Twodose
Active member
Switched from low pressure wax to high pressure, do I need a relay to make the HP wax run with cold water instead of hot?
Whenever you direct fed the pump with city water pressure you need to lower the water pressure to get the pump to draw in whatever chemical you’re trying to draw. My pumps are set up with direct feed from the city water, no gravity fed tanks. I use a Generant regulator to lower the incoming water pressure on both the Hot and Cold water and a DEMA 203C injector to draw the chemical into flow of water. The nice part of this system is there are no gravity tanks, no troublesome float valves and the pumps will last longer because they aren’t trying to draw a suction. I’ve never had a washed out pump head.Using this relay wouldn’t work because the rinse water comes in at about 40 psi so it won’t create suction to pull product out of the tank, it was actually pushing water backwards into the wax tank when wax was selected out in the bay.
It worked as described in the way that when on rinse it will just open the rinse solenoid and when on wax it will open the wax solenoid and the rinse solenoid at the same time.
I think the only way to get it to work is to have a separate cold water holding tank for only the wax and opening a solenoid to that tank with this relay when the wax is selected.
You may want to try these from mouser.com > 653-G7L-1A-TJ-AC24
You said you used a 1-pole relay, I think that's why why it didn't work. You must use a double-throw relay like in my diagram.Mep001, I'm confused now as to who is giving advice to who. My system is not this way. (If you are talking to me that is)
Mine has a suction tank, but not gravity fed and it has both hot and cold water solenoids that feed the tank. I have no city water pressure on the suction side on any cycle. Then I have a soap solenoid on the suction side downstream of the tank so soap is sucked via a metering valve. I also set up a wax solenoid next to the soap input. It works as it should in wax cycle. But then the wax solenoid stays activated in rinse because I have wired it up wrong. I think it is active in all high pressure cycles. And I think this is because my relay was back feeding power into the wax solenoid either because I have the wrong relay or just wired up wrong.
2biz, this is news to me which #'s on that switch are make before break?I just reread your post. How does it work where you only have one grvity feed tank being supplied with hot and cold water via solenoids? Is it an Erie 2 way that feeds the tank? I guess you need to be more specific on how your system works...Either way, I still think you can do what you want using your rotary as long as its wired correctly.
I'm going to throw this at you too....IF your using an electro switch https://www.kleen-ritecorp.com/p-1728-rotary-switches-8-position-2-stack-metal.aspx Three of the positions are "Make Before Break" contacts...?