Product Description
Contact kit
Specifications
Product Overview
| Product Type | Electric Motor Contactor Contact Kit |
Physical Specifications
| Contact Material | Silver or Silver-Plated Brass |
| Typical Voltage Ratings | 24V, 48V, 80V DC (electric lift truck standard) |
| Primary Benefit | Restores electrical conductivity and switching reliability in worn contactors |
| Corrosion Resistance | Silver contacts resist oxidation and arcing better than base metals |
Compatibility
| Application | Motor control and load-switching circuits |
| Compatible Manufacturers | Crown, Toyota, Raymond, Yale, Jungheinrich, and other electric lift truck brands |
| Replacement Trigger | Visible pitting, corrosion, darkening, or excessive contact resistance |
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What electric lift truck models use the 3131285 contact kit?
A: The 3131285 contact kit is compatible with electric forklift and pallet jack control systems from Crown, Toyota, Raymond, Yale, and Jungheinrich. Verify your specific control module or contactor model against the kit specifications to ensure electrical compatibility and terminal configurations match.
Q: What are the electrical specifications for the 3131285 contact kit?
A: This contact kit is rated for typical electric lift truck voltage and current ranges. Contact material is silver or silver-plated brass designed to handle motor control switching and load current. The kit restores electrical conductivity and switching reliability in worn or corroded contactors.
Q: What contact material does the 3131285 use?
A: The 3131285 kit contains silver or silver-plated contacts that resist arcing, oxidation, and corrosion better than base metals. Silver contacts maintain low contact resistance across repeated switching cycles, ensuring reliable electrical performance in motor control and load circuits.
Q: What failure symptoms indicate the 3131285 contact kit is needed?
A: Replace contacts if the truck exhibits intermittent power loss, slow motor response, weak acceleration, or audible arcing when activating controls. Corroded or pitted contacts reduce electrical conductivity and cause voltage drop that affects motor performance and control response time.
Q: How often should electrical contacts be inspected or replaced?
A: Inspect contact condition during scheduled electrical maintenance or annually on heavy-use equipment. Replace contacts when visible pitting, corrosion, or darkening appears, or when electrical testing reveals excessive contact resistance. Regular inspection extends equipment reliability and prevents sudden control failures.