View Single Post
  #29   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
The Daring Dufas[_6_] The Daring Dufas[_6_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,852
Default Define "Normally Open" vs. "Normally Closed"

RBM wrote:
"Bitzer" wrote in message
...
I'm replacing a broken surface mount magnetic switch mounted on my garage
door that controls a signal light in the house that comes on when the door
is open.

Thus, I need a switch that is OPEN (meaning no current flows) when the
magnet is near the switch and CLOSED (meaning current flows) when the
magnet is removed from the switch.

So do I need a normally open switch or a normally closed one? Different
manufacturers/vendors seem to use the terms differently. Is it "normal"
when the magnet is near the switch-- or away from it?


As an electrician, I've been through this numerous times over the years. It
clearly depend on who you are talking to, and what trade they're in. IMO,
the "normal" position is the state the switch is in when nothing affects it.
Alarm people have the opposite take on it. My solution is to always buy
devices that come in the "form C" which is both open and closed circuits,
this way you can't go wrong



He he he, most electricians I come across are befuddled by three way and
four way switches. I had to explain it to my electrical superintendent
and foreman on a government job I worked on some years ago. Normally
open and normally closed had to be explained to them using the
illustration of the difference between a virtuous woman and a slut.
*snicker*

TDD