SMI · RELAY · IN STOCK
What Is the 1Pce SMI-S-112LM Electromagnetic Relay 12A 12VDC 4Pins?
The 1Pce SMI-S-112LM Electromagnetic Relay 12A 12VDC 4Pins is a relay manufactured by SMI engineered to deliver stable operation within its rated electrical and mechanical specifications. This component integrates into existing systems as a direct replacement or new installation, backed by KOEED's commitment to genuine, factory-new products with full technical and logistics support.
In short: If you need a dependable relay for your equipment — whether as a spare, replacement, or new build component — this is the correct part, in stock and ready to ship worldwide from koeed.com.
Key Features and What They Mean
1. Low-Power Coil Design
What it means: The electromagnetic coil is optimized for low current draw at rated voltage (typically 80-200mA), allowing direct drive from ECU outputs, PLC digital output modules, or simple toggle switches without intermediate driver circuitry.
Why it matters: Many control modules have limited per-channel current capacity. A relay coil that exceeds that limit requires a driver transistor or intermediate relay — adding cost, complexity, and another failure point. Low coil current means the relay integrates directly into existing control wiring.
Result: Simpler installation, fewer components, and direct compatibility with modern ECU and PLC outputs. Lower total system cost and fewer potential failure points in the control chain.
2. Silver-Alloy Contact Material
What it means: The relay contacts use silver-based alloys — typically silver-tin-oxide (AgSnO2) or silver-nickel (AgNi) — selected for their combination of high electrical conductivity, arc resistance, and anti-welding properties under DC load switching.
Why it matters: Pure silver contacts, while highly conductive, are soft and prone to material transfer (pitting) under DC arcs. Silver-alloy contacts distribute arc energy more evenly and resist welding, extending contact life by 3-10x compared to basic copper or silver contacts in the same current class.
Result: Extended relay service life, consistent contact resistance over time, and reduced risk of contact welding under high-inrush loads like motor starts and capacitor charging.
Key Specifications
| Brand |
SMI |
| Product Name |
1Pce SMI-S-112LM Electromagnetic Relay 12A 12VDC 4Pins |
| Category |
Relay |
| Condition |
New |
| SKU |
336420152654 |
| Vendor |
KOEED |
| Type |
Electromagnetic Relay |
| Coil Voltage |
Verify from product label |
| Contact Rating |
Verify from product label |
For detailed specifications, dimensional drawings, and full datasheets, please refer to the manufacturer's official documentation or contact us. Available technical documents can be provided digitally at no additional cost.
Typical Applications
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Vehicle Lighting Systems: Headlights, fog lights, driving lights, LED light bars, and auxiliary lighting circuits — anywhere a low-current switch or ECU output must control a high-current lighting load.
-
Cooling Fan Control: Radiator fans, condenser fans, intercooler fans, and auxiliary cooling — electric fans that draw 10-30A and require reliable switching that a dashboard switch or ECU cannot handle directly.
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Fuel Pump Circuits: Electric fuel pumps, lift pumps, and fuel transfer pumps — high-current continuous-duty loads where relay failure means the engine stops.
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Starter Motor Solenoid Control: Starter solenoid engagement — brief but extremely high-current switching that demands robust contacts.
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Auxiliary and Accessory Power: Air horns, winches, air compressors, power inverters, seat heaters, defroster grids — any high-current accessory that should be ignition-switched or manually controlled.
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Industrial and Agricultural Equipment: Forklifts, tractors, harvesters, construction machinery — 12V/24V electrical systems with heavy electrical loads in dusty, high-vibration environments.
Frequently Asked Questions
How should I wire this relay — do I need a fuse?
Standard 4-pin relay wiring: pin 30 (common/power in from battery via fuse), pin 87 (NO output to load), pin 85 (coil ground), pin 86 (coil positive from switch/ECU). Always install an appropriately-rated fuse on the power feed to pin 30 — the fuse protects the wiring, not the relay. A relay without a fuse on the main power circuit is a fire hazard.
Can this relay handle both AC and DC loads?
Most automotive-style relays are rated for DC loads only. The contact material and arc-quenching design differ between AC and DC ratings. Using a DC-rated relay on an AC circuit can cause contact welding or rapid erosion. Check the contact rating printed on the relay — it will specify AC and/or DC. When in doubt, assume DC-only.
What is the difference between this and a solid-state relay (SSR)?
Electromagnetic relays use a physical coil and moving contacts — they make an audible click, tolerate brief overloads, and work with both AC and DC loads depending on the model. SSRs use semiconductor switching — silent, no contact wear, faster switching, but more sensitive to overvoltage and typically require a heatsink above a few amps. EM relays are preferred where cost, simplicity, and galvanic isolation matter.
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