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I may be a little late with this reply but you know you can conduct 10amps
in the switch. The switching of DC is the issue. In the olden days when caps were added across ignition points to keep the points from arcing and eating the energy that is supposed to make sparks. They used a 0.22 uf cap to keep 8 amps or so from causing a the slow moving points from arcing. To be safe I would suggest using a 100v minimum ceramic is best but an electrolytic will do. The value should be about 1 to 2 uf and to be super safe a series diode 2 amps average is ok in series with the cap. The anode of the diode should be at the + end of the switch and the cathode connected to the + end of the cap. Also a resistor must be added across the diode of 10 to 330 ohms at 1/2 watt for lead strength. This series string of cap and diode and resistor in parallel are across the switch terminals. This should protect the switch. Good luck Ray "Terry Spragg" wrote in message ... Maynard G. Krebbs wrote: On Mon, 06 Sep 2004 20:04:20 +1200, Steve wrote: I am building a new 12V DC switch panel for my boat and have a load of switches rated at 10A@125V or 8A@240V. Although they have 12V illumination there is not a DC rating in the datasheet. Does anyone have any idea what sort of rating can I assume for low DC voltage or are they totally unsuitable? The switches are Cherry RRA22H3BBRHN rocker switches. Thanks in advance, Steve I've always been told to use DC switches and breakers on DC. The arc is harder to break because there isn't a null period in DC like there is in AC. I wouldn't use them unless they are rated for Direct Current. Mark E. Williams One way to help switches in DC circuits is to connect a capacitor across the switch. It sucks up the last bit of current as the switch opens, helping to prevent the formation of an arc. Fast acting 'snap' switches last better in DC. A few microfarads, properly polarised (positive towards the positive battery) can work wonders. I would try your switches, make them changeable and carry a spare for critical applications. They may survive the duty and conditions you throw at them, if not, go upscale. Try one. Work it to death. The rating is only intended to indicate safe working current, not indicative of arc tolerance, which usually means beefier contact and actuator design, heavier case, toggle, etc. A shorted arc suppression capacitor becomes a stuck 'on' switch in circuit. DC and inductors like solenoids are a bitch on switches. A starter switch comes to mind as possibly the most critical. But, remote switching is only a luxury, non? There is always the modified hammer tool for jumping starter solenoids. A few wire nuts aboard, or even electrical tape can save an electrically challenging day. Terry K |
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