Hello,My apologies.
This relay is controlling a bending sequence function on a powered press machine. Unfortunately it is a uniquely designed piece of equipment by a long departed predecessor.
Essentially upon pressing the start button, the machine applies a fold to a piece of sheet steel. Once the first bend is completed, it moves along via a pneumatic cylinder to the next position. Here it is supposed to operate the second fold, however this relay sticks. Tapping it ever so slightly initiates the second bend and completion of the sequence.
Inspecting the internals of this relay shows a row of three internal relays, of which two are blackened and have seen better days. An external inspection has ruled out possible repair owing to the internal relays connected to the circuit board being obsolete. I have attached another image showing the entire cabinet.
Hi,Like I posted his smart relay may not even be bad it’s not the only place a problem can’t be he has off board switches that go bad way more then the smart relay
You could seek out the local rep for one of the popular makes and see what they suggest as a replacement , Pilz would be one of the first on my list to contact.I am looking for some assistance with a safety relay. The image attached shows a relay we currently have which is pretty old now. It is intermittently sticking and I wish to replace this. Unfortunately an exact replacement is no longer available so I am wondering what I can replace this with which will be suitable?
NO WAY WOULD I SUGGEST ANY EXCEPT A QUITE SKILLED Worker to even touch the module. I have seen a few thousands of dollars of equipment turned into scrap by the unskilled-not-even-hobby-class wannabe techs hired by some organizations. There should be a legal process to recover damages from those who represent that they know what they are doing, when actually they are totally clueless, can't read a schematic, and are unable to even follow a written test sequence.i would advise against repairing existing unit. not only it is old but charred relays may have damaged board as well, which also can happen by unskilled repair attempts etc. replacement relays will be typically $30-80 each. that is close to price of replacement module. and TS was having hard time even with shown schematics of buttons with NO abd NC contacts. besides, this is a safety device and any tampering is of course prohibited. and given that this can mean life or death for someone, i would say it is not worth to pursue this route, just get replacement or substitute unit.
call local electrical supplier, each of them will have at least one product line that cover this. (Pilz, Schmersal, Banner, AB, Omron/Sti, Murr, Phoenix...).
I would probably pick Murr because they are really nice and low cost ($100USD)
3000-33113-3020030
but whatever floats your boat:
https://www.pilz.com/en-CA/eshop/Re...lays/Two-hand-monitoring/c/0010000200700480FS
https://products.schmersal.com/en_C...ontrol-panels-to-en-iso-13851-1000074783.html
https://www.rockwellautomation.com/...lty-safety-relays/safety-relays-two-hand.html
https://ca.wiautomation.com/en/phoenix-contact/drives-motors-circuits-protection/2963983
or shop online:
https://www.automationdirect.com/ad...wo-hand_safety_control_relays/bg5933-22-61-24
or get complete kit that includes opto touch buttons
https://www.digikey.ca/en/products/detail/banner-engineering-corporation/ATK-VR81Q/12418029?utm_adgroup=&utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=PMax Product_Low ROAS Categories&utm_term=&productid=12418029&utm_content=&utm_id=go_cmp-20291741422_adg-_ad-__dev-c_ext-_prd-12418029_sig-EAIaIQobChMIq__h6_-piQMVSDgIBR1olwgLEAQYASABEgIOXPD_BwE&gad_source=1&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIq__h6_-piQMVSDgIBR1olwgLEAQYASABEgIOXPD_BwE
Hi,In post #6 the TS refers to "two internal relays blackened" and a third relay evidently OK. While exact replacements may not be available it is quite likely that equivalent relays would be available,and that the existing module could be repaired. At that point I suggest adding external fuses, rated for less that the relay contacts current rating, in series with whatever circuits the damaged relays would be controlling, to avoid it happening again.
In addition, whatever caused the failure damage will need to be corrected. THAT may require quite a bit of troubleshooting. OR it might be very obvious.