brice14
Civil/Environmental
- Jun 2, 2010
- 21
thread240-218990
This question was asked and answered on the referenced thread. However, this engineering newbie didn't quite understand. I have a relay whose signal switch is about 300m from the relay. A tester (DC) "sees" the circuit as open, but the relay (240 AC) "sees" the circuit as closed. I am assuming this is the same issues as discussed in the reference thread (i.e. impedance transformation).
What I don't understand is how to solve the problem. From what I have read going DC for the signal circuit is the best solution. I would assume that I would put an AC/DC converter in my box and then change my relay to one that accepts a DC signal to switch an AC circuit?
Someone also recommended putting a resistor or capacitor to ground. If I understand this correctly, I would hook one leg of the signal circuit to a resistor and then just shunt that to neutral or ground? This is obviously a simpler solution, but does it make sense?
TIA
This question was asked and answered on the referenced thread. However, this engineering newbie didn't quite understand. I have a relay whose signal switch is about 300m from the relay. A tester (DC) "sees" the circuit as open, but the relay (240 AC) "sees" the circuit as closed. I am assuming this is the same issues as discussed in the reference thread (i.e. impedance transformation).
What I don't understand is how to solve the problem. From what I have read going DC for the signal circuit is the best solution. I would assume that I would put an AC/DC converter in my box and then change my relay to one that accepts a DC signal to switch an AC circuit?
Someone also recommended putting a resistor or capacitor to ground. If I understand this correctly, I would hook one leg of the signal circuit to a resistor and then just shunt that to neutral or ground? This is obviously a simpler solution, but does it make sense?
TIA