Hey guys, when I built my brewery I used some switches that are advertised as 16A 250V/20A 125V which I assumed would be sufficient for my build using 2500w elements.
As you can see below, the switch failed in the middle of my last brew which I ended up replacing during the boil with a similar switch with the same rating. It had clearly got really hot and melted the tiny piece of plastic that held the pole into the switch and it just fell out breaking the circuit.You can see that the other one was starting to go the same way. Not great.
Replacement on right. (same rating but looks better made).
I'd been feeling a little uncomfortable about the wisdom of using switches with the same 16A 250V/20A 125V rating that had already failed, so I replaced them both with two of these 20A 250V switches last week.
So here's my question. If a switch is rated at 20A 125V surely it's 250v rating is 10A, not 16A or is there something about resistance here that I don't understand?
As you can see below, the switch failed in the middle of my last brew which I ended up replacing during the boil with a similar switch with the same rating. It had clearly got really hot and melted the tiny piece of plastic that held the pole into the switch and it just fell out breaking the circuit.You can see that the other one was starting to go the same way. Not great.
Replacement on right. (same rating but looks better made).
I'd been feeling a little uncomfortable about the wisdom of using switches with the same 16A 250V/20A 125V rating that had already failed, so I replaced them both with two of these 20A 250V switches last week.
So here's my question. If a switch is rated at 20A 125V surely it's 250v rating is 10A, not 16A or is there something about resistance here that I don't understand?