Hey Kern just for general knowledge...think of a relay as a simple lightswitch. Except instead of needing your hand to flip it one way or the other to operate, it's activated by electricity. Using the relay in your post #144 for an example, the terminals shown as 30 and 87 are the switch to the device you're controlling. The other terminals 85 and 86 are for the relay coil, which is what triggers the relay to close the switch(terminals 30 & 87) and complete the circuit. So if that relay was being used for a headlight, you would have 12v from the battery hooked to 30 and the wire out to the light on 87. The wire from your headlight switch would be on 85, and 86 would simply go to ground(or the other way around, polarity doesn't matter unless they're marked + and -).
Also noteworthy--that Seimens relay also has an 87A terminal, which is for normally-closed switch operation. That just gives you the option of using it to switch something 'off' when power is applied to the relay coil.
Different relays may use different numbers, but those symbols are standard; you've probably seen them in your years reading prints.
(What?! Carpenters reading electrical drawings?!
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