If the lamp turns ON but motor does NOT run → suspect OL contact miswired: it interrupts lamp path but not K1. Based on field service reports from automotive and HVAC industries (2015–2025):
It sounds like you’re referring to a specific Czech technical document: (Electrical schematics and wiring in practice 1) — likely a textbook or lab manual for vocational or university-level electrical engineering. elektrotechnicka schemata a zapojeni v praxi 1 pdf
| Error | Cause | Detection method | |-------|-------|------------------| | | Forgot seal-in contact | Press Start → motor runs only while holding button | | Overload in wrong phase | OL placed on neutral side | Single-phasing → motor burns | | Wire cross-reference mismatch | Terminal X1 labeled K1(13) but physically connected to wrong K2 | Continuity test + schematic comparison | | Auxiliary contact welded | High inrush current | Check with multimeter (coil de-energized) | 7. From Schematic to Physical Panel: A Formal Mapping Given a ladder rung: ---[S1]---[K1 coil]--- If the lamp turns ON but motor does
| Component | IEC symbol feature | ANSI equivalent | |-----------|----------------|----------------| | Normally open contact | ——/ —— | -] [- | | Normally closed contact | ——/\ —— (with slash) | -]/[- | | Relay coil | Rectangle with label K1 | Circle with label CR1 | | Thermal overload relay | Two bent lines (bimetal) | Square with “OL” | From Schematic to Physical Panel: A Formal Mapping
Since I cannot directly generate or reproduce a copyrighted PDF, I can provide a that mirrors the technical depth, structure, and practical focus of such a document. This paper will be suitable for a student or practitioner looking to understand the underlying principles, standards, and analysis methods for electrical schematics in real-world installations.
Practical resources emphasize the as the primary troubleshooting tool, because it abstracts away physical location and focuses on current paths. 3. Symbol Standardization (IEC vs. ANSI) In Czech practice, IEC 60617 is mandatory. Critical differences from ANSI that cause confusion: