This application claims priority to United Kingdom Application No. 1717667.1, filed on Oct. 25, 2017 and titled, “Electrical Relay with Mounting Bracket,” which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to the field of electrical relays such as heavy-duty relays, also known as contactors. In particular the invention relates to a relay and mounting bracket combination which permits the relay to be mounted on a surface or panel in one of a plurality of angular rotational orientations with respect to the bracket.
Following is a description by way of example only and with reference to the figures of the drawings of modes for putting the invention into practice. In the figures:
Devices such as contactors or heavy duty relays generally have mounting brackets or mounting holes the position of which is fixed in relation to other important features of the device such as the main terminals or coil terminals. Two examples of relays having fixed bracket orientations (90 degrees rotational variation) are shown in
One solution is to make several variants of the relay brackets with each having a different relay orientation, but this is expensive and requires stockists or installers to maintain a range of brackets. Alternatively a bracket with multiple attachment bores (i.e. having a large amount of rotational symmetry) could be made, but this may render the bracket too bulky to fit in spatially constrained locations.
The present invention seeks to provide a relay and mounting bracket combination which permits an installer to select one of a range of relay rotational orientations with respect to the associated mounting bracket, but without the aforementioned cost and bulk compromises.
According to one aspect of the invention there is provided a relay and mounting bracket combination comprising a relay having a body with a longitudinal axis defined between a terminal end portion provided with one or more electrical terminal connectors and a base end portion adapted for engagement with the bracket, wherein the bracket is provided with one or more attachment features which facilitate the mounting of the bracket to an external object or surface when the bracket is engaged with the base end portion of the relay.
The engagement between the base end portion and the bracket is made by the inter-engagement of one or more protruding nubs with one or more constraint features thereby providing axial constraint against withdrawing of the base end portion from engagement with the bracket, said one or more nubs and one or more constraint features being configured so as to be capable of co-operating at any one of a plurality of rotational orientations of the base end portion with respect to the bracket, whereby the relay may be mounted on the bracket in a selected one of a plurality of rotational orientations.
The one or more nubs are typically provided on or in the relay base end portion. The one or more constraint features are typically provided on or in the mounting bracket.
The bracket may comprise a member which defines a generally cylindrical aperture or seat sized to accommodate the base end portion therein. The member is preferably generally annular in form. The aperture or seat is preferably provided with said one or more constraint feature, for example on an inner surface of said seat or aperture.
Said one or more protruding nubs are preferably radially extending and can be any shape which permits it to snag a counterpart constraint feature. Said one or more protruding nubs may be radially extending from the base end portion, for example radially extending outwardly from an outside surface of the base end portion.
In a preferred arrangement a constraint feature comprises an annular lip or shoulder provided on or in the annular aperture or seat of the bracket. The one or more nubs may be provided projecting radially outward from the base end portion of the relay. The lip or shoulder thus provides constraint against axial displacement of the nub or nubs through a continuous range of relay body rotational positions with respect to the bracket. Of course the annular lip or shoulder may be interrupted by one or more bypass features (such as axial slots) which permit the nub or nubs to bypass the constraint feature before being rotated and drawn back into engagement under the lip or against the shoulder.
At least a portion of the nub-facing side of the lip or shoulder may be provided with a surface treatment which promotes mechanical keying of the nub and lip or shoulder, such as surface roughening or texturing, and/or the nub itself may also be provided with a surface treatment for the same purpose. The surface treatment may be the provision of inter-engaging surface features, such as saw tooth profile elements.
In another preferred arrangement the constraint features may comprise a series of circumferentially spaced-apart discrete recesses formed on an inside wall of the bracket aperture or seat. The engagement of a nub and a recess provides constraint against axial movement of the nub and each recess corresponds to a discrete rotational position of the relay body with respect to the bracket. There may be at least four such recesses, preferably at least 8, and more preferably at least 12.
Each recess typically comprises a roof portion which provides axial constraint. There may be side walls which provide rotational constraint, and an open base portion which permits entry of the nub into the recess.
The nubs are preferably each sized and configured to be a sliding fit in each recess.
In another aspect of the invention the one or more nubs have an axial depth which is greater than an axial space provided between the associated constraint feature and a surface to which the bracket is to be mounted. Thus when the bracket is placed base edge-on to the surface and fixed with the base edge flush to the surface, a nub in the constraint feature will be compressed between the constraint feature and the flush surface. In this way the nub or nubs may be clamped tightly against movement.
In yet another aspect of the invention one or more open slots are provided for the nub or nubs to bypass the constraint feature when rotationally aligned with the open slot or slots, after which the nub or nubs may be rotationally displaced (by rotating the relay with respect to the bracket) so as to become aligned with a position in which the nub or nubs can be axially constrained by a constraint feature or features. The relay and bracket are then moved axially apart so that the nub or nubs enter into the appropriate constraint feature or features.
The bracket is preferably a generally annular member having an inside surface which defines the aforementioned annular aperture. Said one or more open slots may be provided in said inside surface, and said one or more nubs may be provided projecting radially outwardly from the base end portion of the relay.
In a preferred arrangement there are two slots and two corresponding nubs, which slots and nubs may be positioned in a diametrically opposed configuration.
The base end portion of the relay body may be generally cylindrical. The body is preferably sized (typically the outside diameter) to be a sliding fit in the annular aperture. The constraint feature or features may be provided on the inside surface of the annular aperture.
The bracket is preferably a unitary member, so as to provide simplicity and no assembly at the point of installation (other than engagement with the relay).
The bracket attachment features may comprise two or more radial, outwardly projecting cheek portions. Each cheek may be provided with a bore in which a screw, bolt or rivet may be disposed for fixing to an underlying surface. Other fixing means may be utilized such as gluing, or brazing or spot or pressure welding, in which case a bore may not be needed.
In a further aspect of the invention there is provided a combination of a relay and mounting bracket comprising a relay having a body with a terminal end portion provided with one or more electrical terminal connectors and a base end portion adapted for engagement with the bracket, wherein the bracket is provided with one or more attachment features which facilitate the mounting of the bracket to an external object or surface when the bracket is engaged with the base end portion of the relay, wherein an engagement between the base end portion and the bracket is made by the co-operation of one or more protruding nubs with one or more constraint features which provide axial constraint against withdrawing of the base end portion from the bracket aperture or seat, wherein the bracket comprises a generally annular member which defines a cylindrical aperture or seat sized to accommodate the base end portion therein, and wherein the body portion is provided with said one or more protruding nub or nubs are radially extending and are each radially oversized with respect to the radius of the bracket aperture or seat, the aperture or seat having an inside surface provided with one or more axially extending open bypass slots each capable of receiving an oversized nub when circumferentially aligned therewith, so that the base end portion may axially enter the bracket aperture or recess with the nubs passing through the slots, and wherein said inside surface of the aperture or recess is further provided with one or more inwardly directed shoulder features, sized to accommodate the nub or nubs therein but providing axial constraint which prevents axial withdrawal of the nub or nubs when the shoulder feature covers the nub, the arrangement being such that the relay base portion may be engaged with the bracket by aligning the nub or nubs with the axial slots, and then twisting the bracket with respect to the base portion so that the nub or nubs are accommodated in a shoulder feature or features, which shoulder feature or features prevent axial disengagement of the base portion from the bracket by acting upon the nub or nubs.
Each nub may have any shape capable of snagging a constraint feature, but each preferably has the form of a generally rectilinear section block having the form of annular sector. Each recess for constraining the nub preferably has the form of an annular sector cut-out in the aperture inside surface.
The terminal end portion of the relay is in certain embodiments typically too large to be passed through the bracket aperture, so that the bracket cannot pass beyond the terminal end portion. This means that the bracket can only be engaged with the relay base portion after passing the base portion and being drawn back onto the base portion and its associated nub or nubs.
In
A first embodiment of a combination heavy duty relay 10 and a mounting bracket 11 is shown in
A mounting bracket is a unitary cast or moulded generally annular member 27 which is formed with diametrically opposed cheek portions 23, each with a bore 30 best seen in
In this way the bracket orientation can be tailored to a desired one of a range of possible positions corresponding to recess and block pair engagements, as shown in FIG. 4 in which four possible orientations are shown (although more orientations may be available depending upon the number of recess pairs).
In this embodiment an alternative bracket (
This arrangement operates in a similar way as the first embodiment, with a few important differences. The rotational orientation of the relay is continuously variable as the blocks are free to rotate in the annular recess to adopt a desired relay orientation (leaving aside the bypass slots where there is no constraint). The annular recess of course provides little by way of rotational constraint (in the absence of discrete recess walls which co-operate with the blocks). Thus the surface of the annular shoulder 29 may be roughened or textured or otherwise treated so as to mechanically key or adhere to an upper (co-operating) surface of the blocks 14. This block surface may itself be roughened, textured or otherwise treated to enhance the fixing effect. As with the first embodiment the blocks 14 may have a height which is slightly greater than that of the annular recess, thereby causing the block to be squeezed axially by the shoulder 29 when the bracket is tightened onto the underlying substrate or panel.
In certain aspects the present invention allows a mounting bracket to be attached to a relay or contactor in a chosen orientation, regardless of whether the upper end region of the device has greater bulk or diameter or protrusions or other irregularity which would prevent the bracket from being pulled down over the upper end of the device. In addition to allowing the user to select an optimum mounting orientation/configuration, the combination provides the option of multiple mounting configurations for different applications using only one set of components (i.e. one relay—bracket combination).
In some embodiments, the invention allows the application of a mounting bracket to fit onto a device with an upper portion having a larger diameter or cross sectional area than the bracket aperture. The upper portion of the device may have a regular or irregular cross sectional shape or profile.
In certain embodiments the bracket has a circular hole the diameter of which is greater than the diameter of the lower portion of the device, preferably a sliding fit. The bracket may have slots or recesses disposed such that they coincide with nubs on the device when appropriately rotationally oriented.
The bypass slots are open through the thickness (depth) of the bracket such that the nubs can pass through them without hindrance. On the underside of the bracket there are recesses, the angular spacing of which also coincides with the angular spacings corresponding nubs on the device, but these recesses are blind, i.e. they do not pass through the entire thickness of the bracket. The depth of these blind keyways matches, or is slightly less than the height of the nubs (or blocks) on the device.
It can be seen therefore that the open bypass slots allow the lower end region of the device to be inserted through the hole in the bracket. By rotating the bracket the nubs/blocks on the device can be aligned with any pair of the blind recesses, thus giving multiple angular relationships between device and bracket.
In another aspect of the invention the plurality of discrete blind recesses is replaced by a continuous recess on the underside of the bracket. The depth of this recess would typically be marginally less than the depth of the nubs/blocks. Thus when the bracket is tightened down onto the panel, the clamping action of the bracket onto the nubs/blocks will hold the device secure. The advantage of this alternative is that there are an unlimited number of positions of the bracket relative to the device.
The underside of the recess in the bracket and the interfacing top surface of the nubs/blocks may have a textured surface to provide a degree of positive mechanical fixing when the bracket is tightened down onto the mounting plate. Other forms of mechanical fixing or keying may be provided, such as by the provision of inter-engaging saw tooth profile elements.
In use the relay body according to certain embodiments or aspects of the invention as hereinbefore described is introduced to the bracket and the base end portion of the relay is axially threaded through the bracket aperture, with the nub or nubs aligned with the bypass slots. Once the nubs have passed the slots, the relay body may be rotated with respect to the bracket until a desired relay body orientation is achieved. In cases where several discrete recesses (or constraint features) are distributed around the aperture (or seat) inner surface, the closest discrete recess to the desired orientation is chosen. In cases where the constraint feature represents a substantially continuous feature (such as an annular lip or shoulder) the desired orientation may be adopted without adjusting to a closest discrete recess. The fixing of the mounting bracket to an underlying surface or substrate serves to fix the bracket to the relay (or vice versa) so that the relay is held in the desired orientation for integration into an electrical circuit. The use of bypass slots avoids the need for the bracket to slide over a top (terminal) end of the relay body when engaging therewith. Hence any terminal end portion shape and configuration can be used, especially those in which the terminal end portion is more bulky, or irregular, than the relay body base end portion which is engaged with the bracket.
In summary, the present invention relates to the field of electrical relays such as heavy duty relays, also known as contactors. In particular the invention relates to a bracket a relay and bracket combination which permits the relay to be mounted on a surface or panel in a plurality of angular rotational orientations. There is provided a relay and mounting bracket combination comprising a relay having a body with a terminal end portion provided with one or more electrical terminal connectors and a base end portion adapted for engagement with the bracket, wherein the bracket is provided with one or more attachment features which facilitate the mounting of the bracket to an external object or surface when the bracket is engaged with the base end portion of the relay, wherein an engagement between the base end portion and the bracket is made by the co-operation of one or more protruding nubs with one or more constraint features which provide axial constraint against withdrawing of the base end portion from the bracket aperture or seat. The bracket is preferably provided with a generally annular aperture or seat sized to accommodate the base end portion therein. The inside surface of the aperture or recess may be provided with at one or more inwardly directed shoulder features, sized to accommodate the nub therein but providing axial constraint which prevents axial withdrawal of the nub when the shoulder feature covers the nub. The arrangement is such that the relay base portion may be engaged with the bracket by aligning the nub or nubs with open axial slots, and then twisting the bracket with respect to the base portion so that the nub is accommodated in a shoulder feature, which shoulder feature blocks disengagement of the base portion from the bracket by acting upon the constrained nub or nubs.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1717557.1 | Oct 2017 | GB | national |