Dan kamsickas
GinSan Technician
We don't do direct financing. It's a minefield. I don't believe any manufacturer does direct financing. I can get you quotes on equipment.
We don't do direct financing. It's a minefield. I don't believe any manufacturer does direct financing. I can get you quotes on equipment.
It probably threw a rod. That can still happen with new equipment if it runs low on oil.my bay 2 pump decided to crack in the body
I'm in a similar boat only I purchased my pump stand used. 05 I believe. I got the meter box doors also but wires just cut at both ends. I don't think anything is wrong with it but I've begun reverse engineering it to figure out how to wire everything up. Do you still recommend gutting the plcs and nodes? Removing the complex computer management and going to a simple setup? What was the purpose of the plc and nodes? I notice 3 cat cables labeled main controller. Was the a remote program that could run everything? As far as you talked about the multiplex or relays is that just say to isolate functions in a similar way to 2 or 3 stack rotorary switches? I like the idea but want to know whats im losing by deleting most of the box. There had to be some advantage to it right?There's no reason for the timed hot to come back into the room. Timed hot needs to go straight to the rotary switch inputs, jumpered to inputs 11 and 21 (8 position) or 10 and 20 (10 position).
You don't connect anything "all together," each individual line from the switch needs to connect separately to each wire out to the solenoids. You're just going to remove the bank of green relays and connect the wire from the bay to the wire to the solenoids. The spot free is going to need something to isolate the bays, the rest do not.
A1 and A2 on the contactor are the power in for the contactor coil, but you need to run it through the thermal overload. It's most likely already wired where the power from the bay will go in at A1 and the common to the normally closed side of the thermal overload (marked as 96) with a jumper wire going from 95 to A2 on the contactor.
Here's my pictures again where you can see I removed the banks of relays and used terminal strips to make the connections:
View attachment 8550
View attachment 8551
I just wanted to acknowledge this well explained response. It was very helpful and right on point. Thankyou very much!Beyond fulfilling the developer’s dreams, the PLC:
Systems were available with MMI touchscreen and/or desktop computer for programming, monitoring, and remote control.
- Inputs can be on/off time delayed.
- Provide outputs to multiple devices (solenoids/motor starters/water heaters, temperature-controlled circulating pumps, weep systems, etc.)
- Provides operator settings for price-to-start & bay timing. The coin box “message center” is just a display, eliminating the typical Dixmor, Timemaster, IDX bay timer.
- Provides operation data…bay function usage, coin counts for each bay.
- Integration with HS’s Rainmaker or Cobra touchless in-bay automatics.
Because PLCs are 24vDC powered, the nodes power the green Phoenix relay coils to provide the necessary 24vAC output power for all solenoids, contactors, motor starters. So, there’s a DC power supply AND a 24v transformer.
The Cat5 cables provide network communication between the PLC processor and the I/O modules.
With very expensive components it’s definitely not a K.I.S.S system.
I love it!
I agree to a point, but you and a few others are 99.9% "Not" the norm in this business OR someone looking to buy! I have three PLC's running washer fluid winterizing systems and my lighting system that interacts with bay timers. I will want to sell the CW one of these years. Is it going to be too complex for many or most potential buyers? It can be pretty intimidating!As someone who programs plc's for a living I would love a plc wired system. I have actually removed a lot of the relay logic from my washes and changed it over to a plc. You can change the entire operation of how your wash works without changing a single wire. You can have data collection of any type of data you want. You could do remote monitoring and reset faults remotely. The possibilities are endless. Of course you would need to purchase the software to be able to edit the program.
I agree to a point, but you and a few others are 99.9% "Not" the norm in this business OR someone looking to buy! I have three PLC's running washer fluid winterizing systems and my lighting system that interacts with bay timers. I will want to sell the CW one of these years. Is it going to be too complex for many or most potential buyers? It can be pretty intimidating!
Is it going to be too complex for many or most potential buyers? It can be pretty intimidating!
You mean like this?You could write an instruction manual.
I agree on paper I love the idea, but replace you with I lol. I don't have time to get a degree in plc programming. And are the plcs going to save enough to cover potential down time. Both diag and repair? Think if the foam brush isn't coming on, you grab your multimeter check the relay the solenoid the rotary switch find out after an hr that the plc has failed. How long will it take to get a new plc, program it, replace it and check it. A relay goes down it can bypassed or replaced in minutes. Not to mention supply shortages, chip shortages, and shipping time. When down time has huge consequences features and conveniences take a back burner to reliability and simplicity. As much as I love highly sophisticated feature rich, I also love simple mecanical cleaver solutions I can walk through in my head. For example I put a keyed switch to bypass the meter for a local shop charging 200$ a month for unlimited use. Super simple and actually very useful in diagnostic. I can turn the key and rule out the meter and coin exceptor.As someone who programs plc's for a living I would love a plc wired system. I have actually removed a lot of the relay logic from my washes and changed it over to a plc. You can change the entire operation of how your wash works without changing a single wire. You can have data collection of any type of data you want. You could do remote monitoring and reset faults remotely. The possibilities are endless. Of course you would need to purchase the software to be able to edit the program.
WHHHHHAAAATTT?!?!?!@goodingcarwash , Mep passed away back in October.