The present invention relates to a fire detector.
Fire detectors are used for early recognition of fires in areas having a corresponding fire load, to protect people and material assets. Fire detectors are typically mounted on the ceiling and have a round, white housing having a diameter of approximately 10 cm and a height of approximately 7 cm to 10 cm. Because of its function, the housing is seated on the ceiling. Fire detectors are industrially mass-produced products and fire detectors of one model and manufacturer typically appear identical. The corresponding housing size may normally be immediately recognized on the ceiling as a fire detector in spaces having public traffic. The uniformity of mass production and the housing shape therefore always represent a compromise between the function of the fire detector and the taste of the user and the visual demands of the surroundings.
Scattered light fire detectors are therefore predominantly mounted on ceilings, because the smoke is first transported to the ceiling due to the thermal generated by the fire and then propagates along the ceiling. This has the disadvantage that the installation, maintenance, and function testing of the fire detector must be performed on the ceiling. At least a ladder and, in taller rooms, even a lift platform is necessary for these activities. This results in a high outlay in time and money for the cited activities. Therefore, it is desirable to be able to perform the maintenance and regular function testing of the fire detectors using testing devices mounted on a long rod. Furthermore, a defective fire detector is also to be easily replaceable using a tool insert mounted on a rod. For this reason, nearly all fire detectors are inserted into a base to which the necessary supply and transmission lines are permanently connected. Contacts are located in the base, via which the fire detector is connected to these lines. Even when a fire alarm system is first put into operation, the fire detector is to be mountable in the base with the aid of a tool insert of this type, since often the installation and wiring of the base is performed by another company and, sometimes, a long time before the installation of the fire detector itself. Thus, a ladder and/or lift platform is only necessary for wiring the base. The fire detector is predominantly installed in the base, as described in WO 97/05586, for example, by inserting the fire detector in a specific orientation in the base and attaching it using a rotational movement, like a bayonet closure. Therefore, the tool insert used on the installation tool for installing the fire detector in the base is tailored to the shape of the fire detector, in such a way that the frictional force required for the rotational movement is applied via a form fit.
A scattered light smoke detector, which has a light transmitter and a light receiver which are positioned in such a way that a scatter point outside the scattered light smoke detector is situated in the open air, the scattered light smoke detector having a cover for protecting the light transmitter and the light receiver, as well as means for differentiating between smoke and other foreign bodies located in an area around the scatter point, is described in German Patent Application No. DE 101 18 913 A1. The means for differentiating between smoke and other foreign bodies has a processor for analyzing the variation over time of received signals of the light receiver, the processor being connectable to the light receiver. The technology for recognizing a fire employed in this scattered light smoke detector allows an installation of the scattered light smoke detector generally flush with the ceiling. An important step for unobtrusive mounting of fire detectors of this type has thus already been taken. Such a fire detector which is insertable flush with the ceiling requires, however, that it generally only has a flat or only slightly curved and smooth surface, which is formed by a cover disk which covers the fire detector. Therefore, it is extraordinarily difficult to install fire detectors of this type in a base using a rotational movement. Only comparatively low frictional forces may be transmitted via the smooth, flat surface of the fire detector, much lower frictional forces than via a form fit, which is typical in the current fire detectors. In the worst case, the frictional force which may still be applied is no longer sufficient to engage the fire detector contacts with the base contacts. Since the fire detector now terminates flush with the ceiling after being inserted into the base, it is additionally very probable that the mounting tool will slip along the ceiling during the required rotational movement and mark or even damage it.
Furthermore, a scattered light smoke detector which has two light receivers or an imaging lens for a light receiver to set a defined measuring volume is described in German Patent Application No. DE 101 18 913 A1.
An example fire detector designed according to the present invention may offer the advantage of easy mounting and dismounting for maintenance purposes or the like. This is because a fire detector in accordance with the present invention in which a fire detector insert of the fire detector may be installed in its base and removed again not through a rotational movement, but rather through a movement in the axial direction, i.e., perpendicular to the ceiling. The fire detector insert is pressed into the base during installation and is locked solidly in the base after being released. The fire detector insert is removed from the base by pressing on the fire detector insert again in axial direction and subsequently relieving the pressure on the fire detector insert. Since generally two defined mounting states occur here, this achievement of the object may also be referred to as a type of “mechanical flip-flop”. This type of mounting is made possible by a catch which includes a connecting member that is mounted centrally and rotatably in the base. Lugs positioned on the fire detector insert cooperate with this connecting member, which cooperate with diagonally running control faces of the connecting member and convert axial movements of the fire detector insert into a rotational movement of the connecting member. A favorable mounting position between the fire detector insert and the base is particularly expediently ensured by a mechanical coding, which only permits mounting of the fire detector insert in the base in a specific position.
The present invention is explained in greater detail below with reference to the figures.
In the following, the assembly of fire detector insert 1 and base 20 of the fire detector is described. Fire detector insert 1 is first carefully placed on base 20 and rotated until a position is reached in which fire detector insert 1 may be pressed into base 20 because of a mechanical coding in fire detector insert 1 and base 20. The mechanical coding is caused by lugs 25, 26 projecting radially inward into the interior of base 20, which engage in formfitting grooves 6, 7, 8 on the outer circumference of fire detector insert 1. The mechanical coding ensures that contacts 2 on fire detector insert 1 and contacts 21 on base 20 meet one another in the correct position. In contrast to typical fire detectors, only a very slight application of force is necessary for the rotational movement mentioned, since only the proper position for the coding arrangement must be produced. This slight application of force may be applied without problems even in fire detectors which are mountable flush with the ceiling. After the coding arrangement has been brought into alignment, the final assembly of fire detector insert 1 in base 20 is performed through pressure on fire detector insert 1 in the axial direction. Through this pressure action, fire detector insert 1 moves into the interior of base 20. At the same time, contact face 4 on the back of fire detector insert 1 meets pressure spring 22, positioned centrally in base 20. A generally hollow cylindrical neck 9 rises out of the back of fire detector insert 1. This neck 9 has four lugs 5, projecting outward in the radial direction, on its outer lateral surface, which hold pressure spring 22 on contact face 4 and prevent pressure spring 22 from slipping away laterally during the relative movement between fire detector insert 1 and base 20. The spring force of pressure spring 22 is expediently dimensioned in this case so that it is sufficient, together with the weight of fire detector insert 1, to overcome the friction force of contacts 2, 21 between fire detector insert 1 and base 20 when fire detector insert 1 is removed from base 20. The length of pressure spring 22 is dimensioned so that when fire detector insert 1 is inserted into base 20, there is still no connection between pressure spring 22 and contact face 4 as long as the mechanical coding prevents fire detector insert 1 from being pressed into base 20. This is required since otherwise spring 22 would be pre-tensioned upon a rotation of fire detector insert 1 because of the friction between spring 22 and contact face 4, which may make pressing fire detector insert 1 into base 20 more difficult. As fire detector insert 1 is pressed further into base 20, both lugs 3 meet connecting member 23. Connecting member 23 is rotatably mounted in base 20 and is held by a disk 24 which is attached by a screw 33 (
The relative orientation of fire detector insert 1 and therefore also the position of both lugs 3 in relation to base 20 is fixed by the mechanical coding between fire detector insert 1 and base 20 using grooves 6, 7, 8 and lugs 25, 26. Disk 24 is attached using a screw 33 to a dome 35 projecting out of base 20 (
The movement sequence when removing fire detector insert 1 from base 20 will now be described with reference to
Of course, it is also possible in a further exemplary embodiment of the present invention to exchange the position of connecting member 23 and the position of lugs 3 cooperating with connecting member 23. This means that in this exemplary embodiment, the connecting member would be connected to fire detector insert 1 itself, while lugs 3 cooperating with connecting member 23 would be connected to base 20 of the fire detector.
Since, as described above, generally only a force in the axial direction must be applied to attach fire detector insert 1 in base 20 and/or remove it from base 20, the achievement of the object according to the present invention is particularly advantageously suitable for ceiling-flush fire detectors, which have no parts projecting out of the plane of the ceiling, to which a force acting in the radial direction could be applied.
The behavior of the locking mechanism described above may be optimized through the following influencing variables. A specific frictional force is overcome as connecting member 23 is rotated. If fire detector insert 1 is pressed into base 20 using a predefinable force F, component Fsin(α) is available for the rotational movement, α being the slope of control faces connected to connecting member 23. Furthermore, lugs 3 move on connecting member 23 as connecting member 23 rotates, which results in an additional frictional force. This frictional force is proportional to Fcos(α). Because of this relationship the larger the slope of the control faces is, the smaller force F is, using which fire detector insert 1 must be pressed into base 20 in the axial direction in order to move connecting member 23.
Slope a may expediently be increased by increasing the number of areas M at a predefined diameter of connecting member 23. Furthermore, slope α may be increased by reducing the diameter of connecting member 23 at a predefined number of areas M. Finally, slope α may also be increased by not implementing the area between two end points of the diagonally running control faces of connecting member 23 as a straight line, but rather providing a larger slope {acute over (α)}>α in the central area between the end points. For the same height h3 (
An advantageous further embodiment variant of connecting member 23 is described in the following with reference to
After fire detector insert 1 has been inserted into base 20 and engaged there, the weight of fire detector insert 1 is carried by the two lugs 3. In addition, lugs 3 must withstand the spring force of pressure spring 22, which is now tensioned. The larger the dimensions of lugs 3, the more stable they are. However, with increasing size, the dimensions of connecting member 23 and therefore the path which fire detector insert 1 must travel perpendicularly to the ceiling when being inserted also increase automatically. The larger this path, the larger the dimensions of base 20 and therefore also the larger the recess required for installing the fire detector in the ceiling. Therefore, more than two lugs 3 may be necessary to increase the mechanical stability with small dimensions of lugs 3.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 002 592.4 | Jan 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2004/053048 | 11/23/2004 | WO | 00 | 7/13/2006 |