D
Don
Guest
Hello all, I am just finishing my charger controller for my electric
vehicle. I want to power a 240VAC coil relay with the power of the
pack (312VDC nominal). The resistance of the coil is 3600 ohms and is
rated at 4.0VA. This is a P&B T92 relay and the datasheet says it can
take 75-120% of the rated coil voltage.
What would be the DC voltage range in which I could drive this relay?
Since I do not know how to convert a AC rating to DC, I am simply
looking at the DC rated coils and guessing that the nominal value is
70VDC, for a range from 52V to 88VDC.
Given that my lowest pack voltage would be around 312VDC, and my
highest pack voltage would be approx 380V (when charging at 4deg C in
the winter), I think I can use a voltage divider circuit, but not sure
if this is too wide of a range.
If the current of the relay at 70 V / 3600 Ohms = 0.020 A, then power
1.4W
The resistor I would need is (380V-70V) / 0.020 A = 15.5 k Ohms and a
power of
6.2 Watts
Will this work?
thanks
Don
vehicle. I want to power a 240VAC coil relay with the power of the
pack (312VDC nominal). The resistance of the coil is 3600 ohms and is
rated at 4.0VA. This is a P&B T92 relay and the datasheet says it can
take 75-120% of the rated coil voltage.
What would be the DC voltage range in which I could drive this relay?
Since I do not know how to convert a AC rating to DC, I am simply
looking at the DC rated coils and guessing that the nominal value is
70VDC, for a range from 52V to 88VDC.
Given that my lowest pack voltage would be around 312VDC, and my
highest pack voltage would be approx 380V (when charging at 4deg C in
the winter), I think I can use a voltage divider circuit, but not sure
if this is too wide of a range.
If the current of the relay at 70 V / 3600 Ohms = 0.020 A, then power
1.4W
The resistor I would need is (380V-70V) / 0.020 A = 15.5 k Ohms and a
power of
6.2 Watts
Will this work?
thanks
Don