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Contactor Construction & Operating Principle

A contactor is an electrically controlled switch used for switching an electrical power circuit , similar to a relay except with higher current ratings. Contactor is in fact an electromechanical switch.

Low-voltage Contactor is an electrically controlled switch used for switching an electrical power circuit, similar to a relay except with higher current ratings. A contactor is controlled by a circuit which has a much lower power level than the switched circuit.

A contactor is a relay that is used for switching power. They usually handle very heavy loads like an electric motor, lighting and heating equipment’s etc.

Though their output is used for switching very high loads, they are controlled by a circuit with very less power. According to the loads they handle, they vary in sizes from a small device to as huge as a yard .

Unlike circuit breakers contactors are used for switching purposes only, they do not interrupt a short-circuit current like a circuit breaker.

Contactors have ratings ranging from a breaking current of a few amperes and 24 DC volts to thousands of amperes with many kilo volts.

Construction of Contactor

Below diagrams explain the construction of contactor.

Components of contactor

Mainly there are two types of coils in a contactor i.e. AC coil and DC coil. In AC coil the options available are for 110, 240 and 415 volt while in DC coil options are for 12 and 24 volt.

Operating Principle of Contactor

Mechanical Life of contactor is over when

Electrical Life is over when the contact Silver material wears away.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Contactors

Advantages of contactors include:

Disadvantages of contactor include absence of overload protection and malfunction due to excessive use of contacts.

Application of Contactors

Lighting Control Contactors are often used to provide central control of large lighting installations, such as an office building or retail building.

To reduce power consumption in the contactor coils, latching contactors are used, which have two operating coils. One coil, momentarily energized, closes the power circuit contacts, which are then mechanically held closed; the second coil opens the contactor.

Magnetic Starter: A magnetic starter is a device designed to provide power to electric motors. It includes a contactor as an essential component, while also providing power cut-off, under-voltage, and overload protection.

Common Contactor Complaints and Field Failures

Field Failures Causes of Contactor

Failure Causes of Burned Contacts

Severity of Failure

Failure Causes of Burned Coils

Severity of Failure

Causes of Open Coils

Severity of Failure

Causes of Stripped Screws

Severity of Failure

Precautions for Reliability of Contactor

Summary of The Article

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