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How do push button switches work?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Deleted member 191766
  • Start date Start date
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Deleted member 191766

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I have a switch that when one presses it in it locks down and when one pushes again it unlocks; I seek an explanation (diagram/video) of how the W wire achieves this magic.
 

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That is a pushbutton switch, not a "toggle" switch. Probably the most commonly seen toggle switch is a typical wall mounted light switch.
 
I have a switch that when one presses it in it locks down and when one pushes again it unlocks; I seek an explanation (diagram/video) of how the W wire achieves this magic.
How all mechanical switches work is the same,join two terminals.
They can either be simple on off positional switches , momentary switches or latched like yours but the action of the switch is a mechanical construct.
They all essentially join two or more wires.
 
My bad, not toggle; changed the title, and yes I have tried Google

I am after learning not how they work electrically, but mechanically; the mechanism by which they behave differently on each push; there is a two channel mechanism and a different channel is selected on each push. I'm after the details of the dynamics and the shape of the channels that make this possible.
 
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Latch switches might actually be the right name.
Your best bet is to take a few apart, it's a hard shape to describe like a G on it's back but wrong font, with a plastic flap ,sprung with edge tongues that slides through it but there are other ways even harder to describe and all likely patented too.
 
Finally got to photograph an undamaged mechanism; seems to be based on a series of ramp/steps to avoid returning immediately to the same position.
Looks like it is the middle (chevron) catch that breaks on failure, perhaps because the spring was too strong.
 

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