Mechanical_Matt
Mechanical
- Feb 7, 2022
- 3
Hello all, This is my first post here after lurking a bit. I have been tasked with designing a circuit to drop the DC voltage of a vehicle to the fuel pump to ~9V so that the pump power drops therefore putting less heat into the fuel during idle. I've been at it for a while and feel like I'm close, but keep running into minor hiccups I am using 2 relays to switch between the 12V and the 9V setup. I have a switch in there to activate the relays to simulate my 5psi pressure switch for the full application.
The thing that I'm running into now is that when I first turn the circuit on, it'll switch and go to full speed and drop to low speed no problem. After I let the circuit run, either in full or low speed for 10 min, the relays stick and require mechanical agitation to get them to unstick. I am suspecting that possibly the coil resistance of two relay coils in series is to blame that it wouldn't want to draw the current after the relay warms up? The DC input is 13.5V @ 11Amps when in low speed, and 13.5V @ 19Amps in high speed. I'm using ACNM5112 relays, 1N5817 Flywheel diodes, a PSDF3060L1 crowbar diode, two CL5120 LED drivers for status indication, a 100uF cap for a decoupling cap for the i6A buck converter board.
I've attempted to draw the schematic online, however it didn't offer a "jump over" feature for the wires, only nodes are actual connections, otherwise treat it like a jump over.
Forgive me if the circuit is a bit "hammer tech" as I'm classically trained as a mechanical engineer and circuits is not my strong suit, so analog and electromechanical are my go-to's
Any insight on why the relays might be sticking would be super helpful!
The thing that I'm running into now is that when I first turn the circuit on, it'll switch and go to full speed and drop to low speed no problem. After I let the circuit run, either in full or low speed for 10 min, the relays stick and require mechanical agitation to get them to unstick. I am suspecting that possibly the coil resistance of two relay coils in series is to blame that it wouldn't want to draw the current after the relay warms up? The DC input is 13.5V @ 11Amps when in low speed, and 13.5V @ 19Amps in high speed. I'm using ACNM5112 relays, 1N5817 Flywheel diodes, a PSDF3060L1 crowbar diode, two CL5120 LED drivers for status indication, a 100uF cap for a decoupling cap for the i6A buck converter board.
I've attempted to draw the schematic online, however it didn't offer a "jump over" feature for the wires, only nodes are actual connections, otherwise treat it like a jump over.
Forgive me if the circuit is a bit "hammer tech" as I'm classically trained as a mechanical engineer and circuits is not my strong suit, so analog and electromechanical are my go-to's
Any insight on why the relays might be sticking would be super helpful!