Running electric fan with FIdle port
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vtmegasquirter
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Running electric fan with FIdle port
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Matt Cramer
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Re: Running electric fan with FIdle port
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vtmegasquirter
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Re: Running electric fan with FIdle port
Thanks
Re: Running electric fan with FIdle port
I removed the FIDLE relay from the board and jumped relay socket pin #2 to pin #4 then used the signal at pin #6 of the 20 pin strip on the relay board to control a high current relay for the fan.
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vtmegasquirter
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Re: Running electric fan with FIdle port
Example: Electric Cooling Fan Control
Another example is electric electric cooling fan control. We will turn it on 180°F and off at 170°F, using the relay board FIdle output to control a separate cooling fan relay (the traces on the relay board may not have enough current capacity to control your fan directly):
FIdle (PM2)
Port PM2, FIdle enabled
variable = coolant > threshold = 180, hysteresis = 10,
AND
variable = rpm > threshold = 450, hysteresis = 10, (fan will not run while cranking - you can add any second condition that works for you, of course)
Power-on value = 0
Trigger value = 1
Maybe I missed something here?
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Matt Cramer
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Re: Running electric fan with FIdle port
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vtmegasquirter
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Re: Running electric fan with FIdle port
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Matt Cramer
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Re: Running electric fan with FIdle port
No, that should work fine.vtmegasquirter wrote:Actually, I was getting approximately .7 v, I was expecting 12v to trigger my fan relay. Matt, do you see any issue with the suggestion to remove the relay and jump it as discribed above.
Re: Running electric fan with FIdle port
To clarify my earlier post a bit, after the jumper is installed in lieu of the FIDLE relay on the relay board a wire must be connected from pin #6 (of the 20 pin terminal block) to one end of the coil on your external relay -the other side of the coil on this relay must be connected to 12v.vtmegasquirter wrote:Actually, I was getting approximately .7 v, I was expecting 12v to trigger my fan relay. Matt, do you see any issue with the suggestion to remove the relay and jump it as discribed above.
To protect the driver transistor on the MS board from voltage spikes a diode should be installed across the external relay coil. The banded end of the diode (suggest 1N4000) must be connected to the positive supply side of the relay coil.
The megamanual shows this for driving spare outputs, if you substitute pin #6 of the 20 pin term block for the point labeled "C" then you are adding all the circuitry to the right.
http://www.megamanual.com/ms2/spare.htm
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vtmegasquirter
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