The National Association of Relay Manufacturers and its successor, the Relay and Switch Industry Association define 23 distinct
electrical contact forms found in relays and switches. The following contact forms are particularly common:
Form A contacts Form A contacts ("make contacts") are
normally open contacts. The contacts are open when the energizing force (magnet or relay solenoid) is
not present. When the energizing force is present, the contact will close. An alternate notation for
Form A is
SPST-NO.
Form B contacts Form B contacts ("break contacts") are normally closed contacts. Its operation is logically inverted from Form A. An alternate notation for
Form B is
SPST-NC.
Form C contacts Form C contacts ("change over" or "transfer" contacts) are composed of a normally closed contact pair and a normally open contact pair that are operated by the same device; there is a common electrical connection between a contact of each pair that results in only three connection terminals. These terminals are usually labelled as
normally open,
common, and
normally closed (
NO-C-NC). An alternate notation for
Form C is
SPDT. These contacts are quite frequently found in electrical switches and relays as the common contact element provides a mechanically economical method of providing a higher contact count.
Form D contacts Form D contacts ("continuity transfer" contacts) differ from
Form C in only one regard, the
make-break order during transition. Where
Form C guarantees that, briefly, both connections are open,
Form D guarantees that, briefly, all three terminals will be connected. This is a relatively uncommon configuration.
Form E contacts Form E is a combination of form D and B.
Form K contacts Form K contacts (center-off) differ from
Form C in that there is a center-off or normally-open position where neither connection is made.
SPDT toggle switches with a center off position are common, but relays with this configuration are relatively rare.
Form X contacts with one
Form X contact. When actuated, the moving contact swings left to bridge the gap between the two fixed contacts.
Form X or double-make contacts are equivalent to two
Form A contacts in series, mechanically linked and operated by a single actuator, and can also be described as
SPST-NO contacts. These are commonly found in
contactors and in toggle switches designed to handle high power inductive loads.
Form Y contacts Form Y or double-break contacts are equivalent to two
Form B contacts in series, mechanically linked and operated by a single actuator, and can also be described as
SPST-NC contacts.
Form Z contacts Form Z or double-make double-break contacts are comparable to
Form C contacts, but they almost always have four external connections, two for the normally open path and two for the normally closed path. As with forms
X and
Y, both current paths involve two contacts in series, mechanically linked and operated by a single actuator. Again, this is also described as an
SPDT contact.
Make-break order Where a switch contains both normally open (NO) and normally closed (NC) contacts, the order in which they make and break may be significant. In most cases, the rule is
break-before-make or
B-B-M; that is, the NO and NC contacts are never simultaneously closed during the transition between states. This is not always the case,
Form C contacts follow this rule, while the otherwise equivalent
Form D contacts follow the opposite rule, make before break. The less common configuration, when the NO and NC contacts are simultaneously closed during the transition, is
make-before-break or
M-B-B. ==See also==