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

ELECTROMECHANICAL MULTI-POLE SWITCH CONTROLED BY A CHAIN OF PULSES
Uniselector; Uni-selector; Uni selector; Stepping relay; Telephone selector switches
  • An array of uniselector stepping switches as installed in a telephone exchange. The silver dials show the current position of the moving wipers. The fixed feeder brushes are barely visible.
  • An example of a Western Electric 7A Rotary (Bird-cage) Line Finder assembly. The horizontal shaft is driven by a gear and when the Line Finder's electromagnet is energized, a flexible disc at the base of the Line Finder's brush carriage is engaged through friction to the horizontal shaft's driving disc, causing the brush carriage to rotate.

Stepping switch         
In electrical control engineering, a stepping switch or stepping relay, also known as a uniselector, is an electromechanical device that switches an input signal path to one of several possible output paths, directed by a train of electrical pulses.
relay         
  • 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.
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
(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         
  • 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.
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
I
n. to run a relay
II
v. (B) she relayed the information to us

Wikipedia

Stepping switch

In electrical control engineering, a stepping switch or stepping relay, also known as a uniselector, is an electromechanical device that switches an input signal path to one of several possible output paths, directed by a train of electrical pulses.

The major use of stepping switches was in early automatic telephone exchanges to route telephone calls. Later, they were often used in industrial control systems. During World War II, Japanese cypher machines, known in the United States as CORAL, JADE, and PURPLE contained them. Code breakers at Bletchley Park employed uniselectors driven by a continuously rotating motor rather than a series of pulses in the Colossus to cryptanalyse the German Lorenz ciphers.

In a uniselector, the stepping switch steps only along or around one axis, although several sets of contacts are often operated simultaneously. In other types, such as the Strowger switch, invented by Almon Brown Strowger in 1888, mechanical switching occurs in two directions, across a grid of contacts.