Battery powered timer with dry set of contacts.

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srahmn

Member
Location
Santa Rosa, Ca
Occupation
Project Manager
Looking to see if anyone has a good suggestion for a battery powered time clock with only battery as a source. Preferred to be N3R but can always put in an enclosure. There is no utility or emergency power present.
 

srahmn

Member
Location
Santa Rosa, Ca
Occupation
Project Manager
We install home generators. We have a client who wants to shut down their generator at night. "quiet time". The generator provide voltage through a dry set of contacts in the ATS. there will be no voltage present.
 

srahmn

Member
Location
Santa Rosa, Ca
Occupation
Project Manager
Unfortunately the generator is 250’ from the house and customer wants the controller at house in case they want to turn on manually. Need a self contained solution. Thanks for your input. Thought about pulling out feeder and adding conductors. Also issue is we have had power outages exceeding 10 days and concern the battery drain could be enough to not start the generator.
 

hbiss

EC, Westchester, New York NEC: 2014
Location
Hawthorne, New York NEC: 2014
Occupation
EC
So, you need something that uses no external power and has to work remotely from 250 ft. That would be something that somebody would have to build from separate components. Rechargeable battery power supply at both ends, wireless remote control with receiver at generator end and transmitter at house, that time clock or one like it installed in a cabinet with a manual switch on it.

Or maybe there's an app for it...

-Hal
 

srahmn

Member
Location
Santa Rosa, Ca
Occupation
Project Manager

hbiss

EC, Westchester, New York NEC: 2014
Location
Hawthorne, New York NEC: 2014
Occupation
EC
"Fits over your existing wall plate and automatically flips the switch at programmed times".

Now tell me how that will do what you wanted above with remote control from 250'.

-Hal
 

srahmn

Member
Location
Santa Rosa, Ca
Occupation
Project Manager
the ATS is located at the service and the genset is located 250' away. we would simply be breaking the two wire start contacts in the ATS to prevent the generator from starting during the night. the control circuit is on 12 volts and is generator by the battery on board the generator. just need a battery operated timer switch. with a 24 hour clock and a dry set of contacts to make happen.
 

gar

Senior Member
Location
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Occupation
EE
210318-1514 EDT

srahmn:

Build your own based on a Dallas time clock.


I have used various Dallas timing components and have had very good results. You will need to add a means to reset the time base. Once a year might be often enough in your application. In standby they consume very little energy. Those with an internal battery are good for about 10 years. If power is applied most of the time, then the internal battery life can be extended some.

.
 

Barbqranch

Senior Member
Location
Arcata, CA
Occupation
Plant maintenance electrician Semi-retired
We have a generator, and I just installed a simple toggle switch to interrupt the start signal. That way it doesn't run if we aren't home, either. Just turn it on when needed.
The down side is it also interrupts the weekly exercise, so we have to turn it on for that.
 

hbiss

EC, Westchester, New York NEC: 2014
Location
Hawthorne, New York NEC: 2014
Occupation
EC
Unfortunately the generator is 250’ from the house and customer wants the controller at house in case they want to turn on manually. Thought about pulling out feeder and adding conductors.

Ahh, so now the story changes.

The ATS is located at the service and the genset is located 250' away. we would simply be breaking the two wire start contacts in the ATS to prevent the generator from starting during the night.

Use a 12VDC time clock as I suggested and provide it with the 12V from a power supply that has a standby rechargeable battery which is available at any security/fire system supplier like ADI.

Now tell me what's wrong with that...

-Hal
 

gar

Senior Member
Location
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Occupation
EE
210318-1914 EDT

srahmn:

Since you were not scared away by my Dallas comment here is a specific chip that I have used in the past. DS1216.

Do an Internet search for Dallas DS1216 and look at its datasheet. It is extremely impressive, and actually works. I first used these in possibly the late 1970s. This device alone won't solve your problem, but can be part of a home made solution.

Also look at the Dallas DS 2250 T. This is a microcomputer plus a time clock with built in battery backup for 10 years.

hbiss's suggestion is good and you do not need an additional battery because it should be possible to use the generator battery, if the clock is at the generator.
 

g-and-h_electric

Senior Member
Location
northern illinois
Occupation
supervising electrician
Hey guys, while we are all figuring out the time issue we are forgetting one problem that it will create. I was told that it is not good practice to start a generator under load, hence why there is a lag between power out generator start, and power back on. How will the restart be addressed, if the transfer switch is till in emergency position, and the generator loutput breaker is on?

If I am wrong about starting under load, please educate me.... Im old with a lot of old info in the brain.......


Howard
 

Russs57

Senior Member
Location
Miami, Florida, USA
Occupation
Maintenance Engineer
Yes, it is one thing to inhibit start after sundown and enable it at sunrise. It is quite another matter to shut down generator after sundown and restart it at sunrise when normal power isn't available at either time. Those are the questions I would need to be answered.
 
Y'all are making things complicated-
Get a timer-thermostat! Set the stat as high as it will go and the time-of-day settings to when you want the generator to run; can even use the override to run it later. Runs over a year on one AA cell.
 
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