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???
03/24/07 23:22
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#135821 - Polyswitches
Responding to: ???'s previous message

Aubrey, polyswitches and the like are thermal devices and as such, are slow to respond. In a short circuit situation, you have a rapid rise of current limited only by the impedance of the source and the circuit. By the time a polyswitch has reacted, the triac is toast. Fuses react quickly, but you need a machanism to quench the arc, so high speed fuses usually have sand to quench this. Using a larger rated triac helps, but doesn't eliminate the problem. In light dimming circuits I used dual thyristors rated at 40A. Apart from being larger and much more expensive, they would withstand a short circuit multiple times whilst only being protected by a standard din-rail circuit breaker.

List of 16 messages in thread
TopicAuthorDate
Protecting a Triac            01/01/70 00:00      
   Bigger triac            01/01/70 00:00      
   Snubber, mains filter, varistor?            01/01/70 00:00      
      Assymetry            01/01/70 00:00      
         Snubber ?            01/01/70 00:00      
      RE: Snubber            01/01/70 00:00      
         Protecting a triac            01/01/70 00:00      
   switch at zero crossing?            01/01/70 00:00      
      Zero crossing            01/01/70 00:00      
   Is it back EMF or short circuit            01/01/70 00:00      
      Polyswitches            01/01/70 00:00      
         Thermal properties aside            01/01/70 00:00      
            Why bother ?            01/01/70 00:00      
               I vote for overrating too            01/01/70 00:00      
   Thanks            01/01/70 00:00      
      Not "over" just proper            01/01/70 00:00      

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