I have a relay with following contact rating:
Since the maximum switching voltage is 250VAC/25A, can I use this relay to switch 380VAC/1A load? What is the consequences?
I have a relay with following contact rating:
Since the maximum switching voltage is 250VAC/25A, can I use this relay to switch 380VAC/1A load? What is the consequences?
Since the maximum switching voltage is 250VAC/25A, can I use this relay to switch 380VAC/1A load?
You can't horse-trade current rating and voltage rating on a relay contact.
What is the consequences?
When you're dealing with voltages that high, the biggest challenge for a relay is snuffing the arc. The arc is proportional to voltage.
As a relay opens, voltage will arc across the contacts. That's a sure thing. It can't be stopped. Further, once the arc ionizes the air across the gap, that makes it much easier for the arc to continue. However the relay stops the arc one of several ways:
So when you use a relay that is under-rated for your voltage, the very obvious failure mode is that it will simply arc across the contacts anyway, either welding the contacts together, or setting the relay on fire. When post-failure forensics are done, this failure will be a surprise to no one.
Manufacturers data should always be followed if for no other reason than of liability. No mention of type of load is considered, reactive load would significantly reduce contact capability. Multiple poles can help only providing pole isolation is acceptable, otherwise there is one big mess. The relay listed is a low voltage type which is 240v absolute max and only under special conditions. To expect it to switch 300+v is totally impractical and will result in (spectacular) failure.
Not recommend for 1 contact. You can series 2 normally open contact to get higher breakdown voltage. Just incase that both contact using same mechanism (DPDT or more).It could be better if you have 4PST then you can series all 4 contacts.
I agree with the Four pole single throw relay. To safely pull it off without question, you use the 240 volts to energize the coil of the relay and that allows you to pass whatever voltage you want to send through it. It can be AC, DC, single phase or 3 phase it doesn't matter.