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    How to Choose the Right Contactor

    This guide is here to help you narrow your options quickly and avoid common mistakes. You don’t need to be an expert — just match the contactor to what you’re actually switching.

    Start with what you’re controlling

    Different loads stress contactors differently. This determines which rating matters:

    • Motors: Use the AC-3 rating (most applications).
    • Heaters / resistive loads: Use the AC-1 rating.
    • Jogging / inching / frequent starts: Use the AC-4 rating.
    Choose current using the correct rating

    The largest current number is not always the right one. If you’re switching a motor, ignore AC-1 and focus on AC-3 amps.

    Match the coil voltage exactly

    The coil voltage must match your control circuit (for example, 24 VDC or 120 VAC). A mismatch here means the contactor simply won’t operate.

    Confirm the system voltage rating

    Make sure the contactor is rated for your system voltage under IEC or UL/CSA, depending on your standards requirements.

    Refine only if needed

    Once the basics are right, use these to narrow things down:

    • Number of poles (typically 3-pole for three-phase)
    • Auxiliary contacts (NO / NC for control logic)
    • Physical size if panel space is tight
    Common pitfalls
    • Using AC-1 current for motor applications
    • Overlooking coil voltage compatibility
    • Using AC-3 contactors for jogging/inching duty