Almost any electrical item will melt with a loose connection. A loose connection will induce arcing at high current flow and the arcing will build up carbon on the terminals that will only compound the problem. The current flow through the carbon will generate heat, and that will melt the crap out of almost anything.Kev R said:I had one melt like that but not as bad, the problem was a lose conection at the ssr
PM me your address and I'll send you one of the dodgy Foteks I have.sp0rk said:The Fotek is fake, however I think the Inkbird is a genuine one made by Inkbird
Do us a favour and see if you can pop out the little lid that the label sits on, on the Inkbird SSR
If they're completely filled with resin, it's probably a decent unit
I'm planning on buying a couple to tear down and inspect for quality
pulse width modulationNealK said:PWM?
Pulse Width Modulation, or PWM, is a technique for getting analog results with digital means. Digital control is used to create a square wave, a signal switched between on and off. This on-off pattern can simulate voltages in between full on (5 Volts) and off (0 Volts) by changing the portion of the time the signal spends on versus the time that the signal spends off. The duration of "on time" is called the pulse width. To get varying analog values, you change, or modulate, that pulse width. If you repeat this on-off pattern fast enough with an LED for example, the result is as if the signal is a steady voltage between 0 and 5v controlling the brightness of the LED.
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