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    Controlling water pump and radiator fan

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    • Zesty_Lykleundefined
      Zesty_Lykle
      last edited by

      Hi All,
      Just to double check how to connect a water cooling pump and a radiator fan to the Duet Ethernet.

      Using a single hot end, one pump and a radiator with fan. Both the pump and fan are 12V and below 1.5A.
      I don't want to switch the fans over to 12V as the part cooling fans are still 5V.

      If running the pump all the time, I simply wire it into the 12V of the PSU.
      If running only when the hot end is active, I wire the + to the VIN and the ground to the GND pin of FAN0 and use

      M106 P0 T50 S1 H1

      to switch on the pump when the hot end temp rises above 50C.

      For the fan of the radiator, I do a similar thing.
      I have a thermistor measuring the temp of the water and when it goes above 45C I want the fan to switch on.
      The + wire goes to the VIN and the ground to the GND of FAN1. For the fan settings I use:

      M106 P1 T45 S0.5 H2

      This is assuming I connect the thermistor to the Heater 2 sensor (E1 connector) and want the fan to run at 50% of the speed.

      Is this all correct?

      One extra question, connecting to VIN, what is the best way to to do that? There is no pin available with 12V as far as I can see and shoving it in with the screw connectors is not very elegant.

      Lykle
      Design, make and enjoy life

      Co Creator of the Zesty Nimble

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      • dc42undefined
        dc42 administrators
        last edited by

        The water pump may draw a high starting current if it uses a brushed DC motor. if this is the case, then you should use either an external mosfet switch that can better handle the starting current, or a resistor or surge-limiting thermistor in series with the pump to reduce the starting surge.

        Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
        Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
        http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

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        • Zesty_Lykleundefined
          Zesty_Lykle
          last edited by

          Currently, I have it on a direct 12V external power supply.
          I noticed that when I switch it in, it starts up slowly.
          Does that tell you anything?

          Lykle
          Design, make and enjoy life

          Co Creator of the Zesty Nimble

          dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • dc42undefined
            dc42 administrators @Zesty_Lykle
            last edited by

            @zesty_lykle said in Controlling water pump and radiator fan:

            I noticed that when I switch it in, it starts up slowly.
            Does that tell you anything?

            That could mean that it has slow-start built in. Measure the starting current, if you can.

            Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
            Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
            http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

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            • Zesty_Lykleundefined
              Zesty_Lykle
              last edited by Zesty_Lykle

              On my crappy multimeter, it starts at 0.28 amps and settles on 0.3 amps.
              But I don't think my meter is quick enough to accurately measure the starting current. I will see if Brian can measure it.

              But at least the rest of the config is correct, yes?

              Lykle
              Design, make and enjoy life

              Co Creator of the Zesty Nimble

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              • dc42undefined
                dc42 administrators
                last edited by

                For the water temperature you need to set up a virtual heater, not use heater 2.

                Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

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