thermal relay - meaning and definition. What is thermal relay
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What (who) is thermal relay - definition

ELECTRICALLY OPERATED SWITCH
Relays; Control relay; 3000 Type Relay; 600 Type Relay; Electrical relay; Electromechanical relay; Relay switch; Electric relay; Latching relay; Mercury-wetted relay; Coaxial relay; Overload protection relay; Voltage-sensitive relay; Impulse relay; Voltage Sensitive Relay; Bistable relay; Stay relay; Keep relay; Relay (electrical); Blocking relay; Alarm relay; Power factor relay; Ground detector relay; Lockout relay; Pilot-wire relay; Reclosing relay; Field application relay; Field excitation relay; Tripping relay; Trip-free relay; Under-voltage relay; Over-voltage relay; Over excitation relay; Under excitation relay; Transfer relay; Undercurrent relay; Underpower relay; Annunciator relay; Volts per Hertz relay; Field relay; Incomplete-sequence relay; Rate-of-change relay; Closing relay; DC overcurrent relay; AC reclosing relay; Checking relay; Opening relay; Phase-angle measuring relay; Transformer thermal relay; Mercury-wetted reed relay; Vacuum relay; Multi-voltage relay; Machine tool relay; Polarized relay; Solid-state contactor; Relay cabinet
  • A mercury-wetted reed relay
  • Latching relay with permanent magnet
  • Part of a relay interlocking using UK Q-style miniature plug-in relays
  • Circuit symbols of relays (C denotes the common terminal in SPDT and DPDT types.)
  • 25 A and 40 A solid state contactors
  • Solid-state]] relays have no moving parts.

relay         
(relayed)
1.
A relay or a relay race is a race between two or more teams, for example teams of runners or swimmers. Each member of the team runs or swims one section of the race.
Britain's prospects of beating the United States in the relay looked poor.
N-COUNT
2.
To relay television or radio signals means to send them or broadcast them.
The satellite will be used mainly to relay television programmes...
This system continuously monitors levels of radiation and relays the information to a central computer...
VERB: V n, V n to/from n
3.
If you relay something that has been said to you, you repeat it to another person. (FORMAL)
She relayed the message, then frowned...
= pass on
VERB: V n
relay         
I
n. to run a relay
II
v. (B) she relayed the information to us
Relay         
·noun A number of men who relieve others in carrying on some work.
II. Relay ·vt To lay again; to lay a second time; as, to relay a pavement.
III. Relay ·noun A supply of horses placced at stations to be in readiness to relieve others, so that a trveler may proceed without delay.
IV. Relay ·noun A supply of anything arranged beforehand for affording relief from time to time, or at successive stages; provision for successive relief.
V. Relay ·noun A supply of hunting dogs or horses kept in readiness at certain places to relive the tired dogs or horses, and to continue the pursuit of the game if it comes that way.
VI. Relay ·add. ·adj Relating to, or having the characteristics of, an auxiliary apparatus put into action by a feeble force but itself capable of exerting greater force, used to control a comparatively powerful machine or appliance.
VII. Relay ·noun In various forms of telegraphic apparatus, a magnet which receives the circuit current, and is caused by it to bring into into action the power of a local battery for performing the work of making the record; also, a similar device by which the current in one circuit is made to open or close another circuit in which a current is passing.

Wikipedia

Relay

A relay is an electrically operated switch. It consists of a set of input terminals for a single or multiple control signals, and a set of operating contact terminals. The switch may have any number of contacts in multiple contact forms, such as make contacts, break contacts, or combinations thereof.

Relays are used where it is necessary to control a circuit by an independent low-power signal, or where several circuits must be controlled by one signal. Relays were first used in long-distance telegraph circuits as signal repeaters: they refresh the signal coming in from one circuit by transmitting it on another circuit. Relays were used extensively in telephone exchanges and early computers to perform logical operations.

The traditional form of a relay uses an electromagnet to close or open the contacts, but relays using other operating principles have also been invented, such as in solid-state relays which use semiconductor properties for control without relying on moving parts. Relays with calibrated operating characteristics and sometimes multiple operating coils are used to protect electrical circuits from overload or faults; in modern electric power systems these functions are performed by digital instruments still called protective relays.

Latching relays require only a single pulse of control power to operate the switch persistently. Another pulse applied to a second set of control terminals, or a pulse with opposite polarity, resets the switch, while repeated pulses of the same kind have no effects. Magnetic latching relays are useful in applications when interrupted power should not affect the circuits that the relay is controlling.