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Thanks.<diagram> .... There's your diode, should not use a three port valve with a type AC RCD I assume, but never seen a warning about it! But think the two port valves also stall the motor, so that does not seem to be a problem, the problem is micro switches sticking.
That's pretty clever [and it subsequently goes on to explain in greater detail]! However, I'm still learning, and, in particular, haven't yet worked out exactly how/why the motor behaves in this way in response to AC/DC.The Honeywell V4073A three port, mid position, spring return valve, is a masterpiece of clever engineering. It manages to move to one of three positions using only a cheap non-reversible AC motor, a spring, a couple of micro-switches, a resistor and a diode, and act as a relay for the boiler into the bargain! However, it has obviously required quite a bit of lateral thinking to conjure up, and its operation is thus not easy to understand. Here's how it works.
..... The spring pulls the valve to open the flow through port B (traditionally connected to the hot water cylinder's heating coil), while the motor winds it towards opening port A (feeding the radiator circuit). If the motor is left continuously powered, it will stall in with port A open, but if it is fed with DC (produced with the resistor and the diode), then it will stall in any position. Two micro-switches, operating just either side of the 'A+B' point, are used to define this position.
That's really just a repeat of what you wrote before(which is something I hadn't previously heard of).
What is the diode meant to achieve, and in what sense is the motor 'stalled' when the diode is in-circuit?
I presume that it would stop working, as would happen with most things designed to run on AC when they were supplied with DC.John - might I suggest you try inserting a diode, in series with a clock motor, and see what happens to the motor?
the problem is micro switches sticking.
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