The rotary actuators are an off-the-shelf item for transfer switches. No problem to get them paired with high-amperage switches. But a contactor, which is a solenoid-driven switch, is also an off-the-shelf item. The ones I use in EV applications are rated for 1000A, and cost about $300. You need to be careful to look at the trade-off between voltage, amperage, and the per-cycle probability of a weld, though. An over-rated contactor helps a lot if you're going to be cycling it a lot, whereas if it's for emergency use only, you can hew a lot closer to the max rating.
-Bill > On Jan 28, 2015, at 18:40, Robert Drake <rdr...@direcpath.com> wrote: > > For larger DC devices with ~50amps per side, does anyone have a software > accessible way to turn off power? > > I've looked into PDU's but the ones I find have a max of 10amps. > > I've considered building something with solenoids or a rotary actuator that > would turn the switches on or off, but that's a complete one-off and would > need to be done for each device we manage (not to mention it involves janky > wiring all over the place I've got to explain to the colo) > > My use case is pretty infrequent so it needs to be remote-hands cheap.. it's > for emergencies when you need to completely power cycle a redundantly powered > DC device. The last time I needed this it was because a router was stuck in > a boot loop due to a bad IOS upgrade and wouldn't break to rommon since it > had been >60 seconds. It came up again tonight because we wanted to disable > one power supply to troubleshoot something. > > FWIW, I believe I've seen newer Cisco gear with high-end power supplies that > have a console or ethernet port which would possibly let you shut them down > remotely. That solves the problem nicely if you're dealing with only one bit > of hardware, but I'd like a general solution that worked with any vendor. > Possibly a fuse panel with solenoids that could add/remove fuses when > needed.. or would that be considered dangerous in code-ways or in telco fire > regulation ways? > > > >