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    Wiring thermal cutoff on mains hot bed: splice in at SSR or bed?

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    • A Former User?
      A Former User
      last edited by

      The new build plate and mains bed heater I ordered comes with a resettable 150*C thermal cutoff. I also plan on getting some single use thermal fuses and wiring in series.

      Which is better practice and why:

      • Splicing the thermal cutoff/fuse to the SSR input
      • Splicing the thermal cutoff/fuse to the bed heater hot wire

      I'm thinking splicing to the SSR input has the advantage of no mains power going to the bed if a thermal runaway happens also splicing onto the SSR input seems less problematic and easier to modify than using the bed heater +

      I plan on using one of the IOs on my 6HC to control the SSR.

      I may be missing something here so let me know if I am! Thanks!

      Stock photo below for reference
      heat pad.jpg

      dc42undefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Phaedruxundefined
        Phaedrux Moderator
        last edited by

        In practice it doesn't much matter as long as the flow of electricity is interrupted, so use whichever wiring arrangement is most functional for your setup.

        Z-Bot CoreXY Build | Thingiverse Profile

        mrehorstdmdundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • dc42undefined
          dc42 administrators @A Former User
          last edited by dc42

          @wwak84 connect the TCO in the mains bed circuit in case the SSR fails short circuit.

          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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          • mrehorstdmdundefined
            mrehorstdmd @Phaedrux
            last edited by mrehorstdmd

            I'd put it in the heater power lead. SSRs tend to fail "on", so if you interrupt drive to the SSR, the TCO won't help if the SSR itself has failed. Mount the TCO on the heater using high temp silicone so that if the adhesive fails and the heater falls away from the bed plate, the TCO will do its job and kill heater power.

            https://drmrehorst.blogspot.com/

            A Former User? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • A Former User?
              A Former User @mrehorstdmd
              last edited by

              @mrehorstdmd @dc42 good points, to the heater leads it is

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