Hello,
I was reading about a 2 wire inductive proximity switch, and i am little bit confused about how the switch generates the magnetic field. The wiring for the sensor goes like this:
Essentially all inductive sensors need to have a magnetic field to sense some metallic object, but how could the above sensor generates the magnetic field when the neutral is isolated through some load i.e the neutral has no direct connection to the coil of sensor that generates the field.
I read some where that a small residual current flows even when there is no metallic object nearby, from the phase to normally open contact(NO) then from load and back to neutral, that creates the needed magnetic field required for sensing. Is that true?
I was reading about a 2 wire inductive proximity switch, and i am little bit confused about how the switch generates the magnetic field. The wiring for the sensor goes like this:
Essentially all inductive sensors need to have a magnetic field to sense some metallic object, but how could the above sensor generates the magnetic field when the neutral is isolated through some load i.e the neutral has no direct connection to the coil of sensor that generates the field.
I read some where that a small residual current flows even when there is no metallic object nearby, from the phase to normally open contact(NO) then from load and back to neutral, that creates the needed magnetic field required for sensing. Is that true?
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