An apparatus that enables low cost installation of a secure and tamper proof assembly that accommodates lifeline support for power line communication devices.

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20050200284
  • Publication Number
    20050200284
  • Date Filed
    March 09, 2005
    19 years ago
  • Date Published
    September 15, 2005
    19 years ago
Abstract
A novel apparatus is disclosed that provides a secure, tamperproof, and cordless installation to securely and reliably couple any electronic device directly onto any standard power outlet. The installation is easy, certification free, and does not need to reduce the number of available power outlets. The apparatus also enables reliable and effective signal coupling for power line control and communication devices including X.10, HomePlug, and other proprietary power line based physical layers. For these types of systems the apparatus may provide life line support using a battery or any other form of energy storage. The device is optimally installed directly onto a standard wall outlet by replacing the current face plug with a housing that can be affixed directly onto the duplex outlet with screws that attach to any existing threaded hole used by conventional or other mounting devices within a wall box.
Description
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS



  • Current U.S. Class: 200/297, 220/3.2, 455/402, 455/3.01

  • Intern'l Class: H01F 027/42, H02G 003/14

  • Field of Search: 174/48, 51, 53, 200/50.1, 50.14, 51.14, 297, 220/3.2, 3.3, 3,7, 307/149, 361/600, 601, 636, 643, 379/142.14, 455/3.01, 280, 402


    Statement Regarding Federally Sponsored Research or Development



None


Reference to Sequence Listing, a Table, or a Computer Program Appendix


None


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Power line based communication and control networks including but not limited to the existing HomePlug, X.10, and broadband access ponits have been entering the main stream market at a relatively slow rate. The technology adaptation cycle of these devices is slow due to stiff opposition from competing wireless technologies and limitations in the physical packaging of power line communication devices. Current indoor power line communication devices include units that require replacement of existing electrical outlets or simple devices that plug directly into the existing receptacle. The former provides a reliable connection at the expense of installation that requires professional assistance for most customers, which is the main limiting factor that inhibits widespread adoption of the technology. The latter is easy to install, however, this convenience is afforded at the expense of connection reliability. This drawback causes problems ranging from poor signal coupling to no signal coupling at all; particularly if the unit is accidentally removed from the wall or gradually pulled from the power receptacle because of cable tension. Competing wireless solutions are able to function reliably during power outages because the units can operate when they are plugged into a conventional uninterruptible power supply. By contrast, power line communication systems cannot pass signals through uninterruptible power supplies. Consequently it is expensive to maintain communications during power outages because some alternative form of power, other than low-cost conventional uninterruptible power supplies, must be provided to each unit in the building.


Prior art discloses three expired power line based voice and/or data communication system patents including U.S. Pat. No 3,949,172, U.S. Pat. No. 4,636,771, and U.S. Pat. No.: 4,473,817. The latter describes single phase power line signal coupling that enables any power line to be used as a communication link for any multi-media signal.


Recent prior art discloses different types of power outlet boxes including U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,636,914, 6,147,304, 6,281,439, and 6,441,304; face plate assemblies including U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,924,349 and 6,838,997; wall outlet box extensions including U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,723,921, 5,402,902 and 6,765,149; and mounting assemblies including U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,717,050 and 6,730,845. Prior art that discloses a tamper proof, securely fastened, life-line supported indoor power line communication apparatus that overcomes the above noted limiting technology adaptation factors does not exist.


BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

A novel securely fastened and tamper proof life-line supported indoor power line communication apparatus that overcomes the primary factors that limit adoption of the power line communication and control is disclosed. The power outlet faceplate is removed before the device is directly inserted into the power receptacle either by one or multiple plugs. It is securely fastened to any existing threaded hole or through hole in the power outlet box or power receptacle by using any threaded screws, barbed anchor, plastic anchor, other conventional mounting mechanisms, or any combination thereof. Tamper security is further enhanced by optional mechanisms that require a key to release the faceplate device or by a complete plastic assembly that is securely enclosed by a tamper proof faceplate screw, chemical adhesion, or any other mechanical means including pressure and heat. Life-line support is provided by a rechargeable backup battery or charge cell that is accessible through a lid that is located on the cover of the apparatus.




BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1: Is an illustration of a conventional power receptacle that is covered by a faceplate.



FIG. 2: Is an illustration of a conventional power receptacle with the faceplate removed.



FIG. 3: Is an expanded illustration of the internal hardware and power extension.



FIG. 4: Is an expanded illustration of the internal hardware without a power extension.



FIG. 5: Is an expanded illustration of the device face plate and the life-line support cell.



FIG. 6A: Is an illustration of a single receptacle assembly of the embodied invention.



FIG. 6B: Is an illustration of a duplex receptacle assembly of the embodied invention.



FIG. 7: Is a rear view illustration the snap-on mounting apparatus.



FIG. 8A: Is a rear view illustration of a snap-on assembly of the embodied invention.



FIG. 8B: Is a front view illustration of a snap-on assembly of the embodied invention.



FIG. 9: Is a front view illustration of a screw-on assembly of the embodied invention.



FIG. 10: Is an expanded prospective view of the embodied invention.




DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

An expanded illustration of the embodied invention is shown in FIG. 10. This invention discloses the artwork, architecture, mechanical design, housing, ease of installation, and intended use of any assembly or device that plugs into any wall outlet for the purpose of supporting any form of power line control and communication over power lines including any form of data transfer and any form of multi-media such as audio, video, entertainment, telephone, and the like. The device is an enclosed apparatus that contains these components and the primary part that seeks protection in the method that the device installs, which offers considerable savings over any existing artwork or housing.



FIG. 1 shows a standard wall mounted power outlet consisting of the interior building wires that supply the outlet box 1, the power outlet receptacle faceplate 2, the outlet receptacle box 3, and face plate screw 4. The embodied invention is designed in part to replace the outlet receptacle faceplate 2, which must be removed during the first step of the installation process as shown in FIG. 2. The assembly is subsequently plugged directly into a conventional power receptacle of the type shown at 5, which is commonly mounted into the outlet box by the upper and lower screws shown at 6 and 7 in FIG. 2. The four through holes located at 8 in FIG. 2 are generally used to interface with the building material on the wall and are usually not used by the electrical device or by the faceplate and may be used to mount the embodied invention. The disclosed invention is mounted onto the outlet box after the face plate has been removed as shown in FIG. 2. The screw shown at 22 in FIG. 2 that is used to mount the embodied invention to the outlet receptacle 5 via the center threaded hole shown by example at 23 in FIG. 3 can be any screw. However, the method of installation is easiest when the screw has matching threads to the center screw hole 23 of the outlet receptacle. The screws shown at 20 and 24 in figure that affix the device to the wall box can be any screw of the type shown at 6 and 7 in FIG. 2. Installation is optimal if the screws shown at 20 and 24 have matching threads to the threaded holes in the outlet box at 21 and 25.


The embodied invention can be affixed to the outlet box 3 in the above described manner, by using snap-on mechanisms of the type shown at 28 and 41, barbed anchors of the type shown at 30, 42, 43, 49 and 52, spring loaded elbow clamps of the type shown at 47, or any other mechanical means including pressure, heat, or chemical adhesion or any combination thereof. Likewise, the internal components shown at 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, and 18 in FIG. 3 and the faceplates shown by example at 32 and 54 can be mounted to the back plates shown by example at 19 and 48 by using screws, snap-on mechanisms, barbed anchors, spring loaded elbow clamps, or any other mechanical means including pressure, heat, or chemical adhesion or any combination thereof. Likewise any fully enclosed assembly of the embodied invention like that shown by example in FIG. 8A, FIG. 8B, and FIG. 9 can be mounted to the receptacle using any of the above described methods or by applying sufficient pressure to the barbed anchors or snap-on connectors at 49 and 52 to ensure that the assembly tightly couples to the outlet box as shown in FIG. 7.


The list of components that are displayed in the drawings include a signal and low voltage transformer 9, transformer wires 10, supporting electronics 11, RJ-11 12 and RJ-45 13 communication jacks, power receptacle extensions at 14 and 15, an upper face plate snap-on clip 16, lower face plate snap-on clip 17, life line battery backup assembly 18, miscellaneous electronic hardware and printed circuit boards 27, upper receptacle screw 20, upper receptacle screw assembly 21, face plate screw 22, face plate screw assembly 23, lower receptacle screw assembly 24, lower receptacle screw 25, and a cut-out view of an unspecified building wall material to illustrate placement of the outlet box. These components are shown by example to illustrate the general concept of the embodied invention and are not intended to limit the components that can be housed by this invention. The RJ-11 and RJ-45 jacks are at 12 and 13 are presented in FIG. 3 only to illustrate placement of communication jacks that interface to conventional devices; this example does not limit the type of communication jacks that can be used by this invention or by the claims of this invention.



FIG. 5 illustrates the insertion of a life-line support battery 36, a face plate illustration 32 with communication plug slots 34, power outlet slots 35 and holes that provide keyed access to the release clip 33. The access lid for the battery backup system, shown by example on the top 53, side 38, and front 37 of the faceplates, can be placed anywhere on the housing assembly. FIG. 6A, FIG. 6B, FIG. 7, FIG. 8A, FIG. 8B, and FIG. 9 illustrate several mechanical form factors that this invention may assume. FIG. 6A illustrates a typical stand-alone duplex power outlet embodiment of this invention with a matching duplex face plate 39 and top mounted access lid for the life line support battery 37. FIG. 6B illustrates a power outlet embodiment of this invention with multiple duplex receptacles with a matching faceplate 40 and side mounted access lid for the life line support battery 38. FIG. 8A and FIG. 8B illustrates a form factor that occupies only half of a conventional duplex power outlet receptacle 54 and a front mounted access lid for the life line support battery 53. These illustrations show that the this invention can assume any form factor and use any combination of upper, lower, left, right, and center receptacle in an outlet box. The device may include 1 or multiple receptacles of any type, including specialized outlets for dryers or other unique outlet types and foreign types of outlets. For example, if the original wall-box supplied conventional 110V 15 A duplex power, the same would be available on the outside of the housing of the device. The same applies for any and all other forms of outlets available.

Claims
  • 1. A wall-box mountable face-plate assembly of the types shown by example in the attached drawings and comprising in combination, (a) a back-plate of the type shown at 19 in FIG. 3 that is mountable to any conventional single, duplex, or multiplex wall-box of the type shown by example as a single wall-box at 3 in FIG. 1; (b) multiple modular power-line communication interface and supporting electronic components of the type shown at 11 in FIG. 2 and 27 in FIG. 3 that that are mounted directly to the back-plate shown at 19 in FIG. 3; (c) an assembly and electronic hardware to support battery back-up hardware of the type shown at 18 in FIG. 3; (d) the presence or absence of a battery for back-up power of the type shown at 36 in FIG. 5 that is able to connect to the assembly and electronic hardware to support battery back-up hardware of the type shown at 18 in FIG. 3; (e) a transformer based power supply of the type shown at 9 in FIG. 3 that supplies power to the electronics shown at 11 in FIG. 3 and 27 in FIG. 4 and connects directly over the wires shown at 10 in FIG. 3 to the receptacle extender shown at 15 in FIG. 3 or through a conventional electric plug and directly into the conventional outlet shown at 5 in FIG. 2; (f) a set of communication interface jacks of any type including but not limited to RJ connectors, cable connectors, and fiber connectors that are able to accept existing and future types of communication plugs of the types that are used by computers, telephones, fax machines, multi-media equipment, televisions, radio equipment, recording devices and the like; (g) an enclosing face-plate of the type shown at 32 in FIG. 5 that provides through-hole access at 35 in FIG. 5 to the outlet extensions shown at 14 and 15 in FIG. 3 and through-hole access at 34 in FIG. 5 to the communication jacks shown by example at 12 and 13 in FIG. 3; (h) a removable clip or faceplate of the type shown at 37 in FIG. 6A and 38 in FIG. 6B to provide access for installation and removal of a battery of the type shown at 36 in FIG. 5 that easily snaps on and off of the enclosing face-plate of the types shown by example at 38 in FIG. 6A and 40 in FIG. 6B; (i) any housing device that will contain mounting apparatuses to support antennas, acoustic transceivers, diodes, infrared sensors or other systems for wireless communications between the box and any other device.
  • 2. The assembly of claim 1 comprising in combination, (a) a tamper proof enclosing face-plate of claim 1 (g) of the type that prevents an un-intended user from opening the device or from pulling the faceplate shown by example at 32 in FIG. 5 from the wall that can be snap-mounted to clips that are similar to those shown at 16 and 17 on the back-plate assembly shown at 19 in FIG. 3 and that must be removed using a release key device through access points that are similar to those shown at 33 in FIG. 5; (b) a tamper resistant enclosing face-plate of claim 1 (g) of the type shown at 39 in FIG. 5 that can be snap-mounted to clips that are similar to those shown at 16 and 17 on the back-plate assembly shown at 19 in FIG. 3 and that must be removed using a release pin through access points that are similar to those shown at 33 in FIG. 5 before the assembly can be opened; (c) an enclosing face-plate of claim 1 (g) of the type shown at 40 in FIG. 5 that can be snap-mounted to clips that are similar to those shown at 16 and 17 in FIG. 3 on the back-plate assembly shown at 19 in FIG. 3 and that can be removed by pulling the unit off of the snap-on clips at 16 and 17 in FIG. 3; (d) the use of tamper resistant snap-on mounting apparatuses of the types shown at 41, 42, and 43 in FIG. 7 to mount the back-plate shown at 19 in FIG. 3 to the through-holes shown at 44 and 45 in FIG. 7 that must be removed before the back-plate assembly shown at 19 in FIG. 3 can be removed from the wall-box shown by example at 3 in FIG. 1; (e) the use of any chemical, rubber sealant, screws, snap-on mechanisms of the type shown at 28 and 41, barbed anchors of the type shown at 30, 42, 43, 49 and 52, spring loaded elbow clamps of the type shown at 47, or any other mechanical means including pressure, heat, or chemical adhesion or any combination thereof to mount the back-plate shown at 19 in FIG. 3 to the outlet-box shown by example at 3 in FIG. 1; (f) the use of any chemical, rubber sealant, screws, snap-on mechanisms of the type shown at 28 and 41, barbed anchors of the type shown at 30, 42, 43, 49 and 52, spring loaded elbow clamps of the type shown at 47, or any other mechanical means including pressure, heat, or chemical adhesion or any combination thereof to mount the internal components shown at 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, and 18 in FIG. 3 and the faceplates shown by example at 32 and 54 to the back plates shown by example at 19 and 48.
  • 3. The assembly of claim 1 comprising in combination, (a) a back-plate of the type shown at 19 in FIG. 3 that is mountable to any conventional single, duplex, or multiplex wall-box of the type shown by example as a single wall-box at 3 in FIG. 1 using threaded screws of the type shown at 20 and 24 in FIG. 3 that match the threads of and are able to screw directly into the existing points shown by example at 21 and 25 in FIG. 3 on the existing wall box shown at 3 in FIG. 1; (b) a back-plate of the type shown at 19 in FIG. 3 that is mountable to any conventional single, duplex, or multiplex wall-box of the type shown by example as a single wall-box at 3 in FIG. 1 using threaded screws of the type shown at 22 in FIG. 3 that matches the threads of and are able to screw directly into the existing point at 23 in FIG. 3 on the existing single outlet receptacle device shown by example at 5 in FIG. 2; (c) a back-plate of the type shown at 19 in FIG. 3 that is mountable to any conventional single, duplex, or multiplex wall-box of the type shown by example as a single wall-box at 3 in FIG. 1 using snap-on mounting apparatuses of the types shown at 41, 42, and 43 in FIG. 7 to mount the back-plate shown at FIG. 19 in FIG. 3 to any available through-holes on the outlet receptacle or electrical device of the type shown at 44, 45 and 46 in FIG. 7.
  • 4. The assembly of claim 1 and claim 2 comprising in combination, (g) any fully assembled apparatus the type that is expandable in scale to mount to and to fit properly onto any conventional single outlet of the type that is shown in FIG. 6A; (h) any fully assembled apparatus the type that is expandable in scale to mount to and to fit properly onto any conventional duplex outlet of the type that is shown in FIG. 6B; (i) any fully assembled apparatus the type that is expandable in scale to mount to and to fit properly onto outlets of the type shown in FIG. 6A and FIG. 6B that are designed to house any number of multiple electrical outlet or electrical switch devices or any combination thereof; (j) any fully assembled apparatus the type that is shown in FIG. 6A and FIG. 6B that is expandable in scale and physical geometry to mount to and to fit properly onto any type of outlet that delivers any type of voltage and power level that is used to provide power for electrical devices that plug into a wall; (k) any fully assembled apparatus the type that is shown in FIG. 6A and FIG. 6B that is expandable in scale and physical geometry to mount to and to fit properly onto any wall-box that houses any combination of the presence or absence of any type of outlet or switching device that delivers or controls any type of voltage and power level that is used to provide power for electrical devices that plug into a wall.
  • 5. The assembly of claim 1, claim 2, claim 3, and claim 4 comprising in combination, (l) any device that is intended to reduce the burden and cost of the task of coupling voice communications from a unit that houses voice communication support systems to existing telephone systems by wireless, plug-in, or other wired connection; (m) any device or apparatus that does not require removal of any existing electrical device in any wall-box of the type shown by example at in FIG. 1 or form of any electrical junction box or other receptacle container.
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60551518 Mar 2004 US