And what does PWM mean anyway?:lmao:
For right now, I'd say buy one and see what you think. The hum/whir that it makes is weird. We can sit at the dinning room table and at 5-6' we can hardly hear it. But at my computer in the living room 15-18' away I can hear it. It's not loud, but then my wife will tell you I half deaf (but it's the high pitched stuff I can't hear). I think 2 WP40's could be enough. And if not, buy a third or get a WP25 when they come out and put it on the back glass? So understand, I'm not recommending them, I'm saying they'll move your water. You have to decide if they work for you and if the sound is accepable.
Floyd, please share more info. I do 120v stuff all the time, but DC and small motors are very new for me. What do I need to look for in a PWM module? Do I need to match voltage, amps, watts? And what does PWM mean anyway?:lmao:
Hope that helps.
My cat could care less about my tank...
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If it's a simple on/off controller how does the light sensor slow down the pump?maybe the controller is simply a timer with functions to start-stop the pump and the knot control how long it stay on-off, and not a controller that speed up and down the pump.
Before using PWM module we need to know if pump use PWM or analog 0-10v, probably 0-10v instead of analog because tunze use 0-10v and this pump is a tunze copy.
But we need to know this or if this can be done, for example koralia controllable pumps use a weird power source to be controlled, that's way only koralia controller can control it.
Another thing from what i have read from Ron this pump work different to the tunze and vortech because this one completely stop and none of the other do that, they just slow down, this stop start thing concerns me about how controllable the pumps really, maybe the controller is simply a timer with functions to start-stop the pump and the knot control how long it stay on-off, and not a controller that speed up and down the pump.
So Ron you don't recommend the pump....?
Ron, did you try the "lock" function to lock in the control knob setting once you got the waves or interval dialed in? That function is performed by push and hold the "Feed" button until the Lock LED lights up in red. Same procedure to unlock as well.
Thanks for the U tube link Ron...that pump has some serious undertow!
Hmm, I just went and looked at the images on Fishstreet and the connector to the pump has three terminals, so it may not be a simple DC motor, or there is some sort of feedback signal.
If the pump operated on a 0-10V servo signal, that would be even better as that is easily supported.
I just hope it is not something weird like 3 phase.
We need a nerd who owns one of these to hook up a meter and/or a scope to the connector to the powerhead and see what the controller is actually using.
Dennis
If it's a simple on/off controller how does the light sensor slow down the pump?
From what I've read the light sensor automatically powers down the pump, reducing its overall speed.
Dennis,
I don't have a scope, but I have a good quality multimeter. That kind of helpful info can I try to capture?
It looks like it goes from Power source to DC power convertor with a 24V output to the controller to the pump, would replacing the power supply with a variable 24v voltage regulator before the controller give the speed control ?