Electric power outlets are commonly provided on a wall of a building structure. A switch may be attached to the power outlet permitting a user to complete a circuit through the power outlet to switch on a light, or other appliance. Alternatively, the power outlet may provide a connection socket to permit a user to insert the terminals of a power driven appliance such as a heater, cooler, kitchen appliance, or the like. Typically, such power outlets are covered by a coverplate, protecting the power supply on the wall from accidental human contact, and thus providing a safety feature.
In recent years, it has become a common feature of a coverplate to provide a function in addition to its safety feature. The coverplate may be provided with two terminals that extend rearwardly from the coverplate, configured to make contact with the two electrically live power terminals on the power outlet, thereby drawing a small amount of current to power small low power devices that are attached to the rear side of the coverplate. Such coverplates are known in the art as active coverplates. It is known that most power outlets have a standard dimension, so that the distance of separation of power terminals on a standard power outlet are known, and this distance of separation is also given to the rearwardly extending terminals on the coverplate so that the rearwardly extending terminals may conveniently contact the power terminals on the outlet. Such low power devices may include features such as LEDs to provide floor lighting, or LEDs to provide an indication whether the power through the outlet is on or off. These LEDs may further be controlled by switches such as motion detector switches, or photosensor switches. Other features include USB charging ports, and the like.
However, a problem in the prior art arises during the manufacture and assembly of such coverplates, and this problem during assembly may extend to the safety of the resulting coverplate once it is manufactured and assembled. During assembly, the complexity of assembling a fairly complex electric circuit onto the back of a coverplate is made difficult by the fact that numerous components and elements must be connected to the coverplate, thus giving rise to the potential for assembly error. As a result, the eventual product may present the consumer public with a product that is not sufficiently safe for installation onto power outlets that are powered by live electricity.
Another problem encountered in the prior art is that the clips or prongs provided by standard powered coverplates tend to be lengthy in order to reach the screws on a power receptacle, and these may come in contact with the wall box or other conductive material, which often will be metal. This is an ongoing problem, and large manufacturing costs are incurred in trying to reduce this problem.
The present invention addresses these and other needs.
In one embodiment, the invention is an active coverplate comprising a face plate having a proximal surface and a distal surface and an electrical load. A flange extends distally away from the distal surface of the face plate. The flange comprises a contact having a distalmost end. It includes a housing defining a hollow interior and sized to receive the contact such that the distalmost end is exposed outside the housing for making electrical contact with a power supply of a receptacle body. The contact is free to slide distally and, alternatingly, proximally within the housing. The coverplate also includes an electrical connection between the contact and the electrical load.
In some embodiments, a spring is positioned in the housing to bias the contact distally. In other embodiments, the contact is a hollow cylinder, and the spring is positioned within the cylinder.
In some embodiments, the coverplate includes a support frame attachable to the distal surface of the face plate, wherein the flange is a molded feature of the support frame.
These and further advantages will be more fully apparent when read in light of the drawings and the detailed description of some embodiments.
Reference will now be made to the figures wherein like structures will be provided with like reference designations. It is understood that the figures are diagrammatic and schematic representations of some embodiments of the invention, and are not limiting of the present invention, nor are they necessarily drawn to scale. In some embodiments, the invention comprises a coverplate configured for attachment to a power outlet on a wall.
With reference to
The support frame 18 further includes receptor flanges 20, 22 which may extend distally and perpendicular to the plane of the support frame. Each receptor flange 20, 22 is shaped to define a hollow interior chamber 30 (seen in
With reference to
A strip of LEDs 50 may be attached to the support frame 18, and the LEDs may be spaced along the strip for being placed next to openings 16 in the faceplate 11. Two conductive wires 52, 54 are placed on the support frame to connect the strip of LEDs 50 to the contacts 24, 26 in each receptor flange respectively. Thus, a circuit may be formed between the contacts, extending along the wires and through the strip of LEDs. Power for the circuit is drawn from the potential difference that will be provided by electric power to the receptacle. A switch 17 may be provided for completing the circuit for powering the LEDs. A microprocessor which may be a motion sensor switch, or a photo detector switch, may be further inserted into the circuit for activating the LEDs upon sensing motion, or upon sensing nightfall. The circuit will eventually be powered by electric power received into the contacts 24, 26 via the power outlet 100 as described herein below with reference to
During assembly, after the contacts and springs are inserted into the flanges, the support frame 18 is pressed down onto the faceplate 11, so that the pins 56 are inserted into the holes 58. The contacts 20, 24 are neatly captured and enclosed within the chambers 30, so that only a small distalmost portion of the contacts protrude outwardly through apertures in the chambers 30 for connection to the outlet 100 as shown in
The resulting faceplate 10 is easy to assemble, and it has a high degree of protection against contact to a live component by a workman installing the faceplate onto a power outlet as shown in
To describe how the coverplate 10 is used in practice, it is necessary to describe the outlet receptacle with which the coverplate is designed to engage.
In recent years, a modification has been made to standard receptacles to allow electricians to check, without removing the receptacle from the wall box, whether power is running through the wiring of the receptacle. This modification is to include an exposed slot 110 which runs from the front of the receptacle to a point where the slot intersects with a conductive clip 112 that joins the first power screw 102 to the second power screw 104. (The screws are the points of contact, at which power arrives into the receptacle from electric wires extending from the wall into the box behind the receptacle.) The electrician testing the receptacle for power supply may simply insert his power detection tool from the front face of the receptacle and down the slot 110 until the tool touches the clip 112. If the clip is receiving power from the screws, the tool will light up and show that the receptacle is receiving electric power.
This slot 110 provides a point of entry and contact, directly from the front of the receptacle and down through slot 110 to the clip 112. As seen in
Thus, in use, the coverplate 10 is placed against the receptacle 100 so that the flanges 20, 22 line up with the exposed slots 110 on each side of the receptacle. The flanges are gently pushed distally, so that the contacts 24, 26 are forced, against the bias of the springs 28, 29, into contact with the clips 112 which are under a potential difference across the power outlet 100. (
The present system and method has the advantage of reducing the possibility of the contacts forming a short circuit with any other live wire, or the wall box which often will be metal. The prior art, in which clips are lengthy and extend backwards towards the metal wall box suffers from a disadvantage because the length of the clips in the prior art, which are designed to reach all the way back to the screws in a power receptacle, increases the likelihood of making contact with conductive material in the box. The present invention eliminates the need for lengthy clip elements for receiving power from the standard screws of a receptacle, and instead obtains power from the clips 112 which join the screws together, and which are located much closer to the faceplate 11 of the coverplate 10.
Accordingly, there is described a novel system and method that addresses needs in the art. The present invention may, of course, be carried out in other specific ways than those herein set forth without departing from the essential characteristics of the invention. The present embodiments are, therefore, to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, while the scope of the invention is set forth in the claims that follow.