2Biz,
mixed emotions regarding “retirement”. On one hand, I’ve played a lot of golf – but, I’ve always played a lot of golf. On the other hand, I have nothing else to do now…one year in and I’m pretty stir crazy. Especially since “The Razz” is in off-season.
Copperglobe,
It’s an assembly of off-the-shelf components – a programmable logic relay with expanded I/O. The existing FB and FG air and liquid solenoids are re-wired to the Idec outputs. The added washer fluid solenoids are supplied from a 15 gallon drum with a
FloJet G57.
My original design was quite “clunky”…back in 2005(?), the 1st generation Idec Smartrelay was pretty basic. The program simply filled each hose with washer fluid.
The concept was to simply replace the residual liquid in the exposed hose with washer fluid. Since air-blow-out alone could never clear the freezable
soap from the low point in the bay hose, I added purge-fill-purge to the system. Experiments resulted in determining just how little washer fluid was needed to protect the bay components.
Since the 5th and 6th generation Idec’s are much more capable, my most recent installation controls the entire system 24/7/365 allowing for delayed activation when temps are below freezing – preventing protection sequences from occurring when customers simply pass through the foam brush selection.
The program’s default setting fires the FB air solenoid for 10 seconds, followed by 5 seconds of washer fluid. Then, a 5 second pause is followed by another 10 seconds of air-blow-out. I figured those times would be a good starting point. To make the original experiments easy to adjust, I added some “User Programmability” to the Idec. Turns out, the default times worked just fine.
IIRC, at 60psi the
FloJet delivers 4 oz. of washer fluid per cycle, per bay. So, 32 oz. for the initial protection sequence and 4 oz. after each use. About 5cents per bay, per cycle???