I've been told the main source of contactor failure is arc'ing of the contacts when the circuit is turned on.
The mechanical switch in the system has what's called, "bounce" which means there's voltage instability in the system while the contacts are closing. This bounce causes arcing. Some contactors have things called arc quenchers to keep this from happening on the high voltage contacts.
I've always taken the step of installing a "de-bouncing" circuit into the contactor coil, which is just a simple capacitor/resistor system that buffers the input signal.
I don't know if I'm acutally solving a real problem by adding a de-bounce circuit. I've never had one fail but that doesn't mean I'm doing any good.
My question is, does anyone have any words of wisdom on de-bouncing contactors?
The mechanical switch in the system has what's called, "bounce" which means there's voltage instability in the system while the contacts are closing. This bounce causes arcing. Some contactors have things called arc quenchers to keep this from happening on the high voltage contacts.
I've always taken the step of installing a "de-bouncing" circuit into the contactor coil, which is just a simple capacitor/resistor system that buffers the input signal.
I don't know if I'm acutally solving a real problem by adding a de-bounce circuit. I've never had one fail but that doesn't mean I'm doing any good.
My question is, does anyone have any words of wisdom on de-bouncing contactors?