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A limit switch with a roller-lever operator; this is installed on a gate on a canal lock, and indicates the position of a gate to a control system A limit switch mounted on a moving part of a bridge In electrical engineering , a limit switch is a switch operated by the motion of a machine part or the presence of an object.
In building wiring, multiway switching is the interconnection of two or more electrical switches to control an electrical load from more than one location.A common application is in lighting, where it allows the control of lamps from multiple locations, for example in a hallway, stairwell, or large room.
An Eaton Corporation office building in Brossard, Quebec. Eaton Corporation plc is an American-Irish-domiciled [2] multinational power management company, with a primary administrative center in Beachwood, Ohio. [3] Eaton has more than 85,000 employees and sells products to customers in more than 175 countries. [4]
A Single-Pole, Single-Throw (SPST) mercury switch on millimetre graph paper, device length approximately 1.5 cm Another mercury switch design. A mercury switch is an electrical switch that opens and closes a circuit when a small amount of the liquid metal mercury connects metal electrodes to close the circuit.
An early switch operating by this principle was invented by Chester I. Hall of the General Electric Company, with a patent filed in 1921 and approved in 1924.Like the modern infinite switch, Hall's invention used a bi-metallic strip, heated by a constant current, to break a connection after a given period of time.
Leviton Manufacturing Company, Inc. is an American manufacturer of electrical wiring equipment in North America. The company produces electrical outlets including GFCI and USB charging devices , network infrastructure, lighting control systems , load centers and circuit breakers , EV charging stations, and utility submetering .
Eaton's actively sought out new subscribers, particularly in rural areas, by employing such tactics as offering gifts for the contact information of non-subscribers. [ 1 ] There was initially only an English version of the catalogue; the first French version was published in 1910, and began to be regularly distributed in 1927.
The 1965 edition of the NEC, article 384-15 was the first reference to the circuit total limitation of panelboards. [1] As of 2008, the location of this language is at Article 408.54 now titled "Maximum Number of Overcurrent Devices."