Panel shops work where design intent meets reality – tight DIN rail space, mixed voltages, unpredictable field wiring, commissioning deadlines, and the simple fact that “easy to troubleshoot” often matters as much as “meets spec.”
That’s why relays remain foundational in modern control panels. Even in PLC-heavy systems, relays still solve everyday problems more cleanly than adding I/O, rewriting logic, or complicating the BOM. Two categories do most of that work:
ELKO EP North America’s CRM series time relays and VS series auxiliary relays are designed around those realities in a panel shop, helping engineers and builders create panels that commission smoothly and service quickly.
When a relay improves a panel system, it usually shows up in three places:
Fewer unique part numbers, fewer special cases, simpler schematics.
Straightforward wiring, easy adjustments, clear status indication.
Techs can diagnose issues at the door, not with a laptop and a prayer.
Time and auxiliary relays contribute to all three.
Time relays aren’t just “delays.” In panel practice, they’re the simplest way to add predictability when equipment has start-up quirks, minimum off-times, purge requirements, or sequencing needs.
Panel shops benefit when one time relay can cover multiple timing behaviors (on-delay, off-delay, interval, pulse, cyclic timing). This reduces “one-off” part numbersand makes it easier to standardize across jobs.
In practice, timing needs change. A dust collector might need a longer post-run. A purge time may be adjusted after commissioning. Time relays with broad ranges help you absorb those changes without swapping hardware.
Timing often needs to respond to START/INHIBIT/RESET conditions rather than simply powering the relay. That’s the difference between a basic delay and a relay that plays nicely inside permissives and fault/reset logic.
Panel shops know that commissioning time is expensive. When a relay provides a clear indication of state/timing, it reduces “guess-and-check” troubleshooting and shortens startup.
In some systems, timing isn’t “set and forget.” It may be tuned for changing conditions. External adjustment options can keep that tuning accessible without opening the enclosure.
Auxiliary relays are frequently the difference between a panel that’s easy to expand and one that becomes a rework magnet.
Instead of redesigning I/O or adding modules, an auxiliary relay can expand a single signal into multiple contacts, useful for permissives, feedback loops, stacklight triggers, or safety-related signaling (where appropriate to the system architecture).
Panel shops often fight for space. A relay that fits neatly into standard rail layouts helps keep builds consistent and reduces layout gymnastics.
A clear energized/not-energized indicator reduces troubleshooting time, especially when maintenance teams are dealing with intermittent signals or unclear logic states.
Here are a few practical patterns panel engineers use all the time:
Result: fewer nuisance trips, cleaner logic, less stress on controller outputs.
Result: more stable enclosure temps, clearer diagnostics at the door.
Result: better equipment protection and fewer “mystery faults” caused by rapid cycling.
If you want to keep your relay decisions consistent across builds, anchor selection in a few repeatable questions:
In panel design, the best components aren’t just “high spec.” They’re the ones that reduce build variability, shorten commissioning, and make troubleshooting obvious.
ELKO EPNorth America’s CRM time relays and VS auxiliary relays support that goal by helping you:
Call 800-575-5562 today. Our solutions experts are ready to assist you.