... But it's true nonetheless - switching high voltage DC will destroy switches...
My day job involves industrial control equipment. You will very often find a switch or relay contact rated at a given current for 240V AC or
24V DC. Experience also supports this recommendation. If you exceed the DC rating then the insulation bears up OK but the contacts don't last long at all. If you have to switch high voltage DC then use an appropriate MOSFET, IGBT or SCR and only ever for control: don't rely on this solid state stuff where your safety is concerned. If they fail they usually fail short-circuit.
(Edit)
On reflection, probably best to avoid SCRs for amateur use: you can latch them on OK but switching them off while they're passing DC current can be a bit of a chore...
« Last Edit: January 06, 2011, 02:00:32 AM by ToolGuyFred »
John
Amateur Audiophile and Backstreet Boffin.
Original Foreplay with C4S + Sweet Whispers
ParaSEX amps with MQ nickel-cored outputs
Factory-built Lowther Acousta 115s with silver-coiled DX3s, wired in DNM solid-core
KEF active sub (help for the last couple of octaves).
Bottlehead DAC on batteries.