PCB Help?

oznovice

New Member
Hi experts
I'm a novice with electronics and was hoping someone here at an idea of how to fix this issue I am having with a 24V (battery powered - solar charged) gate motor control board. It seems to work more at night (so no power charging the batteries) and randomly during the day, unless it's hot/humid, then it just doesn't work.

I will post a pic of the unit and the board diagram from the manual if that helps.

The model is:
ISC800DC Sliding Gate Opener

So I have troubleshooted the following

Confirmed 26V volts at the board from the batteries.

Confirmed the remote is working, by manually checking Relay 1 (opening the gate) works. I originally thought it was the relay not working, so I opened the top of Relay 1 (see pic) and manually actuated it while pressing the remote and the gate ran the Open Cycle. Without manually moving the contacts on the Relay, it doesn't run power to the motor. When the unit started playing up originally, a flick with the finger (tap) on the pcb outer cover while pressing the remote would get the gate to open.

Confirmed no power (obviously) on the PCB to the motor connector when the unit is playing up.

When the unit is playing up and not working with the remote, I have noticed this module (I believe it's a Voltage Limiter??) gets hot. I dont have an accurate temp on it, but it's almost too hot to touch.

I have installed switches to turn off solar charge to the batteries (so no power to the PWM controller from the solar panels but pwm still connected to batteries, so power available at the Load output of the PWM), and I have a switch to turn off power to the Control Board (which then allows that Module (voltage limiter) to cool down). Turning the power off to the PCB for a while, used to correct the problem until that unit heated up again. The manual shows the Load output of the PWM connects to the PCB of the gate motor.

I have checked the rear of the PCB and see no burn outs and have resoldered/cleaned the solder points on the pcb that looked dull.

If it's a simple fix, I would just rather replace a module on the PCB rather than buying an entirely new 24V electric gate, as it seems buying another complete kit is about the same price as a new control board and a lot of work to replace the entire unit. It's about 7 years old.

I think it's not getting the signal to engage the relays to run power to the motor somewhere, but as mentioned, manually actuating a relay while pressing the remote does send power to the motor, so I think the remote sensor on the pcb is working correctly. So whatever is supposed to actuate the relays (open and close) I think could be causing the issue. Could it be an internal failsafe on the PCB, for heat/outside temp/humidity? This model gate opener uses Magnets to determine if the gate is open or closed. All LEDS are lit when the unit is fully opened or closed, so I thought that meant the PCB was reading the gate position correctly?

Is that small blue box a relay as well? (see pic).

I'm totally stumped. I have to replace relay 1 as I have opened the top, and was thinking of replacing the other, plus the Blue Box one (if that's a relay also). It just doesnt make a lot of sense to me that it works fine for a few days and nights, then wont work sometimes, even at night.

Any help you experts could offer would be much appreciated.
 

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edit: forgot to mention, I tried installing an adjustable voltage regulator with digital display which seemed sort the problem (being able to limit volts and amps to the PCB), however, the regulator has a input limit of 31 volts and the 24V solar array in full sun, puts out about 31.5v, which obviously the PWM controller limits the charge to under that for the 24v batteries. When more than 31 volts, the regulator trips it's over voltage input protection and stops working.
 
The "Working when its tapped" fault indicates its most likely either a bad relay contact or a dry / cracked joint on a component.

Or possibly a loose pin in one of the connectors?
 
The "Working when its tapped" fault indicates its most likely either a bad relay contact or a dry / cracked joint on a component.

Or possibly a loose pin in one of the connectors?
Hi thanks for the reply. I have removed all the connector wires and tested. All connections seem fine. Last night when I put the PCB back on and reconnected the wires, the gate worked. This morning when charging with the solar in full sun 30c and 78% humidity, it didn't work until I manually engage the contact on the Relay 1 (motor open) while pressing the remote. Tapping doesn't seem to work anymore. I thought a relay engaged when power is sent to it, or is power always at the relay and there's a switch on the pcb to engage it? The motor ran fine once manually accuated, and seemed like it was getting sufficient power as it wasn't slow. Does this type of relay always have power, and another switch engages it? or could the PCB is getting too many volts/amps from the battery/solar controller and the control board is not letting motor run as like a fail safe? I dont understand either why the Solar Controller would put 31.4 volts into the 2 AGM batteries every now and again when it's float charge is set to 27.6 I have used a lot of 12v solar arrays, and if charging a 12V system, 15.7 volts seems high to put into a 12v agm battery. Oh, and I have replaced the solar controller with another, and it seemed to do the same (battery type b01 24v). Batteries when not on charge sit at about 25.8 after a day or so of not being charged. If a battery, or both are on the way out, could the solar controller be trying to dump a quick higher charge into them, like a smart charger might do? As the volts at the battery input on the pcb match whatever the solar panels are putting out (2 x 20W solar panels), I wasn't sure if that was the cause of the hot integrated volt regulator on the pcb.
 
The battery voltage should be around 13.8V each for float charge, or ~14.8V for cyclic charge discharge. If they stay fully charge most of the time, set it at 13.8V

Anything more than 15V will drastically shorten the battery life; they only last around 3 - 5 years if on float at the correct voltage, much less if overcharged as it dries them out.
They could already be drying out and high resistance?

From what you are saying, it may be getting insufficient voltage to the relay, so it's almost pulling in and an tapping or pressing it allows it to fully pull in and the contact connect.

The relay itself will only be powered when it should be activated; there will be an external (transistor) switch controlling power to it.
 
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