jburn
Electrical
- May 4, 2001
- 36
HI,
I would like some opinions on this. A Mfg. rates a small single pole relay at 40A/250VAC. The applalication the relay is used in, the current the contact will normally see is vary low, on both make and break, maybe less that 1 amp. Its used to bypass a set of SCR's, which will be fully gated on, when ever the relay opens or closes.
What is your opinion on using the relay on a 480 VAC circuit? I could see an abnormal case, where the SCR's have not gated on, before the relay opens. If that happens, then the relay could be interupting a motor load, with a FLA rating of 37 Amps. There are three of the relays, one for each phase, and they are not mechanicaly interlocked, as a motor contactor would be.
When I ran across this applalication, my first response was that the relay is under rated because of the voltage. The company that used the relay in their equipment, told me that it is OK. Don't know what the Mfg. of the relay itself, would say.
Thanks for your opinion.
I would like some opinions on this. A Mfg. rates a small single pole relay at 40A/250VAC. The applalication the relay is used in, the current the contact will normally see is vary low, on both make and break, maybe less that 1 amp. Its used to bypass a set of SCR's, which will be fully gated on, when ever the relay opens or closes.
What is your opinion on using the relay on a 480 VAC circuit? I could see an abnormal case, where the SCR's have not gated on, before the relay opens. If that happens, then the relay could be interupting a motor load, with a FLA rating of 37 Amps. There are three of the relays, one for each phase, and they are not mechanicaly interlocked, as a motor contactor would be.
When I ran across this applalication, my first response was that the relay is under rated because of the voltage. The company that used the relay in their equipment, told me that it is OK. Don't know what the Mfg. of the relay itself, would say.
Thanks for your opinion.