- Location
- Bremerton, Washington
- Occupation
- Master Electrician
Is there a NEMA or other standard for drawings showing relay contacts are drawing in the deenergized state?
Is there a NEMA or other standard for drawings showing relay contacts are drawing in the deenergized state?
Contacts are show in their off-shelf AND deenergized state. In other words not only is it the question of deenergized, but pushbuttons are shown 'unpushed', limit switches unactivated, etc. Multiposition switches, such as rotary switches usually have some sort of indication which position are they in, that is usually a solid dot next to the position, or vertical dashed lines with dots at the swicth position intersecting with the horizontal solid or dashed position of the contact.
Gentlemen:
Recently, two local manufacturers of traffic signal controller cabinets have indicated to me that they typically show relay contacts - on their schematic diagrams - in whichever state corresponds to a 'normal' or 'healthy' operating conditions, as required to indicate power flow to the signal lights.
As such, some relays are shown on the schematics as 'energized' whereas others are not. This means that a NO contact is shown as closed on the diagram.
I've been told that this is common in the 'traffic signals' business despite the fact that it is in direct contravention to IEEE/ANSI standards and the standards that I've worked with outside the traffic world.
Traffic signals cabinets are commonly constructed to NEMA TS1 and TS2 standards for many (but not all) municipalities across North America; these standards however do not appear to address schematic drawing conventions.
A little internet research produced a copy of the City of Los Angeles, Department of Transportation, Model 332 schematic which indeed shows relay contacts in their energized state.
At the end of the day I suppose that this is acceptable as long as there are notations on the schematics which explain the conventions being employed.
Nevertheless, I still this practice rather strange and I am wondering if anyone can explain why this is done, what the origin of the practice is, how wide spread it is or if there is some documented 'standard' which dictates this way of doing things.
Thanks very much,
:?
Um, yea. I'll stick with the above and continue to INSIST that anyone submitting drawings to me abides by it. I refuse to accept poor practice because somebody from 1912 made the original drawing and no one has seen fit to update it.
I think it had to do with the multi-contact timers that they used to use, Washers and dryers are still drawn like this, but have a time line and contact position for the timer.