Thanks Charles,
You have given me more information that I hoped for.
Will be building a prototype soon. Will let you know how I got on?
Thanks again,
Bob
Thanks Charles,
You have given me more information that I hoped for.
Will be building a prototype soon. Will let you know how I got on?
Thanks again,
Bob
Anybody remember when cars had switches that did the work without 10 dozen little black boxes that only their designer, knew how worked? The engineers who made those cars must have been geniuses to make those cars work. I remember when heater blowers used resistors to control the blower and a relay wired directly to the power bus for the blower's high power setting.<br><br><b> Side note:</b> be advised, automotive environment is a very hostile place for electronics, especially in heater - A/C applications, I have seen functioning units smoke out a 30 amp breaker when the systems get old, likely due to dragging blower bearings, marginal (crimp) connections etc . . . I would advise using a high blower relay with your PWM controller when you want full power to operate the fan. Take this advice for what you think it's worth, it's backed up by 42 years of fixing cars.
If you do not believe in MAGIC, Consider how currency has value simply by printing it, and is then traded for real assets.
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Gold is the money of kings, silver is the money of gentlemen, barter is the money of peasants - but debt is the money of slaves
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There simply is no "Happy Spam" If you do it you will disappear from this forum.
One thing you have in your favor - since I'm describing a "buck" type converter, full power is achieved with the FET 100% on = almost no dissipation (in the FET). The IRF4905 is a beast - 55V, 74 Amps. I have yet to blow one. A 45V Transzorb across the device and a 15V zener across the GATE and SOURCE is a good idea, though.
Charles Linquist
Hi,
I remember the good old resistors used to change the blower speed. I am sure they gave off more heat than the heater matix did on my old Mini?
I have been told that on this car space is limited and my friend wants 'one of these controller things that don't heat up'.
The spec of the fan motor claims 3A current to be fused at 10A. Seems a bit low? Will check switch on and loading current before building anything.
Thanks,
Bob
<b>I thought it got cold in the UK !</b> What really seems to kill you in automotive is the resistance build up at every connector, cars have so much vibration, and dampness it really causes vibration induced corrosion ( I work at a testing Lab where they shake the pogies out of space and aircraft components, and it is amazing to see these super high quality components actually emit metal oxides in only an hour or two ) all induced by vibration.
If you do not believe in MAGIC, Consider how currency has value simply by printing it, and is then traded for real assets.
.
Gold is the money of kings, silver is the money of gentlemen, barter is the money of peasants - but debt is the money of slaves
.
There simply is no "Happy Spam" If you do it you will disappear from this forum.
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