From an industrial point of view, you would most likely use a contactor with aux contacts rather than a "force-guided relay" in this application.
Any
specific suggestions? That was the point of the thread...
How long are the traces?
About 25-30 cm total, though I'm probably going to redo the board to try to shorten that. (Unfortunately, that means shoving the relays right up against each other and having to make the entire enclosure bigger. Other options for relays/contactors, especially ones that don't need 17 cm² of PCB space, are of interest.)
The usual solution to your problem is to add a pair of layers to your PCB, and use those entirely for the power path. Instead of 5mm they become 50mm (or whatever), unless your PCB itself is somehow super narrow and long.
That's going to add $20, which isn't awful... but I'm not sure I can practically do that. There's all manner of other pins breaking up any plane I'd try to pour and areas I need to stay away from that, even though the
board is plenty big, it would be hard to make a pour much wider.
I'm attaching what the current board might look like trying to go that route. Mind, this is also trusting the FR4 to be sufficient insulator, which AFAIK, it
isn't. Realistically, I don't think there's an alternative to ending up with an 'L' shaped pour from the outsides to the bottom, and the pour between relays being more-or-less as shown.
Right now, my guess is I'll wind up smashing the relays together and running 50×8 mm pours, top and bottom, to T5. And I may just go with 2-layer 2oz boards. Again, it's an extra $20 or so, but that's $20 that I
don't need to spend on bus bars.
5 watts doesn't sound like a lot given that these traces would work out to be ~20cm long, no? And that is 5W without any busbars or parallel wires soldered on top or anything.
The original plan was to use bus bars instead of traces, yes. Throwing that 5 W number out was reacting to the people saying not to bother... and that's 5 W for
one board of a system that's triple-redundant. That's about 12-14 W difference between "don't worry about it" and having a decent volume of copper.
There's an electromagnet sitting next to me that's allegedly 2 W. Let me tell you, that thing gets
toasty, and that's in open air. I have a healthy respect for what a few watts of heat will do in an enclosed space.