorough design and tidy work
I'm in the process of trying to design one for myself too... a few tips (nothing that would give away any specifics) would be greatly appreciated.
1) Do you also supply the power supply for the compressor, or do you just plumb into the existing circuitry to turn it off/on?
2) To maintain a set temperature do you:
* Turn compressor on/off?
* Throttle compressor speed?
* Turn the condensor fan on/off?
* Something else?
3) Did you use Thermistors for temp monitoring or something else?
Thanks in advance for any help you can give me
Rabb
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