The invention relates to a socket for lamps, especially electric discharge lamps, preferably fluorescent lamps.
Fluorescent lamps often consist of a straight discharge tube which is provided with a socket at both ends. Each socket carries two pins, which serve for mechanical mounting of the fluorescent lamp and for the electrical supply of same. Various lamp sockets for such fluorescent lamps are in use. One example for this can be found in EP 1 251 603 A2. The lamp socket illustrated therein demonstrates a housing made of insulating material into which a rotor, likewise consisting of insulating material, is inserted. The rotor can rotate around an axis that is coaxial to the lamp tube of the fluorescent lamp accommodated by the socket. The rotor is provided with an insertion slot, into which the pins of the fluorescent lamp can be inserted in the radial direction. Springy contact sheets, which come into contact with the pins of fluorescent lamp when the pins are inserted into the rotor and the lamp is rotated around its longitudinal axis by 90°, are located on both flanks of the rotor.
The contact springs must develop a sufficient compression force to enable reliable current transfer. This assumes that the contact springs are configured in a fairly stiff manner. The forces required to rotate the fluorescent lamp are correspondingly large, a fact that can result in the lamp not being rotated into its correct contact position of, for example, a 90° twist relative to the insertion position, during the installation. Such a case can lead to diminished contact forces, and consequently to increased transition resistances and ultimately to impermissible heating.
It is the object of the invention to create a lamp socket with enhanced reliability.
This object is achieved by the lamp socket according to claim 1:
The lamp socket according to the invention demonstrates a housing made of insulating material and at least one contact mounted in the housing and a rotor, which is rotatably mounted and consists of insulating material. A support means for the rotor is disposed on the rotor. While the contact is held in the housing, the support means rotates along with the rotor. It therefore moves relative to the housing and to the contact. This circumstance can be utilized to allow the support of the contact to become effective only when the lamp has been rotated into connected position. When the lamp is not in its connected position but in its insertion position, the support means can be ineffective. In other words, the support means can be used to press the contact onto the pin of the lamp when the lamp is rotated into contact position. This makes it possible to create a lamp socket that achieves a high contact force with relatively flexible contacts. Due to the high contact force, a lower electrical transition resistance arises between the contact and the pin of the lamp. The danger of heating or overheating the contact is excluded.
The contact of the lamp socket is preferably formed by a springy contact sheet. This can demonstrate an end that is preferably bent arc-shaped or is angled and that is arranged to fit into place on the support means. The support means helps to force the contact against the pin of the lamp. To this end, the support means preferably forces the contact radially inwards relative to the rotor.
It is advantageous if the lamp socket is provided with a pin support device, which can be disposed between the pins of the lamp for example. This makes it possible to let relatively large compression forces act between the contact and the pin of the lamp without overloading the pin of the lamp.
It is furthermore advantageous if a stopping means is provided opposite the support means. The stopping means can, for example, be a projection, which is provided on the rotor and which defines a slot or passage in combination with the support means. Whereas the support means is configured as an arc-shaped rib, for example, a triangular nose or the like can form the stopping means. The stopping means can be used to keep the contact from being too far radially inwards when the rotor is in the lamp insertion position. Finally, a rotor is thereby created which actively moves the contact from a radially further outward position when the rotor is in the lamp insert position to a radially further inward position when the rotor is in connected position.
Additional details of advantageous embodiments of the invention are subject matter of claims, the drawing or the description. The description is limited to essential aspects of the invention and other actualities. The drawing discloses further details and is to be used as a supplementary means of interpretation. The drawing illustrates an example embodiment of the invention. The drawing shows:
a the rotor of the socket as per
b the rotor of the socket as per
The lamp socket 1 illustrated in
The housing part 3 is provided with an insertion slot 10, which passes through the rim 5 and the front side of the housing part 3. To this end, the insertion slot 10 also crosses a pipe-socket-like catch 11, which projects from the front side of the housing part 4 into its interior space 6. Additional extensions 12, 13, 14 extend from the front wall of housing part 3 into the interior space 6 to form mountings for the housing part 4 and contacts 15, 16, which are to be mounted in the interior space 6. The contacts 15, 16 are configured as mirror images of one another. The following description of contact 15 thus applies to contact 16 in corresponding mirror-image form.
Contact 15 demonstrates a contact tag 17, which acts as a leaf spring. It demonstrates an arc-shaped, or in a plurality of facets, bent end section 18, which is bent around the catch 11. One edge 19 faces housing part 4, i.e. the back wall of the housing 2. This edge 19 is configured straight. The edge 20, which is located opposite and faces the front wall, in contrast, is provided with a cutout 21, which is disposed at a distance to the end section 18.
In the connection to the cutout 21, the contact tag 17 transitions into a mounting and connecting section 22. In the present example embodiment, this is bent as a rectangular hook and serves to fix the contact 15 within the interior space 6 of the housing part 3. To this end, the housing part 3 demonstrates, in its interior space 6, appropriate mounting structures into which the contact 15 can be pushed.
For electrical contacting, the underside of contact 15 demonstrates, for example, one or more openings 23 to which a feed 24 that has been released can be assigned. The feed 24 and the opening 23 can form a plug-in contact. By way of substitution, other connecting means can be provided.
In addition, a contact slot 25 can be provided on the mounting and connecting section 22 in order to establish an electrical bridge to the contact 16, for example. Alternatively the two contacts 15,16 can be manufactured out of one piece of sheet and thus be connected by a web, which can be ripped out if necessary.
To the socket 1 there belongs a rotor 26, which demonstrates a front disk-shaped section 27 and a tube extension 28, which extends away from the section 27. It engages the catch 11 and is locked to it. The insertion slot 10 transversely cuts the rotor 26 and the tube extension 18, severing the rim of the disk-shaped front side of the rotor 26 only on one side. Provided on the inner wall of tube extension 28 are ribs 29, 30, which are particularly obvious in
Provided on the rotor 26 are several, preferably four, support means 31 to 34, which are spaced from each other at 90° angles and, as particularly evident from
Located opposite the support means 31 to 34, there are provided several, preferably four, stopping means 40, 41, 42, 43, which can be configured in the form of triangular noses projecting outwards from the tube extension 28 in the radial direction, for example, and which are located further inwards radially, i.e. closer to the center of rotation 35. Together with the support means 31 to 34, the stopping means 40 to 43 each form a slot-like passage. As evident from
The lamp socket 1 described so far operates as follows:
As depicted in
Rotating the lamp 90° around the center of rotation 35, takes the pins 45, 46 out of the position depicted
During the 90° rotation, the stopping means 42 must first pass the projection 49 and then the projection 48, which are provided on the housing part 4 and each of which expands in the radial direction. This requires a certain torque. This provides a rotate/lock effect, which facilitates the operation.
As long as the rotor 26 has not traveled its 60° rotational position, the support means 33, 34, will pass through the cutouts 21 of the contacts 15, 16, as depicted in
If the rotor 26 has traveled its 60° position, the support means 31, 32 bump against the ends 18 of the contacts 15, 16 and force them inwards with their noses 36, 37. The contact tags 17 are thereby clamped against the pins 45, 46 and a high contact pressure is generated.
As evident, the contacts 15, 16 are each supported on two ends when in the contact state as per
When the rotor 26 is situated in the lamp insertion position as per
In the transition between the insertion position as per
The lamp socket according to the invention demonstrates a housing 2 with a rotor 26. Contacts 15, 16, which demonstrate contact tags 17 that are resilient in the swivel direction, are mounted in the housing 2. The open ends 18 of the contact tags can support themselves on stopping means 31 to 34, which are moved by the rotor 26. In the support position, they are positioned on the ends 18 of the contacts 15, 16. When the lamp is rotated from its insertion position into its connected position, the support means 31 to 34 are distant from the ends 18 of the contacts 15, 16, however, so that the lamp can be rotated relatively freely without current. Only near the end of this rotational movement do cams provided on the support means 31 to 34 bump against the ends 18 of the contacts 15, 16 and force them radially inwards and clamp the contacts 15,16 against the pins 45, 46 of the lamp.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2007 043 266.8 | Sep 2007 | DE | national |