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  1. Home
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  3. Relay sensors stop communicating with gateway after a few minutes

Relay sensors stop communicating with gateway after a few minutes

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  • sundberg84S sundberg84

    It should be fine and click/on off with that power supply.
    Are you using a 5v relay? I ordered 5v relays but got 12v relays instead... same symptoms, all leds worked but no click.
    It should say SRD-05VCS on top on the blue relay.

    R Offline
    R Offline
    rafael.brasilia
    wrote on last edited by
    #12

    @sundberg84
    Mine says SRD-05VDC-SL-C on top. Im pretty sure this is a 5v because it works fine when powered from the Arduino 5v output. I just wanted to connect it to an external power source because I have two relays connected to my Arduino now and that might bee too much for it to handle.

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    • BulldogLowellB Offline
      BulldogLowellB Offline
      BulldogLowell
      Contest Winner
      wrote on last edited by
      #13

      Try separating them, or just one powered at a time so you are sure that they are not bothering each other. As mentioned above have you added capacitors to the power to the radios?

      See if you can get only one (or each separately) working, that rules out interference.

      If that solves your problem, then just use one arduino to control both relays, which is the way most of us would do it in your use case. The extra radio an arduino are a bit superfluous.

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      • R Offline
        R Offline
        rafael.brasilia
        wrote on last edited by
        #14

        So my problem is definitely that the Arduino is not strong enough to power the relays. When the relays are not powered by the Arduino, my sensor communicates with the gateway just fine. It's been on for more than 24 hours now and still communicating fine.

        I found this somewhere else, and I think it's exactly what was happening:
        "if you draw too much power from the +5V, the thermal protection circuit on the voltage regulator will trip and the whole Arduino will shut down"

        So I just need to find a way to power the relays from an external power source. Has anyone done that?
        I've tried several different power sources, and with all of them the relay LEDs turn on but it won't click when turn it on/off. I even tried powering the relay from another Arduino just to make sure the voltage was right, but still no luck.

        Thanks!

        BulldogLowellB 1 Reply Last reply
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        • R rafael.brasilia

          So my problem is definitely that the Arduino is not strong enough to power the relays. When the relays are not powered by the Arduino, my sensor communicates with the gateway just fine. It's been on for more than 24 hours now and still communicating fine.

          I found this somewhere else, and I think it's exactly what was happening:
          "if you draw too much power from the +5V, the thermal protection circuit on the voltage regulator will trip and the whole Arduino will shut down"

          So I just need to find a way to power the relays from an external power source. Has anyone done that?
          I've tried several different power sources, and with all of them the relay LEDs turn on but it won't click when turn it on/off. I even tried powering the relay from another Arduino just to make sure the voltage was right, but still no luck.

          Thanks!

          BulldogLowellB Offline
          BulldogLowellB Offline
          BulldogLowell
          Contest Winner
          wrote on last edited by BulldogLowell
          #15

          @rafael.brasilia

          Reference this you should be powering the relays from Vin which is directly powered (5V) from your USB cable and is not regulated by the Arduino. in other words, the power at Vin is regulated by your power adaptor.

          The 5V (AKA Vcc) pin is using the Arduino's on-board regulator, and indeed the current is limited by that device. If you power your arduino with the Raw pin, using a 9V battery for example, the Arduino's on-board regulator will drop that voltage to 5V, thus its marking.

          I hope that's clear.

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          • TD22057T Offline
            TD22057T Offline
            TD22057
            Hardware Contributor
            wrote on last edited by
            #16

            Perhaps someone w/ more electronics knowledge can comment more but in my limited research, you can reduce power consumption to the relay by getting one w/ an optocoupler. There is a good write up here: https://arduino-info.wikispaces.com/RelayIsolation

            Most x2, x4, and x8 relays on aliexpress that I have seen have optocouplers. Here are some single relay boards with them: http://www.aliexpress.com/item/Free-shipping-5Pcs-Lot-Level-Triger-Optocoupler-Relay-1-Channel-H-LModule-for-Arduino-5V-New/32390536994.html

            SparkmanS 1 Reply Last reply
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            • TD22057T TD22057

              Perhaps someone w/ more electronics knowledge can comment more but in my limited research, you can reduce power consumption to the relay by getting one w/ an optocoupler. There is a good write up here: https://arduino-info.wikispaces.com/RelayIsolation

              Most x2, x4, and x8 relays on aliexpress that I have seen have optocouplers. Here are some single relay boards with them: http://www.aliexpress.com/item/Free-shipping-5Pcs-Lot-Level-Triger-Optocoupler-Relay-1-Channel-H-LModule-for-Arduino-5V-New/32390536994.html

              SparkmanS Offline
              SparkmanS Offline
              Sparkman
              Hero Member
              wrote on last edited by
              #17

              @TD22057 The relay coil will draw a certain amount of current at 5 VDC. Using opto-couplers does not change the amount of current the relay draws. However, some of the relay modules will use transistors, etc. to ensure that the current for the coil is not supplied by the digital output pin of the Arduino as the output pins can't typically source enough current for that.

              Cheers
              Al

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              • RJ_MakeR Offline
                RJ_MakeR Offline
                RJ_Make
                Hero Member
                wrote on last edited by
                #18

                It's a strange problem. In most of my "projects" I power the relays directly from the power supply, home built or mfg and other than adding some capacitors have not seen these problems. Now I aways use Opto-controled relays so I don't have to use any diodes...

                RJ_Make

                R 1 Reply Last reply
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                • RJ_MakeR RJ_Make

                  It's a strange problem. In most of my "projects" I power the relays directly from the power supply, home built or mfg and other than adding some capacitors have not seen these problems. Now I aways use Opto-controled relays so I don't have to use any diodes...

                  R Offline
                  R Offline
                  rafael.brasilia
                  wrote on last edited by rafael.brasilia
                  #19

                  @ServiceXp
                  What kind of power supply do you use to power the relays? I've tried several different options (iPhone charger, iPad charger, and various other 5v power supplies) but no luck. The LEDs on the relay turn on, but it doesn't click. Would you have a picture of one of your relays so I can see your setup?

                  I also tried following the advice from @BulldogLowell and powered the relays from the VIN pin instead of the Arduino 5v output, but I had the same problem. The relay worked for a few hours, then stopped working.

                  FYI: I am using a relay with optocoupler just like the one posted in the link above. Maybe I just got a batch of bad Arduinos from China?

                  Thanks!

                  SparkmanS 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • R rafael.brasilia

                    @ServiceXp
                    What kind of power supply do you use to power the relays? I've tried several different options (iPhone charger, iPad charger, and various other 5v power supplies) but no luck. The LEDs on the relay turn on, but it doesn't click. Would you have a picture of one of your relays so I can see your setup?

                    I also tried following the advice from @BulldogLowell and powered the relays from the VIN pin instead of the Arduino 5v output, but I had the same problem. The relay worked for a few hours, then stopped working.

                    FYI: I am using a relay with optocoupler just like the one posted in the link above. Maybe I just got a batch of bad Arduinos from China?

                    Thanks!

                    SparkmanS Offline
                    SparkmanS Offline
                    Sparkman
                    Hero Member
                    wrote on last edited by Sparkman
                    #20

                    @rafael.brasilia I'm wondering if the relays are actually 9VDC or 12VDC relays that are misprinted as 5VDC. What happens if you power them with a 9V battery as a quick test? I use old phone chargers with similar 5V relays and never had an issue with powering them that way. Do you have any other relays you can test with?

                    Cheers
                    Al

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                    • sundberg84S Offline
                      sundberg84S Offline
                      sundberg84
                      Hardware Contributor
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #21

                      I thought the same, it was how i detected i had 12v relays instead of 5v. I just quickly powered with 9v bat and then the relay clicked.

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                      • R Offline
                        R Offline
                        rafael.brasilia
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #22

                        Thanks for the heads up. But I tried 9v and 12v and no luck! They only click when powered directly from the Arduino and they stop working after a few hours.

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                        • NuubiN Offline
                          NuubiN Offline
                          Nuubi
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #23

                          You should probably draw a circuit diagram about your connections?

                          R 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • NuubiN Nuubi

                            You should probably draw a circuit diagram about your connections?

                            R Offline
                            R Offline
                            rafael.brasilia
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #24

                            @Nuubi
                            This is how I have my connections:
                            Relay Diagram.png

                            Is there anything wrong with it?
                            Thanks!

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                            • korttomaK Offline
                              korttomaK Offline
                              korttoma
                              Hero Member
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #25

                              Try adding a wire between the GND on your relay board and GND on your arduino. Even if they have seperate power source you stil need to connect GND between them.

                              • Tomas
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                              • NuubiN Offline
                                NuubiN Offline
                                Nuubi
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #26

                                Exactly that is the reason. Yep.

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                                • R Offline
                                  R Offline
                                  rafael.brasilia
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #27

                                  YES!!! That was it! I got both relays powered from the external power supply now and everything seems to be working fine.
                                  Thank you all very much!

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