This is mine. Jumpered the ground across 1/8 mono jacks and hook all my switches to 1/8 mono plugs. I added gaskets inside the project box and all cable entrances to make it water resistant
You might be an engineer if...You have no life and can PROVE it mathematically.
What will be my connection To use my float switch?
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I put othet term #6 and the other is #1 then I check sa disp on fusion the sw does'nt go to close
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I got it. I put one term to #8 and the other is #1 and that's my sw1.
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I was thinking yours was only a 6 term not 7 guess I should have counted lol
Thanks too for the help
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excuse the ignorance, but you are shorting what two wires for the switch to activate?
All it does is tell you if a switch or float is open or closed. This cant power or control anything. Most people will use them for ATO float switches to have the apex be the ATO instead of a seperate ATO. You can also attach magnetic door switches to your stand to turn on fuge lights anyyime you open it. A lot of people will also mount switches to their stand for easy maintaince, emergency shutoff, etc.
You might be an engineer if...You have no life and can PROVE it mathematically.
It's for 'reserved'. Not sure why it's there. One of the mysteries of life I suppose.
Al
I do not work for Neptune. Please do not send me PMs with technical questions or requesting assistance - use the forums!
For Neptune support send an email (don't call) to: [email protected] .
Manuals for all products including the Comprehensive Reference Manual can be found here.
Man....that would just really bug me. So it is a volt thing? Can it at all be controlled or referenced when programming? Or is it a constant power load that could allow you to power the light on a switch?
So if i am understanding, the ground is not really a ground, it completes the loop when it connects to inputs 1-6. A common ground....how does one make that into separate grounding?
The switch state can be referenced in programming using the if sw1 open then on syntax. There is a section in the CRM about this.
If you want seperate grounds on a diy BOB then you need a total of 12 terminals. You connect the ground wire to one terminal, and then jumper that to the next ground terminal, and then to the next...so on and so forth.
You might be an engineer if...You have no life and can PROVE it mathematically.
You can think of the RSV terminal simply as "not used"
Please do not send me PMs with technical questions or requesting assistance - use the forums for Apex help. PM me ONLY if the matter is of a private or personal nature. Thanks.
Nope.
Al
I do not work for Neptune. Please do not send me PMs with technical questions or requesting assistance - use the forums!
For Neptune support send an email (don't call) to: [email protected] .
Manuals for all products including the Comprehensive Reference Manual can be found here.
Zombie could you post a pick of the inside of your diy breakout box. I am building one and thinking of adding the mono plugs.
Thanks Ken
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I'll try to remember when I get home. That method works really well for quick setup and teardown, but in hindsight, I actually would have preferred the method that was suggested in post #15 because soldering every time a float fails or I want to change things around gets real annoying.
Oh ok yeah I don't want to do a lot of soldering.
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Got mine built and set up on my apex in my classroom yesterday. So far it works perfectly.
Thanks
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