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HRT wrote:You only need a tiny wire to run to a relay to switch it on. The relay can switch big currents. Basically its so you have the relay next to the fan for example, you only need to run heavy wire to the relay and from there to the fan, leave you just thin wire to run to switch/key/whatever.
Very useful if you have lots of stuff to switch, or if you have a high current item
Crampy wrote:If you didn't use relays, it would eventually burn out the contacts on your switch gear.
l1ttle_d3vil wrote:Crampy wrote:If you didn't use relays, it would eventually burn out the contacts on your switch gear.
over 2 or 3 years? or 6 weeks? basically I just need something so I can get my car around town on the odd occasion, and switch my fans on if I need to. It definitely isn't going to be a long-term or permanent solution.
HRT wrote:And saying its less wiring isn't entirely true.
Run your power feed to the relay straight from the battery and bridge it over to one of the coil terminals as well. Run the output from the relay to the fan and earth the other fan terminal to the chassis.
Now all you need is to feed an earth to the relay through one small wire to a switch, and that switch can be earthed under the dash anywhere.
So now you basically have a power wire from the battery to the fan with a relay in the line somewhere, and a thin single wire to the dash. You're running less wiring if anything
HRT wrote:Run your power feed to the relay straight from the battery and bridge it over to one of the coil terminals as well.
NZ_AE86 wrote:Relays are there for two reasons, one - which is to allow a switch with small contacts to be used, two - allows small wiring to run from your switches to the relays. If all your switches had contacts large enough to handle the current drawn when switched on and off we would not be able to have small easy to use switches we are used to.
Someone mentioned the fuel pump switching off when the car stops - this has nothing to do with the relay. It will stop because the ECU will stop triggering the relay after a preset time.
As for how long it will take to burn out you switch, that will depend on how big your switch is. HRT is on to the best way to do it. Put a fuse in the feed from the battery too.
There are other relay uses for special purpose relays but very few cars use them.
Caveman wrote:ummm it has everything to do with the relay, without it the system would not work.
I think hes meaning circuit opening relay system vs a switch in the cabin for the fuel pump
NZ_AE86 wrote:Caveman wrote:ummm it has everything to do with the relay, without it the system would not work.
I think hes meaning circuit opening relay system vs a switch in the cabin for the fuel pump
The fact is it has a relay in the circuit has nothing to do with it turning off when the engine stops!
The relay is only there to take the current, if it is controlled by a switch on the dash it will keep running until that switch is off regardless of the engine being stopped or running.
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