mloebl
Non-member
To make a long story short... I had bought a peristaltic reef modified pump a couple years ago, and had it fail on me once since it's gears I think need to be greased as it was sticking a bit. Figured I'd go in and lubricate it, but then found out the person who modified it put in security bits, so couldn't get in
. Emailed the company but never heard back, so I made it my mission to try to make my own. My current pump has a float switch jack in the back, so I wanted to have a replacement pump to do the same thing.
Off to ebay... I won a pair of them for $134 shipped. Yes, TWO... So figured one to play with if I blew it up... Worst case it was still 1/2 the cost for two of them what I paid for one.
Here's the model I got all done being modified pumping away:
I powered it up, and quickly ran into a problem... it was smart enough to have a drip sensor so kept shutting off. I'm a basic electronics person and NO expert, so spoke with a friend of mine who helped me out. After disassembling, I found it was a simple beam that needed to be broken every few seconds. I metered it and the transmit side was 12v dc, and on the receive side it was going between 0 and 5v. So I ordered a simple 555 timer kit that was adjustable. The 12v dc was enough to power the kit, but not enough to drive the relay which needed 100ma. The power supply put out 24v ac, so ordered a very small and cheap 24vac to 12vdc transformer. Soldered it in, ran the wires... and heard the relay firing. I adjusted it to fire every few seconds for 1 second hold. I attached the relay output to the receiving side of the drip sensor, and it worked.
Here's the inside after cramming it all in:
The transformer is hot glued above the battery, and the 555 timer is to the right.
cont....
Off to ebay... I won a pair of them for $134 shipped. Yes, TWO... So figured one to play with if I blew it up... Worst case it was still 1/2 the cost for two of them what I paid for one.
Here's the model I got all done being modified pumping away:
I powered it up, and quickly ran into a problem... it was smart enough to have a drip sensor so kept shutting off. I'm a basic electronics person and NO expert, so spoke with a friend of mine who helped me out. After disassembling, I found it was a simple beam that needed to be broken every few seconds. I metered it and the transmit side was 12v dc, and on the receive side it was going between 0 and 5v. So I ordered a simple 555 timer kit that was adjustable. The 12v dc was enough to power the kit, but not enough to drive the relay which needed 100ma. The power supply put out 24v ac, so ordered a very small and cheap 24vac to 12vdc transformer. Soldered it in, ran the wires... and heard the relay firing. I adjusted it to fire every few seconds for 1 second hold. I attached the relay output to the receiving side of the drip sensor, and it worked.
The transformer is hot glued above the battery, and the 555 timer is to the right.
cont....
Last edited: