
ronaldito wrote:LOL, making the slots for the switches is easy piece of cake... no filing at all ... If you have a MILLING MACHINE available... LOL![]()
Used the milling machine from work to do all the required...
I had a serious talk with my Boss, Professional Electrical Engineer, owner and President of the Electrical Engineering Design company, and was discussing about that heated argument AC OR DC for light switches, he said you should not have any problem for use with DC if you do not overload them. With either AC or DC there is gap sparking. You can look at the ratings of a good relay and it has rating for both AC and DC, same contact .. lol I believe its just that someone wanted to get too technical just to put some cream on their tacos... jajajaj If the switch fails just change it, most manufactured products today are mostly reliable, and besides the AC switch only has an AC rating because thats mostly an application for AC switching, but if someome wanted to find ratings for DC they probably could come up with one, if that was their use instead....
ronaldito wrote:You can look at the ratings of a good relay and it has rating for both AC and DC, same contact.
satch wrote:My thinking is way take a chance?
I would much rather feel safe using the right switch.
Besides, dc switches are smaller, and IMO, look better
dovaka wrote:satch wrote:My thinking is way take a chance?
I would much rather feel safe using the right switch.
Besides, dc switches are smaller, and IMO, look better
yea considering how buried te switches are on how much i spent on everything else i didnt mind spending the extra money on the right switches. i also forogt to ask, what on earth are you powering in there with that many switches?
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