SSR Warning note
Posted: Mon Feb 20, 2012 10:08 am
Over the last several years I've had one PID controller failure and several SSR failures. The last SSR death could easily have burned down my house. SSR failures can be benign, but the last one was destructive, with the SSR itself burning furiously and causing a fire in my hot tub. If my wife hadn't woken up and seen the fire, or if we had been away, the house would have burned.
I was running a 13A, 1500W heater controlled by, in this case, a 75A SSR mounted on a DIN heat sink. I felt sure that everything was spec'd out with adequate safety margins. I was wrong -- and I made a couple of poor decisions in the housing and mounting of the SSR.
I recommend that anyone using SSRs mount them in such a way that if they fail destructively nothing else will catch fire.
To me this means mounting in a steel enclosure that is not in direct contact with any flammable material, and completely separate from other flammable or critical parts.
This is 20/20 hindsight. I really wish I had done these simple things. Now I'm in the market for a new hot tub....
I was running a 13A, 1500W heater controlled by, in this case, a 75A SSR mounted on a DIN heat sink. I felt sure that everything was spec'd out with adequate safety margins. I was wrong -- and I made a couple of poor decisions in the housing and mounting of the SSR.
I recommend that anyone using SSRs mount them in such a way that if they fail destructively nothing else will catch fire.
To me this means mounting in a steel enclosure that is not in direct contact with any flammable material, and completely separate from other flammable or critical parts.
This is 20/20 hindsight. I really wish I had done these simple things. Now I'm in the market for a new hot tub....