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 warning light for gas bottle solenoid valve
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DELETED (Inactive)

2 Posts

Posted - Jul 14 2004 :  12:56:41 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
I have bought a solenoid activated valve for the gas bottle in our caravan.
It works by energising one coil to open it and one to close it. The coils do
not have to stay energised. The original plan was to use a (on)-off-(on)
rocker switch to control it, but I am feeling a bit more adventurous and
would like to incorporate a warning light to show that the valve is open. I
figure that the way to do this is to build a simple circuit that latches on
or off according to which way the rocker switch is pressed. This is where I
require some assistance. Although I figure it is easy to achieve, it is
beyond my knowledge. I would appreciate any help that you can offer.

Going beyond the simple warning light, it could be developed further. The
light could be powered by its own battery, so that if the caravan is
disconnected from the car with the gas valve open, the light stays on. Maybe
it could be possible to incorporate a buzzer to warn that the car battery is
disconnected but the valve is still open? The valve has to operate from the
car battery because it is 12volts.

Like I said, I guess this is simple to achieve but I don't know where to
look. I can build the circuit but not design it. Thanks for any help or
suggestions.

Mark

Chamkeeper
Mad Scientist

278 Posts

Posted - Jul 25 2004 :  12:40:52 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
This is an international forum so I am putting a caravan as something we call a camper or RV in the states.

With that said, I feel your best bet is not to monitor the position of the solenoid, but its output. A pressure sensor, on the gas line, would be the intristic safety device you mention. Certainly a small battery could provide the power light an LED or low power (not too loud) alarm.

All in all, a great idea, Im curious to see what other members have to offer but for now, I'm off to offer this idea some attention.

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n/a
DELETED (Inactive)

2 Posts

Posted - Jul 25 2004 :  03:58:49 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
thanks for positive vibes! You're right about monitoring the pressure to make it 'intrinsically safe', could even incorporate a low pressure alarm to warn of impending bottle-change.
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