Speed/Standstill Safety Relay Modules from AutomationDirect

automationdirect safetyrelay 400

April 25, 2019

Safety relay modules consist of safety relays that are controlled by built-in monitoring functions and assure a reliable opening and closing for safety applications. Safety relay modules provide a high level of fail-safe operation for critical processes and protection.

These speed safety relays provide overspeed, under speed and/or standstill detection for single- or three-phase motors by monitoring either external proximity sensors mounted on a rotating element of the motor or load, the frequency of the motor power signal or the remanence voltage (back EMF) of the motor signal.

New Dold UH6932 speed monitor relay modules have 2 PNP or NPN sensor inputs and 2 N.O. positively driven and 2 semiconductor monitoring outputs.

New Dold UH6937 frequency monitoring relay modules require no external sensors and provide 2 N.O. positively driven and 2 semiconductor outputs for monitoring.

The new safety speed relay modules start at $380.00 and have a 1-year warranty.

Go HERE for more information

Related Articles



Editor’s Pick: Featured Article

Weidmüller’s u-control 2000: The Automation Controller

Weidmüller’s u-control 2000: The Automation Controller

Weidmüller’s scalable engineering software, u-control 2000, adapts individually to your requirements. And, the u-control is powerful, compact and fully compatible with Weidmüller’s I/O system u-remote. This article looks at what makes u-control the heart of your automation.

Programmable logic controllers (PLCs) are one of the main components of any automated system. A typical control system has inputs, outputs, controllers (i.e., PLCs), and some type of human interaction with the system, a human machine interface (HMI), for example.

Read More



Latest Articles

  • NVIDIA 800 VDC Architecture Will Power the Next Generation of AI Factories

    November 4, 2025 By Mathias Blake, Martin Hsu, Ivan Goldwasser, Harry Petty and Jared Huntington The exponential growth of AI workloads is increasing data centre power demands. Traditional 54 V in-rack power distribution, designed for kilowatt (KW)-scale racks, isn’t designed to support the megawatt (MW)-scale racks coming soon to modern AI factories.  NVIDIA is leading the transition to 800 VDC data… Read More…

  • Efficient Power Monitoring at the Edge: Moxa’s DCI Solutions for Data Centres

    November 4, 2025 As data centres grow in higher densities to support AI-enabled workloads and more complicated operations, keeping the Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) at optimum is critical at this time. Downtime is never acceptable. Also, without being able to see electrical systems in real-time, such as substations, UPS, switchgear, and HVAC, failures will take… Read More…