cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/26703241

This diagram is from the service manual of a combi boiler. It’s a flow sensor which detects whether hot water is running, which is then used to trigger on-demand heat and switch a diverter to take radiators out of the loop.

In English, the diagram shows:

  • X ⅔ red wire (+5V)
  • X 2/2 black wire (ground)
  • X 2/6 green wire (signal)

I need to know what those fractions mean. I took the voltage measurements in this video:

I cannot necessarily trust the model in that video to have the same specs as mine. My voltmeter detected 4.68 V on the red input wire showing that the sensor is well fed. The green “signal” wire is supposed to be 0 V at rest and 2 V with water running (or I think the reverse of that is used in some models). In my case the green wire is ~1.33 V at rest and ~0.66 V when water is running. I need to know if these readings are normal as I troubleshoot this problem.

update

@synapse@lemmy.world gave the right answer. Someone in another cross-post helped solve the underlying problem.

  • diyrebel@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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    3 months ago

    @synapse1278@lemmy.world got it right. It turns out the diagram is misleading by putting “X<space>2”. It’s just an abbreviated label for where the wire ends up on the circuit board; which for the green wire would be more verbosely written as “connector X2 pin 6”.