I think the last one I bought the parts from Amazon and built was about $40-$50.
You need a relay (ideally with heat sink), and a handful of wire, switches, box, plug receptacle too if you want to get fancy.
I think the last one I bought the parts from Amazon and built was about $40-$50.
You need a relay (ideally with heat sink), and a handful of wire, switches, box, plug receptacle too if you want to get fancy.
So none of those $30 PIDS on Amazon are plug and play? You have to add more stuff? Those things just switch the power to the lead pot on and off to control the temperature correct?
M
So none of those $30 PIDS on Amazon are plug and play? You have to add more stuff? Those things just switch the power to the lead pot on and off to control the temperature correct?
M
That would depend on the power rating of your pot vs the rated power of the ssr. I put a heat sink on mine and it doesn’t get hot at all. I don’t think I really needed it. I was concerned that the cheap SSR I bought was not actually good for what it was rated for. I think it would have been fine.
If you ok with wiring things i would just build it. also for a heat sink the next time you see any tower computer at the side of the road you can grab the heatsink from the cpu and mount it to the ssr. mine is massively oversized and barely gets warm.https://www.canadiangunnutz.com/forum/showthread.php/1696333-RCBS-Promelt-with-extras
Is this worth $120? I'm thinking not.
M
Are you running a 220V or 120V pot? Mine is 120V 700W. I suppose the heat sink could be added later if one finds the SSR warms up. Is that true?
M
Ok.... I just ordered $31 worth of Amazon PID, SSR(40A), and thermocouple. Sooo....
When this is all cobbled together (and programed?), I simply set my pot to max and let the PID and SSR do it's thing correct?
M
Ok.... I just ordered $31 worth of Amazon PID, SSR(40A), and thermocouple. Sooo....
When this is all cobbled together (and programed?), I simply set my pot to max and let the PID and SSR do it's thing correct?
M
Going back to finding a scrap computer for the heatsink you can also use the power supply as a housing for the pid, here are some pictures of my setup.