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Safety Relays with Forcibly Guided Contacts

Precautions for Safety Use
Precautions for Correct Use

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Primary Contents

Precautions for All Relays with Forcibly Guided Contacts

Mounting

The Relays with Forcibly Guided Contacts can be mounted in any direction.

Relays with Forcibly Guided Contacts

While the Relay with Forcibly Guided Contacts has the previously described forcibly guided contact structure, it is basically the same as an ordinary relay in other respects. Rather than serving to prevent malfunctions, the forcibly guided contact structure enables another circuit to detect the condition following a contact weld or other malfunction. Accordingly, when a contact weld occurs in a Relay with Forcibly Guided Contacts, depending on the circuit configuration, the power may not be interrupted, leaving the Relay in a potentially dangerous condition (as shown in Fig. 1.)

To configure the power control circuit to interrupt the power when a contact weld or other malfunction occurs, and to prevent restarting until the problem has been eliminated, add another Relay with
Forcibly Guided Contacts or similar Relay in combination to provide redundancy and a self-monitoring function to the circuit (as shown in Fig. 2).

The G9S/G9SA/G9SB Safety Relay Unit, which combines Relays such as the Relay with Forcibly Guided Contacts in order to provide the above-described functions, is available for this purpose. By connecting a contactor with appropriate input and output to the Safety Relay Unit, the circuit can be equipped with redundancy and a selfmonitoring function.

Durability of Contact Outputs

Relay with Forcibly Guided Contact durability depends greatly on the switching condition. Confirm the actual conditions of operation in which the Relay will be used in order to make sure the permissible number of switching operations.

When the accumulated number of operation exceeds its permissible range, it can cause failure of reset of safety control circuit. In such case, please replace the Relay immediately. If the Relay is used continuously without replacing, then it can lead to loss of safety function.

CE Marking

(Source: Guidelines on the Application of Council Directive 73/23/EEC)

The G7SA, G7S and G7S-[]-E have been recognized by the VDE for meeting the Low Voltage Directive according to EN requirements for relays and relays with forcibly guided contacts. The Low Voltage Directive, however, contains no clauses that specify handling methods for components, and interpretations vary among test sites and manufacturers. To solve this problem, the European Commission has created guidelines for the application of the Low Voltage Directive in EU. These guidelines present concepts for applying the Low Voltage Directive to components. The G7SA, G7S and G7S-[]-E, however, do not display the CE Marking according to the concepts in the guidelines.

VDE recognition, however, has been obtained, so there should be no problems in obtaining the CE Marking for machines that use the G7SA, G7S or G7S-[]-E. Use the manufacturer窶冱 compliance declaration to prove standard conformance.

Contents of the Guidelines

The Guidelines on the Application of Council Directive 73/23/EEC apply to components. Relays with PWB terminals are not covered by the Low Voltage Directive.