When you signal your automation to enable a relay even if you have it set to turn the relay back off after some status change, consider using an extended pulse. This is just insurance against the situation where the relay doesn't actually get commanded to turn off for some reason.
True story: We have JNIORs all over the country monitoring water towers in municipalities. Periodically the water level is reported to a monitoring system. When levels are down the JNIOR is commanded to close a relay engaging pumps that refill the tank. There was a situation where the command to disengage the pumps never came. Now this is just fresh water overflow and outdoors. And, actually this might occur on purpose as some places have a requirement that (say) 20% of the tank contents must be turned over each day. But in this case, well, the home system went through a MS update. It failed to remember that it was pumping.
Now there are a number of solutions that would prevent this from occurring. The application can detect a full tank and shut off the pumps on its own. We are told that it takes about an hour and a half to fill the tank. We've recommended that they pulse the pump relay for an hour or two. At least then the overflow situation won't run on forever (and waste valuable clean water).
So in the cinema, if you are using a relay to run a motor hopefully the motor has a mechanical shutoff at its limits. Still you'll want to insure that the relay is turned off. Maybe pulsing for a time just longer than it takes the motor to go from stop to stop?
I am not sure what analogous situations there might be in the cinema but at least your not going to fill the theater with water (or popcorn or something).
True story: We have JNIORs all over the country monitoring water towers in municipalities. Periodically the water level is reported to a monitoring system. When levels are down the JNIOR is commanded to close a relay engaging pumps that refill the tank. There was a situation where the command to disengage the pumps never came. Now this is just fresh water overflow and outdoors. And, actually this might occur on purpose as some places have a requirement that (say) 20% of the tank contents must be turned over each day. But in this case, well, the home system went through a MS update. It failed to remember that it was pumping.
Now there are a number of solutions that would prevent this from occurring. The application can detect a full tank and shut off the pumps on its own. We are told that it takes about an hour and a half to fill the tank. We've recommended that they pulse the pump relay for an hour or two. At least then the overflow situation won't run on forever (and waste valuable clean water).
So in the cinema, if you are using a relay to run a motor hopefully the motor has a mechanical shutoff at its limits. Still you'll want to insure that the relay is turned off. Maybe pulsing for a time just longer than it takes the motor to go from stop to stop?
I am not sure what analogous situations there might be in the cinema but at least your not going to fill the theater with water (or popcorn or something).
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