Magnetically coupled pushbutton switches, exemplified in
Magnetically coupled pushbutton switches of the prior art, as shown and described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,523,730, 5,990,772, 6,262,646, and 6,556,112, incorporated herein by reference but not limitation, all have an armature piece-part that can travel through a unique pivot/click (FIG. 2/
A common characteristic of most magnetically coupled pushbutton switches is that the armatures only reliably contact the substrate layer in three places, in a stable tripod support configuration. The drawback is that the heel end of an armature must be stable or there will not be a consistent initial and final tactile feedback. If two of the tripod supports are under the feet, which is the case in the prior art, there is only one remaining reliable tripod support location. This third tripod support, which will also be the third reliable contact point, is located at the toe end of the armature. Granted, excessive actuation force will cause more than three places to contact, but the reliability is poor.
The present invention is a magnetically coupled pushbutton switch which uses protuberances to create a weak heel on the armature. The protuberances impose a physical barrier which prevents the weak heel from ever being magnetically coupled to the magnetic coupler layer in the way taught by the prior art. The prior art taught that the armature's rest position should be substantially adjacent the magnetic coupler layer, thus utilizing the maximum magnetic attractive force available. A position that would have been referred to as a “break away” position in the prior art is the rest position of the present invention. Because the weak heel is not allowed to fully return to the magnetically coupled position, the first tactile feedback is lost or, if desired, only barely noticeable. Eliminating the double tactile feedback is, in itself, a significant advantage over the prior art. Now, a very light actuation force will move an armature with a weak heel from the rest position to a partially actuated position. The protuberances so significantly reduce the force required to place a magnetically coupled pushbutton switch into the partially actuated position that it opens up new markets for the switch. For example, a magnetically coupled switch according to the present invention can be used as the shutter button on an auto-focus camera that sets the focus when the shutter button is partially actuated. With the switch of the present invention, the actuation force required to “set the focus” is so significantly lower than the force required to “snap a picture” that the fear of accidentally taking an unwanted picture is greatly reduced.
Perhaps even more significant is that the switch of the present invention is ideally suited for producing a dual output. Because the only tactile feedback of the switch of the present invention occurs when the armature is moved into the fully actuated position, there is no longer a need to stabilize the bottom of the heel end of the armature. Instead, the bottom of the heel end of the armature can be flat and function as the first tripod support, which is preferably the common contact point. Because this support is flat, the armature will not significantly rock to one side during actuation. The benefit is that the second and third tripod supports can now be placed on either side of the toe end of the armature so that there are two contact points that can be electrically connected to the common contact point simultaneously. In the prior art, the heel end of the armature would connect a pair of electrical conductors, 28 and 29 in
The only moveable part of a magnetically coupled pushbutton switch is the armature 32, a substantially flat piece of magnetic material that is electrically conductive. Soft steel coated with silver is a suitable armature material. The armature usually includes a crown 10 that stands above the otherwise flat sheet of armature material. The crown is located much closer to a heel end 22 of the armature. The end of the armature opposite the heel end is a toe end 26. When the armature is magnetically coupled to the bottom of the magnetic coupler layer 4, the crown of the armature protrudes through an aperture 16 in the magnetic coupler layer.
As most clearly seen in the prior art, there are three stable positions that a magnetically coupled pushbutton switch may experience.
Many of the magnetically coupled armatures of the prior art are capable of being modified to include the protuberances of the present invention. With that understanding, the most preferred armature design, shown in
In a first preferred embodiment, a magnetically coupled pushbutton switch of the prior art is improved to include the armature 32 of the present invention. The protuberances 30 of the improved armature are on either side of the crown 10, and the protuberances and crown are raised with respect to the top surface of the armature, but the crown is higher than the protuberances. Two feet 24 depend from the bottom surface of the armature at the heel end 22. Alternatively, a single bar foot may depend from the bottom surface of the armature at the heel end. A very soft actuation force 20 will move the armature into the second stable position because the protuberances only allow the heel end to be weakly held to the magnetic coupler layer 4. When the armature travels into the second stable position, there is almost no perceptible initial tactile feedback. Full actuation of the switch into the third stable position, however, creates a very distinct final tactile feedback and requires significantly more actuation force. The total travel time required for full actuation of the switch may be very short, even less than twenty thousandths of a second, but a switch user can easily support the armature in the partially actuated position for many seconds using minimal effort.
For a double pole switch, the electrical conductors are arranged on the substrate layer 8 so that the pair of electrical conductors 28 and 29 are located under the two feet 24 at the heel end 22 of the armature 32, and the common electrical conductor 7 is located generally under the toe end 26 of the armature. The pair of electrical conductors is actuated when the armature is manipulated into the second stable position such that the pair of electrical conductors is electrically connected by the two feet. The common electrical conductor may then be electrically connected to the pair of electrical conductors by fully actuating the armature into the third stable position. Please note that which electrical conductor is actually common may be changed around.
In a second preferred embodiment, the electrical conductors are arranged to produce a dual output, as shown in
When the dual output armature 32 is manipulated by a user provided actuation force 20 into the second stable position, the armature's first point of contact with the dual output substrate layer 42 will be where the common armature contact point 50 meets the common dual output electrical contact point 48 on the common dual output electrical conductor 38. When the dual output armature is forced to travel into the third stable position, the toe pads 40 make contact at the first and second dual output contact points 44 and 46, thereby electrically connecting the armature to the first and second dual output electrical conductors 34 and 36, respectively. A stable tripod configuration is formed by the three contact points if the dual output armature is fully actuated into the third stable position.
The dual output switch's substrate electrical conductor arrangement takes advantage of this stable tripod configuration that is consistent and reliable. It is highly recommended that the common dual output electrical conductor 38 be at the heel end 22 of the armature 32. The common dual output electrical conductor is much larger than the other electrical conductors just in case the actual common dual output contact point 48 shifts around. The common dual output electrical conductor is large enough to cover the entire region on the dual output substrate layer 42 that may be contacted by the substantially flat heel end of the armature. The first and second dual output electrical conductors 34 and 36 may be smaller because they will be electrically connected to the armature at the toe pads 40 only. Electrical leads 52 connect the electrical conductors to electronics that are external to the switch.
Final travel of the dual output armature is fairly abrupt, so the toe pads hit the dual output substrate layer 42 almost simultaneously. When an electrical conductor touches one of the armature's toe pads, the flow of charge will be toward the common of the circuit because it provides the greatest potential difference. Even if there is a potential difference between the toe pads, there is no flow of current between them because the common electrical conductor is always the first to connect to the circuit and the last to disconnect from the circuit. When the actuation force is removed from the crown of the armature, the toe end strongly returns to the magnetic coupler layer. The heel end weakly returns to the magnetic coupler layer only after the toe end has removed itself from the circuit.
An alternative embodiment of the present invention has the protuberances imposed onto the top of the armature's heel end. An example of imposed protuberances would be small posts that are formed in the magnetic coupler layer. The small posts could be debossed into the magnetic coupler layer in close proximity to the aperture that accepts the crown of the armature. An armature of the prior art would not, in this alternative design, need to be modified because all of the benefits of having a weak heel will be present in an armature whose heel end is blocked by the small posts from ever being strongly held adjacent the magnetic coupler layer in the way taught by the prior art.
While a preferred form of the invention has been shown and described, it will be realized that alterations and modifications may be made thereto without departing from the scope of the following claims. For example, the protuberances do not need to be formed by stamping or molding the armature. A couple of drops of epoxy, or other material that can be fixed to the armature, could take the place of the protuberances already shown and described, and the added material will create the gap that blocks the heel end of the armature from fully returning to the strong magnetically coupled position that is not desired in the switch of the present invention. Also, there are numerous other shapes, sizes and constructions of armatures that have been disclosed in the prior art, and it is expected that this teaching will enable one skilled in the art to incorporate the protuberances of the present invention onto virtually any magnetically coupled pushbutton switch armature.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4096364 | Lynn et al. | Jun 1978 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050110601 A1 | May 2005 | US |