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My 3 vessel brew system project has been working flawlessly for about 10 brews or so since mid last year. at the heart of the system is my DIY controller, which not being an electronics or electrical engineer I made as simple as possible with no fancy features and was feeling pretty smug about myself on the basis I've managed not to electrocute myself or burn down the house so had chalked that up as a success.
However, pride comes before a fall, on my last brew there was a smell of electrical burning and a whisp of white smoke emerging from the controller so clearly something was not quite right. Upon further inspection I've found the negative terminal block has clearly overheated and melted, and there are signs of an SSR overheating with distortion signifying its overheated.
I'm trying to uderstand what has gone wrong and if its a fundamental problem with the way I've wired it up or just a failure of a component.
Firstly the SSR has loads of capacity with a 75a rating for a 24a load...is this likely to be a primary failure of the SSR? I know these cheap Chinese ones can be a bit unreliable or not particularly long lasting.
Secondly, since I'm sharing the same power supply with my HLT and Kettle elements I have a switch to switch between the elements, so either sending power to the HLT or the Kettle. The way I've wired it the live output of the SSR go through the switch and then diverted to either the HLT or Kettle element. And the negative/nutral wires are all connected up together in a large terminal block. Does this sound like a good/correct/safe way to wire this up through the switch? This terminal is close in proximity to a live terminal block...could it have been arcing between the two?
Given all this, are these two failures linked? i.e. the SSR failure causing the negative terminal block melting, or visa versa or two seperate coincidental things.
Thanks.
However, pride comes before a fall, on my last brew there was a smell of electrical burning and a whisp of white smoke emerging from the controller so clearly something was not quite right. Upon further inspection I've found the negative terminal block has clearly overheated and melted, and there are signs of an SSR overheating with distortion signifying its overheated.
I'm trying to uderstand what has gone wrong and if its a fundamental problem with the way I've wired it up or just a failure of a component.
Firstly the SSR has loads of capacity with a 75a rating for a 24a load...is this likely to be a primary failure of the SSR? I know these cheap Chinese ones can be a bit unreliable or not particularly long lasting.
Secondly, since I'm sharing the same power supply with my HLT and Kettle elements I have a switch to switch between the elements, so either sending power to the HLT or the Kettle. The way I've wired it the live output of the SSR go through the switch and then diverted to either the HLT or Kettle element. And the negative/nutral wires are all connected up together in a large terminal block. Does this sound like a good/correct/safe way to wire this up through the switch? This terminal is close in proximity to a live terminal block...could it have been arcing between the two?
Given all this, are these two failures linked? i.e. the SSR failure causing the negative terminal block melting, or visa versa or two seperate coincidental things.
Thanks.