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A reed relay is a reed switch enclosed in a solenoid. The switch has a set of contacts inside an evacuated or inert gas-filled glass tube that protects the contacts against atmospheric corrosion; the contacts are made of magnetic material that makes them move under the influence of the field of the enclosing solenoid or an external magnet.
Relays symbols are a combination of an inductor symbol and switch symbol. Note: The pin letters in these symbols aren't part of the standard relay symbol. SPST, SPDT, DPST, DPDT relays (American‑style)
IEEE 315 Contacts, Switches, Contactors, and Relays Symbols (10).svg (in English) (1993) 315-1975 - IEEE Standard American National Standard Canadian Standard Graphic Symbols for Electrical and Electronics Diagrams (Including Reference Designation Letters), IEEE, p. 64 DOI: 10.1109/IEEESTD.1993.93397. ISBN: 0738109479. Author
The reed switch [i] is an electromechanical switch operated by an applied magnetic field. It was invented in 1922 by professor Valentin Kovalenkov at the Petrograd Electrotechnical University , [ 1 ] and later evolved at Bell Telephone Laboratories in 1936 by Walter B. Ellwood into the reed relay.
Switch and relay contacts are usually made of springy metals. When the contacts strike together, their momentum and elasticity act together to cause them to bounce apart one or more times before making steady contact. The result is a rapidly pulsed electric current instead of a clean transition from zero to full current.
This image is a derivative work of the following images: File:Electrical_symbols_library.svg licensed with PD-self . 2008-12-13T12:47:36Z Rainglasz 1276x850 (253011 Bytes) Addet tube symbol, variable capacitor and resistor (europ. style)
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Solid state relay with green LED Solid state contactor PCB mount solid-state DIL relay. A solid state relay (SSR) is an electronic switching device that switches on or off when an external voltage (AC or DC) is applied across its control terminals.