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Safe In-Wall AC to DC Transformers??

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  • DrJeffD DrJeff

    So basically it is like any other consumer Zwave switch or X10 just box it up (3D printer on stand by) with 2 micro buttons with a rocker face and I want 10. :) But sorry I digressed from the OP in my excitement.

    C Offline
    C Offline
    ceech
    Hardware Contributor
    wrote on last edited by
    #202

    @DrJeff As @Yveaux said the board does not have an insulation transformer. Yes, I make them. And it works fine, placed inside an enclosure is as safe as it could be. Would you make a box for it? I can send you one board if you like, for the measures.

    DrJeffD 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • C ceech

      @DrJeff As @Yveaux said the board does not have an insulation transformer. Yes, I make them. And it works fine, placed inside an enclosure is as safe as it could be. Would you make a box for it? I can send you one board if you like, for the measures.

      DrJeffD Offline
      DrJeffD Offline
      DrJeff
      wrote on last edited by
      #203

      @ceech Yes I like the idea of course the board would be housed inside of a box, my idea is to incorporate the box with a daughter board with 2 push buttons on and off like Zwave switches use. Yes please send me, if you are worried I will use safely I was taught to work on all power 120v - 480v as if it is live so that you remain alive!

      C 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • DrJeffD DrJeff

        @ceech Yes I like the idea of course the board would be housed inside of a box, my idea is to incorporate the box with a daughter board with 2 push buttons on and off like Zwave switches use. Yes please send me, if you are worried I will use safely I was taught to work on all power 120v - 480v as if it is live so that you remain alive!

        C Offline
        C Offline
        ceech
        Hardware Contributor
        wrote on last edited by
        #204

        @DrJeff All right, send me a message with your address and I'll send you one.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • sundberg84S Offline
          sundberg84S Offline
          sundberg84
          Hardware Contributor
          wrote on last edited by
          #205

          Another China iphone plug destroyed.

          This has been working for 2-3 weeks without problems... the plug runs a 5v arduino and a normal 240-5v relay with button and led, standard sketch.

          One day it just didnt started and i opened it up and saw a melted plastic cover and some burned component.
          I have felt the relays a couple of times and noone has been really hot.

          20150826_205836.jpg

          Im getting a bit shaky here... how far from disaster (big fire) is this?

          Controller: Proxmox VM - Home Assistant
          MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - W5100 Ethernet, Gw Shield Nrf24l01+ 2,4Ghz
          MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - Gw Shield RFM69, 433mhz
          RFLink GW - Arduino Mega + RFLink Shield, 433mhz

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • rvendrameR Offline
            rvendrameR Offline
            rvendrame
            Hero Member
            wrote on last edited by
            #206

            BTW, the review of HLK PSU should be published in 'few days' according to the guy from http://lygte-info.dk . Can't wait for that!

            Home Assistant / Vera Plus UI7
            ESP8266 GW + mySensors 2.3.2
            Alexa / Google Home

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • petewillP Offline
              petewillP Offline
              petewill
              Admin
              wrote on last edited by
              #207

              @sundberg84 Yikes! That is exactly why I started this thread. I don't want to burn my house down...

              @rvendrame Awesome! Can't wait either!

              My "How To" home automation video channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq_Evyh5PQALx4m4CQuxqkA

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • rvendrameR Offline
                rvendrameR Offline
                rvendrame
                Hero Member
                wrote on last edited by
                #208

                The review of the hlktech's HLK-PM01 is available here!

                Home Assistant / Vera Plus UI7
                ESP8266 GW + mySensors 2.3.2
                Alexa / Google Home

                1 Reply Last reply
                2
                • F Offline
                  F Offline
                  Fabien
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #209

                  Thank you for the test.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • petewillP Offline
                    petewillP Offline
                    petewill
                    Admin
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #210

                    This is fantastic news!!

                    Would anyone be able to provide a parts list and wiring diagram based on the recommendations from the test site (pasted below)?

                    "A few notes for using it:
                    Electronic wears down faster when warm, especially capacitors, i.e. keep it as cool as possible for long lifetime.
                    I would place a fuse or fusible resistor before the converter, the fuse is not supposed to be replaceable, when it blows it is time to replace the converter.
                    A MOV accross the mains input would probably also be a good idea."
                    http://lygte-info.dk/review/Power Mains to 5V 0.6A Hi-Link HLK-PM01 UK.html

                    Once we have a that info I will update the first post so everyone reading this in the future doesn't have to read through 200+ posts to get to the conclusion. Thanks to everyone who helped with this!!!

                    My "How To" home automation video channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq_Evyh5PQALx4m4CQuxqkA

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • Z Offline
                      Z Offline
                      Zeph
                      Hero Member
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #211

                      The wiring is easy to describe.

                      Put a fuse in line between the "hot" mains AC input and the power supply module input (the "neutral" can go directly to the power supply). Put a MOV across the power supply input (on the PS side of the fuse).

                      For small spikes, the MOV would protect the PS by absorbing most of it. For longer surges, the MOV would cause the fuse to blow, probably sacrificing itself in the process.

                      Maybe others can help with component selection (for 120v and 240v mains). I see that in the case of Littelfuse, the fuse is rated by RMS AC voltage, so a 140v MOV would work for a nominal 120VAC mains). http://www.littelfuse.com/~/media/electronics_technical/application_notes/varistors/littelfuse_selecting_a_littelfuse_varistor_application_note.pdf

                      I don't know if RMS rating is standard, or if some are rated by their DC voltage conduction threshold, but one would want to be sure of that for the brand they are getting.

                      petewillP 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • rvendrameR Offline
                        rvendrameR Offline
                        rvendrame
                        Hero Member
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #212

                        Some more thoughts from the guy who analyzed it:

                        "Hi Ricardo

                        It looks safe enough to me, except I want a fuse or fusible resistor before it. The purpose of the fuse is to blow when the module is worn down and maybe shorts. How fast it wears down will depend on temperature, at very high temperature it might be less than ½ year, at more moderate temperature it might be 10-20 years. The main culprit is the capacitors, their lifetime depends on temperature and quality of the capacitor.
                        Second risk for failure is large transients on the mains that may damage the module, again the fuse is there to prevent things getting out of hand if the module breaks down.

                        The module can get hot if you pack it into the wall, especially if it is inside a lot of insulation. Doing a few test with a DMM and a temperature probe taped to the module inside the wall might be a good idea when running the module near full load.
                        I do not know the stuff used to fill with, but usual it will not easily catch fire."

                        Home Assistant / Vera Plus UI7
                        ESP8266 GW + mySensors 2.3.2
                        Alexa / Google Home

                        M 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • TD22057T Offline
                          TD22057T Offline
                          TD22057
                          Hardware Contributor
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #213

                          @rvendrame Thanks for getting this tested - that's a great result. The high temperatures he was testing at are for running at 1A of output but I thought that the 5V line is just for the Arduino and the radio which aren't going to use much current at all right?

                          rvendrameR 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • TD22057T TD22057

                            @rvendrame Thanks for getting this tested - that's a great result. The high temperatures he was testing at are for running at 1A of output but I thought that the 5V line is just for the Arduino and the radio which aren't going to use much current at all right?

                            rvendrameR Offline
                            rvendrameR Offline
                            rvendrame
                            Hero Member
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #214

                            @TD22057 , exactly, under regular load (< 600ma), the unit should not get that hot. Once I get some time I will try the suggestion, by gluing a temp sensor on the unit and put it behind the wall switch.

                            Perhaps I will add the temp sensor permanently as a extra mySensor on the wall-relay, so I can capture the temp during the upcoming summer days. ;-)

                            Home Assistant / Vera Plus UI7
                            ESP8266 GW + mySensors 2.3.2
                            Alexa / Google Home

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • B Offline
                              B Offline
                              Bertb
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #215

                              Well, I must say, I am very happy with the result. Thanks for the testing.
                              So, I am already planning to use it in a number of devices. To avoid too high temperatures in confined boxes, it might be a good idea to glue a temperature fuse to it and wire it in series with the live mains wire. When the temperature rises above, lets say 75 degrees celsius, the fuse breaks down.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • TD22057T Offline
                                TD22057T Offline
                                TD22057
                                Hardware Contributor
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #216

                                It would also be good to link that temp sensor into the arduino. Then it could send out a "help my temp is to high" message before it shuts down. It should be possible to implement an overheated mode which would just blink a status LED on the front of the device and shuts everything else down until the temperature drops. Using the tricks of running a battery powered node should let the arduino power stay low enough for the PSU to cool down while still checking the temperature every few minutes and running the LED. The fuse would then be a fail-safe backup to the overheated mode.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • rvendrameR rvendrame

                                  Some more thoughts from the guy who analyzed it:

                                  "Hi Ricardo

                                  It looks safe enough to me, except I want a fuse or fusible resistor before it. The purpose of the fuse is to blow when the module is worn down and maybe shorts. How fast it wears down will depend on temperature, at very high temperature it might be less than ½ year, at more moderate temperature it might be 10-20 years. The main culprit is the capacitors, their lifetime depends on temperature and quality of the capacitor.
                                  Second risk for failure is large transients on the mains that may damage the module, again the fuse is there to prevent things getting out of hand if the module breaks down.

                                  The module can get hot if you pack it into the wall, especially if it is inside a lot of insulation. Doing a few test with a DMM and a temperature probe taped to the module inside the wall might be a good idea when running the module near full load.
                                  I do not know the stuff used to fill with, but usual it will not easily catch fire."

                                  M Offline
                                  M Offline
                                  mvdarend
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #217

                                  @rvendrame said:

                                  Some more thoughts from the guy who analyzed it:

                                  "Hi Ricardo

                                  *It looks safe enough to me, except I want a fuse or fusible resistor before it. The purpose of the fuse is to blow when the module is worn down and maybe shorts.

                                  Would something like this be OK?
                                  http://www.aliexpress.com/store/product/100pcs-LOT-PTC-Resettable-Fuses-TRF250-080-250V-0-08A-80MA-PPTC-Polymeric-PTC-PolySwitch-DIP/1653204_32267664975.html

                                  rvendrameR 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • M mvdarend

                                    @rvendrame said:

                                    Some more thoughts from the guy who analyzed it:

                                    "Hi Ricardo

                                    *It looks safe enough to me, except I want a fuse or fusible resistor before it. The purpose of the fuse is to blow when the module is worn down and maybe shorts.

                                    Would something like this be OK?
                                    http://www.aliexpress.com/store/product/100pcs-LOT-PTC-Resettable-Fuses-TRF250-080-250V-0-08A-80MA-PPTC-Polymeric-PTC-PolySwitch-DIP/1653204_32267664975.html

                                    rvendrameR Offline
                                    rvendrameR Offline
                                    rvendrame
                                    Hero Member
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #218

                                    @mvdarend , I don't have experience to evaluate that. These ones are current-driven, I think it would be nice some fuse that is temperature-driven (despite I don't know even if that exist or what would be the parameters for that...)

                                    Home Assistant / Vera Plus UI7
                                    ESP8266 GW + mySensors 2.3.2
                                    Alexa / Google Home

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • Z Zeph

                                      The wiring is easy to describe.

                                      Put a fuse in line between the "hot" mains AC input and the power supply module input (the "neutral" can go directly to the power supply). Put a MOV across the power supply input (on the PS side of the fuse).

                                      For small spikes, the MOV would protect the PS by absorbing most of it. For longer surges, the MOV would cause the fuse to blow, probably sacrificing itself in the process.

                                      Maybe others can help with component selection (for 120v and 240v mains). I see that in the case of Littelfuse, the fuse is rated by RMS AC voltage, so a 140v MOV would work for a nominal 120VAC mains). http://www.littelfuse.com/~/media/electronics_technical/application_notes/varistors/littelfuse_selecting_a_littelfuse_varistor_application_note.pdf

                                      I don't know if RMS rating is standard, or if some are rated by their DC voltage conduction threshold, but one would want to be sure of that for the brand they are getting.

                                      petewillP Offline
                                      petewillP Offline
                                      petewill
                                      Admin
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #219

                                      @Zeph Thanks.

                                      Do you all think a 150v MOV is ok for USA? I found some cheaper than the 140v on ebay but I' like to do it right :)

                                      http://www.ebay.com/itm/LOT-of-10-MAIDA-METAL-OXIDE-VARISTOR-RADIAL-MOV-8mm-Disk-150V-D68ZOV151RA03-/390095815756?hash=item5ad385c44c

                                      I found these fuses but they are 250v. Do you think that would be OK for 120v normal power or do I need to find 150v fuses?

                                      http://www.ebay.com/itm/Through-Hole-T5A-5A-250V-Radial-Leads-Miniature-Micro-Fuse-20-Pcs-SP-/181623867749?hash=item2a49a04965

                                      Something like this for the temperature fuse?
                                      http://www.ebay.com/itm/3-pcs-New-KSD-9700-70-C-250V-5A-Thermostat-Temperature-BiMetal-Switch-NC-Close-/141752004726?hash=item210113f076

                                      Is there anything else I'm missing that should be included in the circuit? Like others, I was also thinking that adding a temp sensor to the Arduino would be good so I could tell how hot it is in the box at any time.

                                      My "How To" home automation video channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq_Evyh5PQALx4m4CQuxqkA

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • rvendrameR Offline
                                        rvendrameR Offline
                                        rvendrame
                                        Hero Member
                                        wrote on last edited by rvendrame
                                        #220

                                        More from the 'guru'

                                        "There is no input fuse, that is the reason I recommend one and it has to be a real fuse that blows, not a fuse that will automatic recover. The only time it is supposed to blow is if the converter blows and then you want the mains permanently disconnected. Probably a 0.2A slow fuse will work."

                                        Home Assistant / Vera Plus UI7
                                        ESP8266 GW + mySensors 2.3.2
                                        Alexa / Google Home

                                        M 1 Reply Last reply
                                        1
                                        • rvendrameR rvendrame

                                          More from the 'guru'

                                          "There is no input fuse, that is the reason I recommend one and it has to be a real fuse that blows, not a fuse that will automatic recover. The only time it is supposed to blow is if the converter blows and then you want the mains permanently disconnected. Probably a 0.2A slow fuse will work."

                                          M Offline
                                          M Offline
                                          mvdarend
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #221

                                          @rvendrame Thanks for the clarification.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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