As I looked the drawings and the sims for the relay flip flop, I noticed that the 6 volt relays get 12.6 volts applied while the toggle signal is being applied every other time. If the toggle signal is applied for an extended time, the relay may fail due to over voltage. I have some 5 volt relay that I plan to use to build a flip flop with and to prevent them from being over voltaged, I plan to add an lm317 to limit the current to the amount that one relay would draw at the correct voltage. The sim says it will work.
As I looked the drawings and the sims for the relay flip flop, I noticed that the 6 volt relays get 12.6 volts applied while the toggle signal is being applied every other time. If the toggle signal is applied for an extended time, the relay may fail due to over voltage. ...
That is why I turned the duty cycle of the timer upside down, so that the relay overvoltage happens only during the 1.5s of the cycle, then the relays are not over-voltaged for the 90s. In the web site link where the flip-flop was taken from, they are assuming that what triggers the flip-flop is a momentary contact push-button, where the button is manually pushed for <1s.
Mike, remember this post from Oct 2010? I still have a spdt switch on the end of my signal arm, may just change it now, You, Sir and the rest of you out there, Are a wealth of knowledge and neat tricks. https://www.electro-tech-online.com/threads/flip-flop-lm555.112406/
Thanks for the help,
Kinarfi