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Relays Are Normally Drawn in Schematic Form Using A Circle To Represent The Input Coil

Relays are typically depicted in schematics as a circle for the input coil, with normally open contacts shown as two lines that are open unless the coil is energized, and normally closed contacts shown as two lines with a diagonal line, which are closed unless the coil is energized.

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Aayush Kureel
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views1 page

Relays Are Normally Drawn in Schematic Form Using A Circle To Represent The Input Coil

Relays are typically depicted in schematics as a circle for the input coil, with normally open contacts shown as two lines that are open unless the coil is energized, and normally closed contacts shown as two lines with a diagonal line, which are closed unless the coil is energized.

Uploaded by

Aayush Kureel
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Relays are normally drawn in schematic form using a circle to represent the input coil.

Normally open contacts are shown as two lines, and will be open (non-conducting) when the
input is not energized. Normally closed contacts are shown with two lines with a diagonal line
through them. When the input coil is not energized the normally closed contacts will be closed
(conducting).

NC (active when input coil is not energised)

NO (active when input coil is energised)

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