Well... my SWG stopped working late last year. I thought it was the surge board, which I replaced, and it worked again for a while, then stopped again. I finally diagnosed the problem (I hope)! It was the "winter switch," part of my custom circuit described above. It was a 4PDT switch, a big honker. I guess ya gotta spend more than $8 on Amazon for something like that.
So I finally got around today to replacing the switch. I spent a little bit more, and ordered it from DigiKey, as per a recommendation from
@ogdento. He warned me, way back when, that it probably wasn't the board, and he was probably right. Well, now I have spare! The new switch sure looked and felt of higher quality. I took a little extra time to do a better job of connecting it, too. I used spade connectors this time, and insulated each one with shrink wrap. I crimped the female connectors to the wires, then soldered them, as well. Then I lubed up the spades on the new switch with dielectric grease before sliding on the connectors.
I had soldered the wires directly to the previous switch, because soldering is better than just a friction connection. But perhaps applying all that heat to a low-quality switch accelerated its failure. So this time, I didn't have to apply heat to the switch at all, just the wires. And should the switch go out again, the next replacement will just take a few minutes, instead of the several hours that I spent this time. These wires are just running motors and relays, there are no signals running through them, so the spade connectors should be fine for that application.
I fired everything up and both the Winter Mode and Summer Mode (which includes my SWG) are working correctly. Tomorrow I'll program the SWG, and restore some CYA and I'll be off and running with swim season 2025.
Hopefully this switch will last a bit longer. I stand by my custom circuit, as its convenience is nice. It took quite a bit of time to build, and now more time to fix, so the convenience came at a heavy price. Oh well.
Here's the previous switch. In retrospect, this is not how I do, and not the quality of work that I would normally perform. I did some shoddy soldering and used cheap parts and got stung by both. Lesson learned. In my defense, this was 13 large wires crammed into a small space. And I had to install this switch standing in front of my EasyTouch, with the wires and switch hanging off of it. I didn't have the luxury of working at a bench. Yep, that's my story and I'm stickin' to it.
Here's the replacement. A higher quality part, insulated spade connectors, all labelled and color coded.
This is how I do! I still had to work standing at my ET, but the spade connectors made that much easier this time.
