1. Field
The present disclosure is directed toward electrical wiring devices with user accessible connections and a shutter system for preventing unwanted objects from being inserted into the user accessible connections of the devices.
2. Description of the Related Art
Many electrical wiring devices have a line side, which is connectable to an electrical power supply, a load side, which is connectable to one or more loads, a user accessible connection connected to the load side, and at least one conductive path between the line and load sides. Electrical connections to wires supplying electrical power or wires conducting electricity to the one or more loads are at line side and load side connections, and electrical connections to user accessible loads are typically connected to the load side connections. With electrical wiring devices with user accessible loads, e.g., single and duplex receptacles, user safety is a major concern. Further, the electrical wiring device industry has witnessed an increasing call for circuit breaking devices or systems which are designed to interrupt power to various loads, such as household appliances, consumer electrical products and branch circuits. In particular, electrical codes require electrical circuits in home bathrooms and kitchens to be equipped with ground fault circuit interrupters (GFCI), for example. Presently available GFCI devices, such as the device described in commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 4,595,894, use an electrically activated trip mechanism to mechanically break an electrical connection between the line side and the load side. Such devices are resettable after they are tripped by, for example, the detection of a ground fault.
Electrical wiring devices such as standard single and duplex type electrical receptacles, and some of the circuit interrupting devices noted above also have user accessible load connections, where the load side connection and user accessible load connection are typically electrically connected together. In such electrical wiring devices, the line and load side connections are binding screws and the user accessible connection is a plug connection to a contact or receptacle located inside the device and accessible through the face plate of the electrical wiring device. To protect users from inadvertently or unknowingly inserting one or more objects into the internal receptacle, well known non-conductive safety plugs that can be inserted through the face plate to block access to the internal receptacle have been utilized. The present disclosure contemplates other techniques for protecting users from inadvertently or unknowingly inserting one or more objects into the internal receptacle of an electrical wiring device.
The present disclosure is directed electrical wiring devices with user accessible connections and a shutter system for preventing unwanted objects from being inserted into the devices to the user accessible connections. In one embodiment of such an electrical wiring device a housing having a top cover with at least one set of two slots is provided. The slots are configured to permit insertion of a load connection device into the housing to a user accessible connection within the housing. A shutter is provided to prevent unwanted objects from being inserted into the housing to the user accessible connection. The shutter is moveable between a blocking position relative to the at least one set of slots and an open position relative to the at least one set of slots. Preferably, movement of the shutter from the blocking position to the open position is facilitated upon insertion of a load connection device into the slots.
Preferably, the electrical wiring device is a receptacle having a set of blade receiving slots and wherein the shutter when in the blocking position is between the set of blade slots and the user accessible connection. In one embodiment, the shutter includes a pair of inclined surfaces wherein one inclined surface is aligned with one blade receiving slot and the other inclined surface is aligned with the other blade receiving slot. In this configuration, when at least a portion of load connection device, e.g., the blades of a plug assembly, is inserted into the set of slots, that portion engages the inclined surfaces. If the pressure applied to the inclined surfaces is equally distributed or substantially the same the shutter can move from the blocking position to the open position.
In an alternative embodiment of such an electrical wiring device, housing means with at least one set of slots is provided. The housing means is configured to permit the insertion of a load connection device into the housing means and electrically connects the load connection device to user accessible contacts or receptacles located inside the housing means. Shutter means located relative to the slots in the housing means is also provided. The shutter means is at least partially moveable between a blocking position relative to the housing means slots and an open position relative to the at least two slots in the housing. Preferably, the shutter means is movable from the blocking position to the open position upon insertion of a load connection device into the slots.
Preferred embodiments of the present application are described herein with reference to the drawings in which similar elements are given similar reference characters, wherein:
The present disclosure contemplates shutter assemblies capable of being used with various types of electrical wiring devices with user accessible connections, e.g., electrical receptacles, used in residential, commercial and industrial environments. Examples of such electrical receptacles include single and duplex receptacles found in, for example, residential wiring environments or circuit interrupting devices that are capable of breaking at least one conductive path at a line side or a load side of the device. In such circuit interrupting devices the conductive path is typically divided between a line side that connects to supplied electrical power and a load side that connects to one or more loads (e.g., secondary loads and user accessible loads). Various receptacles in the family of resettable circuit interrupting devices include: ground fault circuit interrupters (GFCI's), arc fault circuit interrupters (AFCI's), immersion detection circuit interrupters (IDCI's), appliance leakage circuit interrupters (ALCI's) and equipment leakage circuit interrupters (ELCI's).
The receptacle shown herein is a GFCI type circuit interrupting receptacle having line and load phase (or power) connections, line and load neutral connections and user accessible load phase and neutral connections. The user accessible load connections permit external loads, such as appliances, lighting fixtures or other types of loads to be connected to the device.
With circuit interrupting devices, the circuit interrupting and reset portions preferably use electromechanical components to break (open) and make (close) one or more conductive paths between the line and load sides of the device. However, electrical components, such as solid state switches and supporting circuitry, may be used to open and close the conductive paths. Generally, the circuit interrupting portion is used to automatically break electrical continuity in one or more conductive paths (i.e., open the conductive path) between the line and load sides upon the detection of a fault, which in a GFCI type device is a ground fault. The reset portion is used to close the open conductive paths. In embodiments of a circuit interrupting device having a reset lockout, all or part of the reset portion is used to close the open conductive paths if allowed by the reset lockout. In this configuration, the operation of the reset and reset lockout portions is in conjunction with the operation of all or a portion of the circuit interrupting portion, so that electrical continuity in open conductive paths cannot be reset if all or a part of the circuit interrupting portion is non-operational, if an open neutral condition exists and/or if the device is reverse wired.
The above-described features can be incorporated in any resettable circuit interrupting device, but for simplicity the device shown and described is a GFCI type receptacle. A more detailed description of a GFCI receptacle is provided in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,595,894 and 6,437,700 both of which are incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
It should also be noted that binding screws are exemplary of the types of wiring terminals that can be used to provide the electrical connections in most receptacles. Examples of other types of wiring terminals include set screws, pressure clamps, pressure plates, push-in type connections, pigtails and quick-connect tabs.
Turning to
The top cover 14 has a face 24 which contains two sets of slots that provide access to the user accessible line and phase connections of the receptacle. Preferably, each set of slots includes two or more blade receiving slots.
In the embodiment of
The bottom housing 18 has a series of four terminal screws (only two of which are shown in the figures). Terminal screw 44 is connected to the load neutral terminal. A similar terminal screw on the other side of the housing 12 is connected to the load phase terminal. Terminal screw 48 is connected to the line neutral terminal and a similar terminal screw on the other side of the housing is connected to the line phase terminal. At the rear wall of middle housing 16 is a grounding screw (not shown) to which a ground conductor may be fastened.
Referring again to
As shown in
Referring to
Although the shutter is described as a movable shutter with inclined blocking surfaces and stops, other configurations of the shutter, blocking surfaces and stops are also contemplated that are capable of performing the same or substantially the same function. For example, the stops may be configured to engage other structures on the top cover or on another component of the receptacle, or electromechanical components may be utilized to block unwanted objects from entering the receptacle. Further, the shutter assembly may be employed on any type of device with user accessible connections, including single and duplex receptacles and circuit interrupting devices.
While there have been shown and described and pointed out the fundamental features of the disclosure, it will be understood that various omissions and substitutions and changes of the form and details of the device described and illustrated and in its operation may be made by those skilled in the art, without departing from the spirit of the application.
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