| This article was first published in 2009. | 
	
	
Last week in How to Electronically 
Modify Your Car, Part 6 we looked at a special way in which pots can be used 
to alter the output of sensors used in electronic car systems. It’s a very 
tricky technique that allows you to achieve lots of effective outcomes at 
nearly zero cost. This week we’re also looking at simple and cheap electronic 
components that are again often overlooked as ways of achieving excellent car 
modifications – relays.
What’s a Relay?
	 
	
	
	
A relay is just a small switch whose movement is 
caused by the action of an electromagnet inside the box. When power is applied 
to the relay’s coil, the electromagnet comes alive and pulls across the 
switching contacts.
Relay Types
The simplest relay is a single pole, single throw 
(SPST) design. This designation refers to the switching part of the relay where 
when it's activated, one wire (a "single pole") can be connected only one way (a 
"single throw"). Just like an on/off switch, when you power up the relay's coil, 
the connection is made; when you un-power the coil, the connection is broken. 
	 
	
	
	
In this diagram the relay's coil is yellow. Near 
to the coil you can see a switch, which is open. This is called a Normally Open 
contact - it's open when there's no power being applied to the relay. When power 
is applied to the relay’s coil, the single contact closes. This is a Single Pole 
Single Throw relay - SPST. 
SPST relays have four terminals - two are to power 
the coil and the other two are the connections for the internal switch. Look at 
the diagram and identify which terminals are which. As you can see, there 
is no electrical connection between the pair of contacts for the coil and the 
pair of contacts for the switching part of the relay.
	
	
		
			| Example 
Car Modification – Auto-Dimming LED Indicator 
	 
	 In How to Electronically Modify Your Car, Part 3 we talked about using 
LEDs in a car. As this diagram shows, if the LED is to survive, you need to place a series resistor in the 
circuit. 
	 
	 Now 
we’ve added a pot (wired as a variable resistor) into the circuit. By turning 
the pot, the brightness of the LED will able to be adjusted. Because the 
resistor is still there, you can’t blow-up the LED – even you turn the pot fully 
in the ‘bright’ direction. 
	 
	 Now 
we’ve added a switch in parallel with the pot. By closing the switch, the pot is 
bypassed – as far as the circuit is concerned, it ceases to exist. So we can 
have two switched light levels for the LED – one that’s bright (switch closed) 
and one that is dim (switch open). The ‘dim’ setting can be adjusted by the pot.  
	 
	 And 
now we’ve replaced the switch with a relay. This SPST relay is a normally 
closed design – it opens when power is applied to its coil. Here we’ve wired the coil 
so it is activated whenever the parking lights are switched on. So what have we 
ended up with? A LED dashboard indicator that is bright in daytime and dims 
itself whenever you turn on the lights! You can even fine-tune the ‘night’ level 
with the pot.  
	 
	 The 
LED could show turbo boost (just add a boost switch, as shown here), indicate 
that a fan is running – or a whole host of things.  
	 
	 Finally, 
here is the built circuit – from left to right: resistor, pot and relay (the LED 
and switch are remote mounted).  | 
	
	
Heavy Current
In the above example, the relay’s contacts had to 
take only a very small current – just enough to run the LED. Therefore, a quite 
light duty relay could be used (more on relay ratings in a moment). But many 
relays used in cars are heavy duty designs. 
In fact, the most common application for a SPST 
relay is to use a small electrical current to control a large electrical 
current. 
For example, a radiator fan might be triggered by 
a temperature switch. The temp switch is capable of flowing only 2 amps, but the 
radiator fan at switch-on takes 15 amps (and then settles back to 8 amps 
continuous). 
	 
	
	
	
If you wire the radiator fan to the switch like 
this, after a few weeks the temp switch will fail – its contacts are being 
hugely overloaded. 
	 
	
	
	
The solution is to add a SPST relay that is wired 
into the circuit like this. Now the temp switch only has to pass enough current 
to turn on the relay’s coil – a much easier job than directly running the fan! 
Neither the relay coil nor the switching part of 
the relay has a polarity – both can be connected either way around to 12V and 
Ground. As we said earlier, relays are very hard to blow-up!
	 
	
	
	
On automotive SPST relays, the pins are given 
standardised numbers. The coil connections are 85 and 86, while the two 
connections for the internal switch are 30 and 87. However, most general purpose 
relays don’t have any numbers on the pins – instead the functions of the pins 
are shown on a little diagram on the body of the relay.
But wouldn't it be good if we had two contacts 
inside the relay – one that was opened at the same time as another one was 
closed? That's what happens in the Single Pole, Double Throw (SPDT) design. 
(Can’t think of much use for that type of relay? There is – and I’ll show you in 
a moment.)
	 
	
	
	
This is what a SPDT relay looks like inside. When 
the relay is energised, one contact is opened and the other one (the Normally 
Open contact) is closed. We still have only a single pole to be switched, but 
now it can be connected two ways - a double throw design. As you can see, it has 
both Normally Open (NO) and Normally Closed (NC) contacts. (Some people call 
this a changeover relay.)
A SPDT relay allows you to control two devices, 
switching one off as the other is switched on. SPDT automotive relays use the 
following codes for their pins: the coil connections are again 85 and 86, the 
normally closed output is 87a, the normally open output is 87 and the input is 
30.
	
	
		
			| Example 
Car Modification – Switchable Fuel Pressure
	 
	 An 
example of where I used a SPDT relay was in a fuel system that needed to be 
switched between two different fuel pressures. To raise the fuel pressure, a 
solenoid valve had to be turned off and at the same time, a fuel pump needed to 
be switched on. Both devices draw a fair amount of current so a heavy duty 
automotive relay was used – one of the pictured relays did this function.  
	 
	 The 
circuit diagram for the fuel system relay looked like this. Power was normally 
supplied to the solenoid through the Normally Closed (NC) relay contact, 
energising the solenoid. But when the relay’s coil was activated (by closing the 
High/Low Fuel Pressure switch), the relay pulled the contact across, switching 
off the solenoid and switching on the fuel pump.  (If 
you get lost, follow the circuit in two parts, starting off from either of the 
‘12V’ power supplies.)  The 
High/Low Fuel Pressure switch had to handle only enough current to switch the 
relay’s coil, so this could have been be a light-duty switch (eg a boost 
pressure switch or a microswitch).  | 
	
	
	 
	
	
	
A Double Pole, Double Throw relay allows you to 
switch two different circuits simultaneously. The 'Double Pole' bit just means 
that it has two separate inputs that can be switched - and we now know the 
'double throw' means that one contact gets opened as the other is closed. With 
this type of relay you can:
These relays are less common in automotive 
aftermarket use and so don’t have coded numbers for the pins.
	
	
		
			| Example 
Car Modification – Switching Out Oxy SensorsSo 
what use is a DPDT relay, then?  Again, 
I’ll use an example from a car modification I’ve done. What was needed was the 
on-demand disconnection of two oxygen sensor input signals from the ECU.  The 
two signal wires from the oxy sensors to the ECU needed to be kept completely 
separate; this meant they couldn’t be joined together and a SPST relay used. 
Instead a DPDT relay was used. (It didn’t actually have to be a double throw 
design, but DPDT relays are more common than SPDT designs.)  When 
the relay’s coil was energised, both oxy sensors were simultaneously 
disconnected from the ECU. | 
	
	
Using Relays
	 
	
	
	
Using a relay is made a lot simpler if you follow 
these steps.
Draw a circuit diagram. The first step is to draw a simple circuit diagram showing where the wires 
go. Which wires go to the relay coil, which to the Normally Open and Normally 
Closed contacts of the relay?
Decide what type of relay is 
needed. If just one connection needs to be switched on and off, you’ll use a 
SPST design. If two connections need to be switched, a DPST or (more commonly) a 
DPDT design will be the one to use. A changeover (where one device is switched 
off and the other switched on) can use a SPDT or a DPDT design. 
Work out the functions of 
each pin. If it’s a standard automotive relay, read the numbers. If it’s a 
general purpose relay, look for the diagram on the relay body. If neither of 
these apply, by careful use of a short-circuit protected power supply and a 
multimeter, you can work out the functions of each pin. (Unless you use too high 
a test voltage, you can’t damage the relay!)
Wire the relay coil 
first. If you wire the relay’s coil first, you’ll be able to check that the 
relay is working by listening to its click. 
	
	
		
			| Example 
Car Modification – Disabling Traction Control
	 
	 It’s 
easy to think of relays as being suitable for just simple car modifications, but 
that’s not always the case.  This 
circuit shows the use of two relays that deactivate traction control 
without affecting ABS or stability control.  The 
system works by connecting the un-driven wheel ABS sensor outputs to the driven 
wheel ECU inputs, so that the ECU cannot see a speed difference between the 
undriven and driven wheels. The modification is automatically switched off 
whenever the brakes are applied, or by a manual on/off switch. This diagram 
shows only half of the system - the complete the system mirror-images the wiring 
for the other side of the car.  
	 
	 The 
total cost of the modification was well under AUD$30 – relays are cheap! For 
more on this approach, see Modifying Electronic Car Handling Systems, Part 3.  | 
	
	
Relay Specifications
In addition to its contact configuration (SPST, 
DPDT, etc) there are at least three other specifications that are important. 
This refers to the voltage which the relay is 
designed to have its coil triggered by. A nominally 12V relay is fine on car 
voltages, even though they can extend as high as 13.8V. However, you shouldn’t 
use a 5V coil relay on a 12V system. 
This is the amount of current the relay coil will 
draw when energised. This can be expressed directly in milliamps, or indirectly 
as a coil resistance. A very sensitive relay might have a coil resistance of 360 
ohms. 13.8 volts divided by 360 ohms gives a coil current of 0.038 amps, or 38 
milliamps. In other words, the switch that you’re using to operate the relay has 
to handle just 38 milliamps. That is a very low value of required current. 
A typical automotive relay is more likely to have 
a coil resistance of 80 ohms, giving a coil current flow of 170 milliamps. 
(13.8/80 = 0.17 amps). That’s still low – most switches will handle this without 
problems. 
	 
	
	
	
This spec refers to the max current that a relay’s 
contacts can handle. To avoid arcing, you should use a factor of safety where 
the max current of your switched circuit is less than the relay’s spec. 
Automotive relays are available with current 
ratings like 25, 30 and even 60 amps. Be careful when checking max current specs 
that the listing is for the DC at or above the voltage you’ll be using – ie, in 
cars, 13.8V. For example, a relay rated at 10 amps at 240V AC is not the same as 
one rated at 10 amps at 12V DC. 
Conclusion
	 
	
	
	
Relays can be utilised in nearly every electrical 
or electronic car modification. Get your head around their use and you’ll never 
regret having spent the time to find out how they work.
Next week we’ll look at using an off-the-shelf 
electronic module.
	
	
		
			| The parts in this series:  Part 1 - background and tools  Part 2 - understanding electrical circuits.  Part 3 - volts, amps and ohms  Part 4 - using a multimeter  Part 5 - modifying car systems with resistors and pots  Part 6 - shifting input signals using pots  Part 7 - using relays   Part 8 - using pre-built electronic modules   Part 9 - building electronic kits   Part 10 - understanding analog and digital signals   Part 11 - measuring analog and digital signals   Part 12 - intercepting analog and digital signals   Part 13 - the best approaches to modifying car electronics ? and the series conclusion  |