ScottAvery Posted September 26, 2018 Posted September 26, 2018 I have a device that can only be controlled by 12v trigger - it slides a lens in and out of place for a projector. Binary position, one position when no signal, other side when receiving a constant 12v signal. Dunno what amperage, but it works with the signal sent from my projector. I want an external control other than the projector and I don't seem to have a device with a controllable output. My thought was I/O Linc to interrupt a constant 12v signal, or an on/off module with a 12v wallwart plugged into it. Anyone have a recommendation, or a better way? Thanks!
PhanTomiZ Posted September 26, 2018 Posted September 26, 2018 1 hour ago, ScottAvery said: I have a device that can only be controlled by 12v trigger - it slides a lens in and out of place for a projector. Binary position, one position when no signal, other side when receiving a constant 12v signal. Dunno what amperage, but it works with the signal sent from my projector. I want an external control other than the projector and I don't seem to have a device with a controllable output. My thought was I/O Linc to interrupt a constant 12v signal, or an on/off module with a 12v wallwart plugged into it. Anyone have a recommendation, or a better way? Thanks! Hi, Quickly, I can think of two ways. 1. X10 Addressable 12 VDC wall wort. I use one of these to light up a decorative 3 VDC picture frame. Use a simple voltage divider cct. to get it down to operating voltage. These work relatively well. I had these from an old X10 camera system that I sold. Should be able to pick them up cheap. http://kbase.x10.com/wiki/XM14A https://www.ebay.com/p/X10-Remote-Controlled-Power-Supply-Model-XM13A/704606892 2. Instead of using the I/0 Linc, use an On/Off Module and your 12 VDC wall wort. I like to keep backup devices in which I use most often. On/Off modules can easily be used for more applications than spare I/O Lincs. They may also be cheaper too. Instead of using an I/O Linc for my water shut off system, I use On/Off Modules and 120VAC valves. Again, On/Off modules are almost always my goto devices... PhanTomiZ
paulbates Posted September 26, 2018 Posted September 26, 2018 The other advantage of @PhanTomiZ's second option is that you won't be using power 100% of the time for the step down transformer. Probably not a ton of power, but a tad greener. Another way to implement his option 2, instead of the on/off module and having things laying around plugged into each, you could replace a receptacle with an on/off outletlinc and plug the transformer into the wall. It doesn't have the flexibility he mentioned but it might make it a cleaner install. Paul
apostolakisl Posted September 26, 2018 Posted September 26, 2018 It is hard to beat the second option you mention (the on/off module with a wall wart). On/off modules are dual band, can be purchased on sale for $25/ea (2 for 1 sales are common). You probably have a spare 12v wall wart sitting around and if not, they are cheap. This would be reliable and extremely easy to implement.
ScottAvery Posted September 26, 2018 Author Posted September 26, 2018 Thanks all, I do have both an I/O linc and on/off module on the shelf I can use without further expense, but I would need to find an appropriate 12v transformer. I have lots of 5v transformers laying about but I don't think I will find a 12v with so little output: 100mA is my understanding. And I will have to cut the cable to use it unless I find some sort of adapter... Not an electrician: Can I use a higher rated device and the trigger will only pull what it needs or would a higher amp transformer burn it out?
mwester Posted September 26, 2018 Posted September 26, 2018 Voltage is analogous to water pressure, while current is analogous to water flow. So just like your sprinkler requires the water pressure to be in a certain range, your electrical device requires voltage to be in a certain range. And with the right water pressure, your sprinkler is only going to sprinkle a certain number of gallons/hour (flow), regardless of how much flow your water main (or well pump) might actually be able to deliver. The same is true of your device: when fed with electrons at the right voltage, it will only consume a flow of current (100mA in your case), regardless of how much current your transformer/wall-wart is capable of delivering. Or, short answer: you can use a transformer/wall-wart with a higher current rating with no problems at all. 2
ScottAvery Posted September 26, 2018 Author Posted September 26, 2018 21 minutes ago, mwester said: Voltage is analogous to water pressure, while current is analogous to water flow. So just like your sprinkler requires the water pressure to be in a certain range, your electrical device requires voltage to be in a certain range. And with the right water pressure, your sprinkler is only going to sprinkle a certain number of gallons/hour (flow), regardless of how much flow your water main (or well pump) might actually be able to deliver. The same is true of your device: when fed with electrons at the right voltage, it will only consume a flow of current (100mA in your case), regardless of how much current your transformer/wall-wart is capable of delivering. Or, short answer: you can use a transformer/wall-wart with a higher current rating with no problems at all. Thank you for the detailed explanation. That was my expectation but I wanted someone to confirm before I risked damage to the device. I did see a cheap USB 5v to 12v step up transformer that could work if I don't find a 12v adapter.
ScottAvery Posted October 9, 2018 Author Posted October 9, 2018 To close it out, I looked at lots of options and individual parts, but did find a wallwart that came with a prefit attachment to connect to bare wire and I bought a trigger cable with pre-tinned bare cable ends. Both came in packages of two, so I have two triggers for $20. I could have bought individual parts, or stripped and connected wires, for less, but thought this was a small price to pay to be sure that it would be a solid connection and not a fire hazard. Paired an on/off module with a remotelinc single scene switch: worked the first time, and every time.
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