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A shading coil or shading ring (Also called Frager spire or Frager coil) is one or more turns of
electrical conductor In physics and electrical engineering, a conductor is an object or type of material that allows the flow of charge (electric current) in one or more directions. Materials made of metal are common electrical conductors. The flow of negatively c ...
(usually copper or aluminum) located in the face of the magnet assembly or armature of an alternating current solenoid. The alternating current in the energized primary coil induces an alternating current in the shading coil. This induced current creates an auxiliary magnetic flux which is 90 degrees out of phase from the magnetic flux created by the primary coil. Because of the 90 degree phase difference between the current in the shading coil and the current in the primary coil, the shading coil maintains a magnetic flux and hence a force between the armature and the assembly while the current in the primary coil crosses zero. Without this shading ring, the armature would tend to open each time the main flux goes through zero and create noise, heat and mechanical damages on the magnet faces, so it reduces bouncing or chatter of relay or power contacts.


Shaded-pole AC motors

A
shaded-pole motor The shaded-pole motor is the original type of alternating current, AC single-phase electric power, single-phase induction motor, electric induction motor, dating back to at least as early as 1890. A shaded-pole motor is a motor in which the auxi ...
is an AC single phase induction motor. Its includes an auxiliary winding composed of a copper ring called a shading ring (or shading coil with more than one turn). The auxiliary winding produces a secondary magnetic flux which, along with the flux from the primary coil, forms a rotating magnetic field suitable for applying torque to and rotating the rotor. These devices are typically used as low-cost motors for microwave oven fans.


References


External links

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''Engineer's Relay Handbook'', 5th edition, published by the Relay and Switch Industry Association (RSIA) – formerly NARM

Information about relays and the Latching Relay circuit


* ttps://web.archive.org/web/20070921033823/http://www.electronixandmore.com/project/relaycomputertwo/index.html "Relay Computer Two", by Jon Stanley {{Electric motor AC motors Electromagnetic components Power engineering Relays