1PCS TECO RHN-10K Thermal Overload Relay (8.5–12.5A) — Motor Protection for TECO CN-Series Contactors
TECO · RHN Series · Thermal Overload Relay · 8.5–12.5 A · In stock
The TECO RHN-10K is a thermal bimetal-strip overload relay manufactured by
TECO Electric & Machinery
(Taiwan). It is designed to protect 3-phase induction motors drawing between
8.5 and 12.5 A by sensing the heat generated in three matched
bimetal elements — a classic, time-proven method of motor current protection.
The unit clicks directly under a TECO CN-series contactor to form a complete
direct-on-line starter, which is why it shows up in so many
factory automation panels
worldwide. It carries differential phase-loss detection, ambient temperature compensation,
and both auto and manual reset modes, plus a front-panel test button that lets the
commissioning engineer simulate a trip without driving the motor.
Need a quote, a cross-reference, or a full BOM including the matching contactor, push buttons and
wiring duct? Send the list to
Moritta@KOEED.COM
and the team will reply with stock and price within 24 hours on business days.
1. Key Technical Specifications & Overview
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Brand
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TECO (TECO Electric & Machinery, Taiwan)
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Series
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RHN
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Part Number
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RHN-10K
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Module Type
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Thermal Overload Relay (bimetal strip, differential mechanism)
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Current Setting Range
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8.5 – 12.5 A (dial-adjustable)
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Rated Insulation Voltage
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600 V AC
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Phase-Loss Protection
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Yes — differential trip mechanism
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Ambient Temperature Compensation
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Built-in (compensated bimetal design)
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Reset Mode
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Auto / Manual (selector on front face)
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Test Function
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Front-panel TEST button (simulates trip without energising the motor)
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Trip Contacts
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1 × NC (95–96) + 1 × NO (97–98)
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Compatible Contactor
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TECO CN-11 / CN-12 / CN-13 (direct-attach mount)
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Typical Motor Power
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5 – 10 HP / 4 – 7.5 kW @ 400 V 3-phase (50/60 Hz)
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Mounting
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Direct-attach to TECO CN contactor base; 35 mm DIN-rail with optional adapter
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Standards
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IEC 60947-4-1, CE
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Stock Status
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In stock — quote within 24 hours at
Moritta@KOEED.COM
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Internally, three matched bimetal strips are heated by the motor phase currents. When sustained
overcurrent heats the strips past their trip threshold, the differential lever flips the auxiliary
contacts, dropping the contactor coil. Phase-loss protection is achieved by a differential lever:
if one phase is lost, the unbalanced heating causes a faster trip, which prevents the single-phasing
burn-out that kills motor windings within minutes.
2. Application Scenarios — Where the RHN-10K Fits
The 8.5–12.5 A window lines up with the most common 3-phase induction motors found on the
plant floor. Typical deployments include:
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Pumps — centrifugal, booster and submersible pumps in water and
wastewater treatment plants.
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Fans and blowers — AHU return fans, exhaust blowers, induced-draft fans.
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Conveyors — packaging lines, material handling and palletiser feed conveyors.
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Machine tools — coolant pumps, hydraulic power units, spindle oil coolers.
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HVAC — chilled-water circulation pumps and cooling-tower fans.
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Compressors — small reciprocating and screw air compressors up to 7.5 kW.
The RHN-10K is commonly wired into motor starter buckets that are themselves controlled by a PLC
or HMI from one of the nine brands KOEED distributes —
Allen-Bradley,
Siemens,
Mitsubishi,
Omron,
Fanuc,
Schneider,
Yaskawa,
Panasonic, and
KEYENCE.
The TECO relay's NC trip contact feeds a digital input on the controller, the NO contact lights an
HMI alarm, and the contactor's coil is driven by a 24 V DC or 110/220 V AC output — a textbook
direct-on-line starter arrangement.
When replacing an aging Telemecanique, Fuji or LS thermal relay, the RHN-10K is a frequent
drop-in candidate because the 8.5–12.5 A range covers the most popular mid-frame motor sizes
on the EU 400 V grid. If you are not sure which frame to specify, the
KOEED AI Diagnostic Tool
can read a nameplate photo and recommend a matching part number.
3. Integration & Wiring Notes
The RHN-10K is designed for direct mounting beneath a TECO CN-11, CN-12 or CN-13 contactor.
Three pass-through power terminals (L1 / L2 / L3) feed the relay's bimetal elements and exit
straight to the contactor output, so the main three-phase loop does not need extra jumper wires.
The wiring pattern is:
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Power circuit: supply → relay input (L1/L2/L3) → relay output → contactor input → motor terminals (U/V/W).
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Auxiliary contacts (front face): 95–96 NC and 97–98 NO, both rated for control-circuit duty.
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Control circuit: the NC contact is wired in series with the contactor coil so that a thermal trip drops the coil and removes power from the motor.
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Alarm circuit: the NO contact can be wired to a PLC digital input, an indicator lamp, or a remote alarm horn to signal "overload tripped".
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Reset wiring: no external wiring is needed; the AUTO / MANUAL selector is on the relay's front face.
The differential phase-loss protection requires no special wiring — it operates on the
imbalance of the three bimetal currents inside the relay itself. This is one of the key reasons
engineers prefer thermal-class relays over simple bi-metallic fuses for three-phase motor protection.
For control cabinets that have to be wired in tight spaces, a typical BOM also includes
terminal blocks, ferrules and DIN-rail wiring ducts
that the KOEED team can quote alongside the relay if you send the
full instrument list
to Moritta@KOEED.COM.
If you intend to mount the relay on a 35 mm DIN-rail (rather than directly under a TECO contactor),
fit the optional DIN-rail adapter plate. When replacing an older LRE or 3UA series relay from a
different brand, the cross-reference team at KOEED can map terminal numbers 95 / 96 / 97 / 98 to
the equivalent terminals on your existing contactor.
4. Installation & Commissioning Tips
A correct commissioning sequence protects the motor and reduces nuisance trips. KOEED recommends
the following steps when installing an RHN-10K:
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Set the current dial to the motor's nameplate full-load current (FLC). For a
7.5 kW / 400 V motor drawing roughly 14 A, the RHN-10K is actually too small — step up to
the RHN-20K (15–21 A) or RHN-30K frame instead.
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Select AUTO or MANUAL reset before energising. AUTO is normal for unattended
pumps and fans; MANUAL is mandatory on conveyors and machine tools where a sudden restart could
injure an operator.
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Verify the TEST button with the contactor coil un-powered: pressing TEST should
flip the auxiliary contacts and you should hear an audible click. If the trip flag does not
change, the relay is faulty and must be replaced.
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Run a no-load bump test for 2–3 seconds and confirm that the motor spins in
the correct direction. A 3-phase phase-sequence error (motor runs backwards) is not the relay's
job to catch — install a phase-sequence relay upstream if rotation matters.
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Check the ambient temperature compensation. The RHN-10K is compensated for
ambient swings between roughly −5 °C and +40 °C. Outside this range, expect longer
or shorter trip times; consider the
AI Diagnostic Tool
for derating guidance.
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Document the setting on the panel legend so that future maintenance engineers
can re-verify it after a trip event.
If the relay trips repeatedly on start-up, the most common culprits are (a) current dial set too
low, (b) locked-rotor condition on a heavy-load machine, or (c) phase loss upstream. The
PLC Error Code Database
on the KOEED website is a useful reference when a Siemens or Mitsubishi HMI throws an overload
alarm and the operator is unsure whether the fault is in the drive, the contactor, or the relay.
5. Procurement, Warranty & Lead Time
KOEED operates on a quote-driven, B2B model rather than fixed online pricing.
For a single piece or a 500-piece panel build, the workflow is the same: send a part number list
and the team will reply with stock position, lead time, and tiered pricing within 24 hours on
business days. KOEED does not list fixed prices for this relay because pricing varies with
quantity, destination, and Incoterms — but the
Create a Quote
form on the website is the fastest way to get a firm number.
Authenticity. TECO RHN-10K relays sourced from KOEED are genuine
factory-original parts pulled from authorised channels. Each shipment can be accompanied by a
manufacturer datasheet on request, and the part is covered by the standard
KOEED warranty
against manufacturing defect.
Lead time. In-stock items typically ship within 1–3 business days from the
Shenzhen / Hong Kong dual-base warehouse. Worldwide shipping is available via DHL, FedEx, UPS, and
standard air freight; transit time depends on destination but most regions receive orders within
3–7 days door-to-door.
Full-BOM support. The relay is rarely ordered alone — a typical motor
starter bucket also includes a contactor, a motor circuit breaker, push buttons, selector
switches, terminal blocks, and often a PLC or HMI. Send the entire instrument list to
Moritta@KOEED.COM
and KOEED will quote the lot as one BOM, mixing brands such as TECO contactors, TECO relays, and
a controller from any of the nine brands KOEED distributes.
For engineering questions, panel-design help, or a cross-reference against an older Telemecanique,
Fuji, LS, Eaton or Moeller relay, the
Contact Us page lists
every channel — email, WhatsApp, and the online form. The
FAQ page also has answers
to the most common "which frame to choose" and "how to wire a 3-phase starter" questions.
Need an RHN-10K or a full motor-starter BOM?
Send your part list to Moritta@KOEED.COM and get availability + price within 24 hours.
Request a Quote →
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