Ground Fault sharing using the Follow Me coordination feature.
To share Ground fault you need to install the GFP Jumper on one classic only. You then need to make sure Ground Fault is Enabled in the tweaks menu for any of the networked Classics you want to shut down on detection of ground fault. For example say you have 3 solar Classics and one Wind Classic and you do not want the wind Classic to shut down for GFP make sure in the tweaks menu of that Classic GFP is Disabled.
Quote from: Halfcrazy on November 27, 2011, 07:35:21 PM
If the jumper is pulled off of the jumper,
huh?
Quote from: Halfcrazy on November 27, 2011, 07:35:21 PM
no current can pass through that PTC so no ground fault will occur, even if you leave the GF enabled in the Tweaks menu.
What is PTC?
Quote from: Halfcrazy on November 27, 2011, 07:35:21 PM
The idea for networking, which is coming up shortly now, is to have one Classic tell the other Classics that it has a ground fault and so the other Classics can turn off if any other Classic has a fault.
Has this been implemented?
--vtMaps
Hi vtM,
The latest manua (1/7/13), as this is written, coveres these issues; page 22:
http://www.midnitesolar.com/pdfs/classicManual.pdf
PTC = Positive Temperature Coefficient -- a Thermistor. This is used instead of a Fuse that will blow, and force the customer to try to find one. The MN approach is elegant, no?
Believe that there is a jumper block that can be moved to enable/disable this Thermistor, and there is the menu item in Tweaks to enable/disable the CC's action.
That is the way I understand it. Vic
The jumper on the jumper is really called a "shunt" I think. It's the thing you slide onto the 2 pins to short
it out.
Vic had the PTC right.
The PTC is a resettable fuse. When a certain amount of current passes through it, it heats up
and raises its resistance, hence Positive Temperature Coefficient. The Classic senses this
and trips as a ground fault.
This is part of the Follow Me feature if the Classics have their GND FAULT enabled in Tweaks.
boB
Quote from: boB on January 10, 2013, 03:00:05 AM
The jumper on the jumper is really called a "shunt" I think. It's the thing you slide onto the 2 pins to short
it out.
boB
The DIL pins sticking out of the circuit board are often known as a header plug, link header, DIL links etc... and the little, usually black, shorting link is most often called a jumper.
I have also heard it called a 'shorting link'
From manual for an eastern made com port card
"make jumping shorts on 4pin up and down pushing on shorter"
dgd
Quote from: dgd on January 10, 2013, 06:02:04 AM
Quote from: boB on January 10, 2013, 03:00:05 AM
The jumper on the jumper is really called a "shunt" I think. It's the thing you slide onto the 2 pins to short
it out.
boB
The DIL pins sticking out of the circuit board are often known as a header plug, link header, DIL links etc... and the little, usually black, shorting link is most often called a jumper.
I have also heard it called a 'shorting link'
From manual for an eastern made com port card
"make jumping shorts on 4pin up and down pushing on shorter"
dgd
OK, so now with that, I would say...
Install the jumper over the header pins
boB