PRL relays, as they will be known, have silver alloy contacts and come in SPST (1 Form A), SPDT (1 Form C) and DPST (2 Form A) forms.
Coil voltages span 3 to 24Vdc and 200mW to 1.2W, and up to 277Vac can be switched.
“All models further offer flux sealing, Class B coil insulation, and operating from -40 to +85°C,” said the company, which used to be called CUI.
This is a company that seldom does things by halves, and has done it again as there are 70 new relays in this family (in April, it was 62 plastic knobs, and in June is was eight optical encoders whose options multiplied this to 72 in total).
To give some idea of size, the relays range from 19mm to 29mm in their longest dimension.
Find all the PRL relays though this Same Sky link – a tip for finding more information is that there are only six data sheets, one for each sub-family PRL1 to PRL6.
What puts any particular PRL relay into one of the sub-families is not entirely clear. Out of curiosity, Electronics Weekly has asked – so watch this space if such taxonomy is your thing.