davidbeach:
EM relays are why modern relays have torque control equations and time dials.
An SEL-411L is a device capable of may wondrous functions, but an HZ or a KD was the work of a genius. Once you have everything as numbers you can do anything that math and the available computational horsepower allows, but to make raw, undigitized, currents and voltages do all that, in a package that small, that's the mark of shear genius.
I still marvel at the concoctions of iron and copper that make up an electromechanical relay to extract proper operation on phase angle, impedance, differential.
I learned (and understood) how and why a 50P was linked to a 21, why 87T might need a harmonic restraint, etc, all bits of knowledge that have served me well.
The fact that all those elements might be incorporated into a single microprocessor-based unit tells me how it's supposed to work and how to test its function.
The fact that employment of those functions in a microprocessor-based package often results in accuracy that taxes the capability of the test equipment is amazing to one who once calibrated using fiddly elements like torque springs and movable magnets. There's no adjustment to the microprocessor-based relay. It either works exactly, or not at all.
The multitude of functions and settings, though, can lead to some interesting "I didn't think it would do THAT!" episodes.
old field guy