LightenUP
Active Member
A friend of mine worked on this porject and just wanted to share it with you all.
Here is the finished installation of my waterfall freeze protection project.
I found a GREAT box for the installation at Home Depot (top box in first pic). It is a sprinkler
timer cabinet made by Orbit (model #57095). It is lockable, weather resistant, and it has an internal GFI to provide power to everything. It was $30 - a bargain. The Ranco probe wire is coiled behind the mounting plate and exits the bottom of the Orbit box.
I have the Ranco unit setpoint at 37 degrees F, with a 3 degree differential - when the temperature reaches 34 degrees (37-3) it provides contact closure for an I/O module. The I/O module then sends a link to six waterfall relay switches, and doesn't turn them on again until the ambient warms to 37. I may need to play with setpoint and differential a bit, but I think this will be fine.
It works great, and the Orbit box was the perfect solution for the installation.
Tomorrow I'll be attempting the pool valve control.
Steve Ewing



Here is the finished installation of my waterfall freeze protection project.
I found a GREAT box for the installation at Home Depot (top box in first pic). It is a sprinkler
timer cabinet made by Orbit (model #57095). It is lockable, weather resistant, and it has an internal GFI to provide power to everything. It was $30 - a bargain. The Ranco probe wire is coiled behind the mounting plate and exits the bottom of the Orbit box.
I have the Ranco unit setpoint at 37 degrees F, with a 3 degree differential - when the temperature reaches 34 degrees (37-3) it provides contact closure for an I/O module. The I/O module then sends a link to six waterfall relay switches, and doesn't turn them on again until the ambient warms to 37. I may need to play with setpoint and differential a bit, but I think this will be fine.
It works great, and the Orbit box was the perfect solution for the installation.
Tomorrow I'll be attempting the pool valve control.
Steve Ewing



