Nope, I have a huge fan drawing fresh air in constantly, I would say the all the air in the room 850 Sq ft is changed once every 10-20 min. I am thinking that this is helping them grow much better as well.Looking good. How's the odor? House stink yet?
Haha, yeah I ask people because maybe I cant detect it, but the funny thing is half the people in my building grow so my stink aint even that bad compared to the other lol. I think my neighbor is at the start of flowering.Have you had anyone over recently that doesn't frequent your house often? That's the true test
I think my neighbor is at the start of flowering.
So the first thing I need to see is the full back panel, you and get replacement AC fans you have to just be careful when rewiring them coz they run at 120v ~.Pico- Got my HP power supply from storage today. Flipped it on and got massive fan noise. Pulled it apart and sure enough the blade was completely loose and the motor was shot. Felt like I was spinning the motor around gravel. I'm now looking into another AC fan since I can't replace it with a cheap PC fan. They are dc from what I remember.
Also noticed the volt meter does not move. The amp gauge does.
This is one of those moments I wish I knew hardware level circuitry.
Connecting your multimeter in a wrong way and it can blow it up in your face....make sure to put the "sensor"cables in the correct connectors and to Switch wether to amps and voltage accordingly, also usually there r 2 different fuses 10A and less. Also its not hard to find how to measure voltage (in parallel) and amps (in series) to your circuit in the wwwAlso noticed the volt meter does not move. The amp gauge does.
I think he was talking about the voltmeter on the power supply, most likely its the sense connections set up for parallel operation or remote sense, the strange thing is that the amp gauge is moving...Connecting your multimeter in a wrong way and it can blow it up in your face....make sure to put the "sensor"cables in the correct connectors and to Switch wether to amps and voltage accordingly, also usually there r 2 different fuses 10A and less. Also its not hard to find how to measure voltage (in parallel) and amps (in series) to your circuit in the www
Correct. I was referring to the voltmeter on the power supply itself.I think he was talking about the voltmeter on the power supply, most likely its the sense connections set up for parallel operation or remote sense, the strange thing is that the amp gauge is moving...
So the sense connections are missing, let me check the data sheet to see what to connect "S-" and "S+"...Correct. I was referring to the voltmeter on the power supply itself.
For testing with the multimeter: I used the positive and negative lead that is on the front of the device. If that is incorrect, do let me know. I was able to get the correct amp reading as it matched the reading on the power supply. The Voltmeter on the device works when I remove the leads from the positive and negative post on the front and the amps then read zero. I am most likely doing this wrong. I have not touched a multimeter in 15 years.
Now for pictures of the device.
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Lax you're a great guy.better to post it openly so others could learn from it
I agree. Just didn't want this thread to turn into troubleshooting of my own power supply. I will keep it open in the other thread that is more for the DIY.better to post it openly so others could learn from it