Don't be a smartass. It was a genuine question. Obviously that's what bypassing means, I asked if it was possible. Will it do any harm to the Nayax when the timer sends the power to the switch? What wire do you use?
Possibly, which is why there's mention of a relay. The comment right before your very first post mentions this. I'm not familiar with Nayax readers, but I have to assume its internal relay isn't rated to directly power solenoids and contactors. They weren't made to switch loads.Will it do any harm to the Nayax when the timer sends the power to the switch?
Well it wasn't a genuine answer. I didn't ask what bypassing a timer meant. I asked if it was possible. It was quite obvious I was looking for a member with knowledge of this situation to steer me in the proper direction. Whether it be telling me what relays to use, which wires to use, etc. Not someone responding with zero information and zero help and I'm no further ahead than when I first put the question out there.Mine was a genuine answer. Bypassing the timer means sending the power right to the rotary switch. It's possible because that's what you do.
Possibly, which is why there's mention of a relay. The comment right before your very first post mentions this. I'm not familiar with Nayax readers, but I have to assume its internal relay isn't rated to directly power solenoids and contactors. They weren't made to switch loads.
Okay thanks! I've just started up the Nayax unit for the first time and it's currently set to charge $1 and that's it, no count up or anything. How do we change the settings to have a different starting $ value, how much each increment is worth and to have it count up? I've been on hold with tech support all day and getting pretty frustrated with their customer support, especially as a new customer who just bought 10 units.I wouldn't recommend bypassing the timer with any credit card system. I've seen pretty much every one have their outputs fail because they're just not strong enough to handle the intrinsic electrical noise of a car wash. The proper way to install the Nayax is to use a Dixmor timer and do count up. Any other way is half way.
I honestly have no clue. We do not get into setting them up for customers. Two reasons: We will use pretty much any card system the customer wants on their equipment do keeping track of how to set them all up would be a PITA and that would involve us having access to a customers financial info and that is not anything we want.Okay thanks! I've just started up the Nayax unit for the first time and it's currently set to charge $1 and that's it, no count up or anything. How do we change the settings to have a different starting $ value, how much each increment is worth and to have it count up? I've been on hold with tech support all day and getting pretty frustrated with their customer support, especially as a new customer who just bought 10 units.
Did you get this to work?We have older Dixmor 2000 timers, dont think they have the CC count up. We are using a relay and wiring the rotary switch. But if theres another way to do it on the older timers I am open to it! My next project though is to get cash counting to work. I am going to try Pulse 2 cable wired to the coin acceptor.
Hi @WashUp23 I have a new location that has DX2002 timers and there is a input terminal labeled "CC" on the circuite board and thats where the Green Pulse 1 wire lands and it works perfect for me in count up mode. Im not sure what other Dixmor models are out there but it sounds like there might be both a Dixmor 2000 and 2002. Let me know if your model has different input terminals. I am curious.Did you get this to work?