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    SSR controlled heater setup query

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    • droftartsundefined
      droftarts administrators @900turbo
      last edited by

      @900turbo That looks fine. Like I said, you can use pretty much any I/O out pin (though it is slightly more complicated on the 6XD because of the opto isolated outputs), and the PSON pin is basically just another switchable pin.

      Ian

      Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

      900turboundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • 900turboundefined
        900turbo @droftarts
        last edited by

        @droftarts Just thought I would check.
        Thanks for the help Ian.

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        • 900turboundefined
          900turbo @droftarts
          last edited by 900turbo

          @droftarts
          I took the readings at 200ohms

          Room temperature 30.2

          25 degrees = 30.1

          50 degrees = 30.0

          70 degrees = 30.1

          so only a very slight drop in resistance followed by a rise not sure what this means ?

          droftartsundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • droftartsundefined
            droftarts administrators @900turbo
            last edited by

            @900turbo said in SSR controlled heater setup query:

            I took the readings at 200ohms

            I don't know what you mean by that? Do you mean you get 200 x 30 = 6000 ohms? I'm used to modern digital multimeters!

            Check you are measuring the resistance of the temperature sensor, by measuring ohms across the two wires that come from the bed. Looking at your picture of the bed, these are the red wires. The second pair of wires, the thicker white ones, are for the heater. Usually, these will be low resistance. Check you're measuring the correct wires, they will be the thinner ones.

            For a 100k thermistor, you should get something like:
            25 degrees = ~100k ohms
            50 degrees = ~33K ohms
            70 degrees = ~15k ohms

            Ian

            Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

            900turboundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • 900turboundefined
              900turbo @droftarts
              last edited by

              @droftarts 8A671DA4-1278-41E9-BC40-FCC4C8DB952A.jpeg I mean this as in 200 set on the multi meter , there are 5 pins on the heater bed loom of which only 2 produce a reading so I assumed it’s temp sensors wires

              Thank you

              droftartsundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • droftartsundefined
                droftarts administrators @900turbo
                last edited by

                @900turbo can you show a picture of the 5 pins? Try setting the meter to 20k or 200k.

                Ian

                Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

                900turboundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • 900turboundefined
                  900turbo @droftarts
                  last edited by

                  @droftarts at 20 and 200k I don’t get a reading just 0.00

                  900turboundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • 900turboundefined
                    900turbo @900turbo
                    last edited by

                    @900turbo A1749DBC-C6BE-43FD-8C1A-E2DF8508E134.jpeg

                    deckingmanundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • deckingmanundefined
                      deckingman @900turbo
                      last edited by

                      @900turbo 30 Ohms sounds more like the heater resistance than a temperature sensor. Is it 110V mains or 240V? If it's 240V then using ohms law, 30 Ohms would mean it draws 8 Amps which is about 2,000 watts. If its 110V then 30 Ohms would mean about 3.7 Amps giving about 400 Watts. Do either of those wattage figures sound like the spec for your heater? If so, that confirms that you are measuring the heater resistance, not the temperature sensor. If that's the case, try again with your meter set to read 200K.

                      Ian
                      https://somei3deas.wordpress.com/
                      https://www.youtube.com/@deckingman

                      900turboundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • 900turboundefined
                        900turbo @deckingman
                        last edited by

                        @deckingman
                        The heater draws power straight from the PSU at 100-240V so I'm not sure what it draws. However I tried what you said using 200K and got the following results
                        25 degrees = 128.9
                        50 degrees = 38.0
                        70 degrees = 19.0

                        Thanks for the help!

                        droftartsundefined deckingmanundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • droftartsundefined
                          droftarts administrators @900turbo
                          last edited by

                          @900turbo With those results, I'd say it was a 100k NTC thermistor, which uses a beta value of 3950. So use:

                          M308 S0 P"temp0" Y"thermistor" T100000 B3950
                          

                          For more information on thermistor parameters, see https://docs.duet3d.com/User_manual/Connecting_hardware/Temperature_connecting_thermistors_PT1000#typical-parameter-values

                          Ian

                          Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

                          900turboundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • deckingmanundefined
                            deckingman @900turbo
                            last edited by

                            @900turbo said in SSR controlled heater setup query:

                            @deckingman
                            The heater draws power straight from the PSU at 100-240V so I'm not sure what it draws. ........................

                            What I meant was, do you happen to know the wattage of the heater? From Ohms law, if we know the voltage and the resistance, we can calculate the current draw and then voltage x current = wattage. But anyway, it sounds like you've now found the correct pair of wires for the temperature sensor........

                            Ian
                            https://somei3deas.wordpress.com/
                            https://www.youtube.com/@deckingman

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • 900turboundefined
                              900turbo @droftarts
                              last edited by

                              @droftarts When I use the calculator i get6cecdae5-cb9e-418b-9cde-c2fbe9a5a236-image.png a beta value of 3018 should I use this or 3950 ?

                              jay_s_ukundefined droftartsundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • jay_s_ukundefined
                                jay_s_uk @900turbo
                                last edited by

                                @900turbo use 3950

                                Owns various duet boards and is the main wiki maintainer for the Teamgloomy LPC/STM32 port of RRF. Assume I'm running whatever the latest beta/stable build is

                                900turboundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • 900turboundefined
                                  900turbo @jay_s_uk
                                  last edited by

                                  @jay_s_uk Thank You.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • droftartsundefined
                                    droftarts administrators @900turbo
                                    last edited by

                                    @900turbo Use 3950 to start with. If it proves to be inaccurate, you can recalibrate it later.

                                    If I put your data into the thermistor calculator here https://www.thinksrs.com/downloads/programs/therm calc/ntccalibrator/ntccalculator.html and then set the Beta model coefficients for 100k NTC with Beta 3950, your 50C and 70C results match the curve well, but the 25C result is out. I'd guess that this result is inaccurate; either your meter is reading erroneously, or the temperature is closer to 20C rather than 25C. Most thermistors are 100k at 25C.
                                    54cc4bdd-34c3-4e4c-8e31-86ba7ab8e8eb-image.png

                                    Ian

                                    Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

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                                    • 900turboundefined
                                      900turbo @droftarts
                                      last edited by

                                      @droftarts I agree with this due to the significant bed size 700x700mm using a 10mm thick sheet of Aluminium with a 5mm glass sheet on top I believe there is some lag in terms of the heating/temp reading , Am I correct in saying for R25 I just need to enter 128900?
                                      Thanks for the help !

                                      droftartsundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • droftartsundefined
                                        droftarts administrators @900turbo
                                        last edited by

                                        @900turbo In the configuration tool, use the "QWG-104F-3950 (QU-BD silicone bed)" option. That gives the correct values.
                                        f6fcb4bf-20d7-4f33-a51a-717f9c0d7994-image.png

                                        Ian

                                        Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

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