> The problem I experience was that while there was voltage getting to
> the relay it wasn't quite enough to effect closure of the relay - in
> my case you could give the box a whap and that would cause the relay
> to close - or as I mentioned - upon inspection I found that when
> energized it took just the tiniest amount of persuasion for the relay
> arm to make the trip to closed...it was on the edge - the spring was
> just more than it could overcome..
First, most people just do not understand how difficult it is to use
large heavy contacts to switch weak signals with any reliability.
EVERY manufacturer fights that problem, unless they use very special
relay designs.
In your case, either the supply voltage is too low or the relay is
mis-adjusted.
It could be, in an effort to have good connections on a large contact
used for receiving applications, that tension is being set too high
and now pull-in is unreliable. Or it could be the supply is simply
too low in voltage.
If tension is increased from manufacturer's settings, then the surge
voltage needs to be increased. We should always have significant
headroom on closure voltage, or we would certainly see unreliable
operation popping up here and there. It is always necessary to have
reasonable headroom, that is why 24 volt vacuum relays operate on 14
volts and 12 volt relays normally work on 8 volts.
It does not hurt to bang a relay coil with two or more times the
normal steady working voltage. The problem is, if this is a hold-hold
system where one relay closes immediately as one opens, designing the
supply is somewhat complex. Things designed for amplifiers will
generally **not** work, because those systems have a zero-load
current period that allows charging time to recover charge in an
energy storage system.
As another suggestion, try rotating the switch *slowly* from one
position to the next and see if the switch, while in transition,
grabs two or more relays at once. Does it do that? If so, what is the
supply voltage when multiple relays are engaged?73, Tom W8JI
W8JI@contesting.com
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