1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to the lighting arts, and in particular to an electronic auxiliary lighting system for a high intensity discharge lamp. More particularly, the auxiliary lighting system of the present invention uses as a light source a high output compact fluorescent lamp.
2. Description of Related Art
A high-intensity discharge (HID) lamp will extinguish when power to the HID lamp is interrupted. Momentary power interruptions, such as a lightning strike or someone inadvertently hitting the on/off switch, will cause the HID lamp to extinguish. An extinguished HID lamp will not immediately re-ignite upon the restoration of power to the HID lamp because gases within the HID lamp must be cooled before the HID lamp will re-ignite. With the power restored, restarting a hot HID lamp can take several minutes. Even when they are cool, and easy to start, HID lamps still take up to 2 minutes to come to full bright after they are ignited.
The garage building industry puts a great deal of stock in emergency lighting standards. The industry likes to see a certain minimum amount of light along path of egress in their structures during power interruptions. Accordingly, auxiliary lighting control circuitry has been used for automatically lighting an auxiliary light source, such as an incandescent lamp, following a brief power interruption of a HID lamp. It is known in the art to use quartz lamps to meet these emergency lighting requirements. Round and square garage lights having a HID lamp as a primary light source and a quartz auxiliary lamp have been used for many years. The premise is that when the HID lamp, located at the center of the fixture, is not on the quartz lamp, which is typically a smaller cylindrical incandescent lamp mounted to the side of the HID lamp, is lit to provide emergency illumination. However, there are inherent problems with these current practices of providing auxiliary light to garage lighting systems.
The quartz lamps that are typically used as auxiliary lamps are short lived and are very inefficient in converting electric power into lumens. This causes problems with continued reliability, maintenance, and the ability to meet auxiliary lighting needs. A significant problem associated with these current practices is that the quartz lamps are not located at the photometric center of the fixture. This causes the pattern of light projected from the auxiliary lamp to lack uniformity and thus portions of the lighted area are only dimly lit. Additionally, during normal operation the quartz lamp mounted on one side of the fixture blocks or refracts light from the HID lamp located at the center of the fixture. This causes the quartz lamp, during normal operation of the HID lamp, to form a shadow on the area being lit. It has also been found that emergency incandescent lamp sources are inherently glary and consistently mounted off of the centerline of the fixture, causing the luminaire to be aesthetically unappealing.
What is needed in the garage lighting industry is an auxiliary lamp system that provides emergency light without the problems found in the current systems.
An object of the present invention is to provide a luminaire having both a main lamp and an auxiliary lamp where the auxiliary lamp efficiently and reliably provides illumination when the main lamp fails to provide adequate illumination.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a luminaire having an auxiliary and a main lamp that provide uniform illumination without asymmetries to the area below.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a luminaire that has a main lamp and an auxiliary lamp where neither the main lamp or the auxiliary lamp cause shadowing.
It is yet another objective of the present invention to provide a luminaire having a main lamp and an auxiliary lamp so that the luminaire is aesthetically appealing.
These objects and others are accomplished according to the present invention by providing a luminaire for illuminating a wide area and having an auxiliary lamp that reliably emits adequate light efficiently and uniformly without causing shadowing of the light emitted from the main lamp and is aesthetically appealing.
The luminaire of the present invention includes a housing having a lower lamp mounting surface. This housing may becircular, square, or even irregular in shape. The lamp mounting surface may be reflective and may have prisms to increase the efficiency of the luminaire in lighting a desired area. A main light source, preferably a high intensity discharge (HID) lamp, is centrally mounted onto the lamp mounting surface and extends downward. This vertical arrangement provides for optimum illumination efficiency and life of the HID lamp. An auxiliary lamp is also mounted onto the lamp mounting surface. This auxiliary lamp may be a high output compact fluorescent circular lamp and located centrally about the lamp mounting surface surrounding a portion of the HID lamp. The auxiliary lamp surrounds, substantially at its center, a portion of the combination of the main lamp socket and main lamp and may have a light emitting portion closer to the lamp mounting surface of the housing than the light emitting portion of the main lamp. A lamp's light emitting portion is typically a filament or gaseous volume where light is generated within the lamp. Additionally, the luminaire optionally may have a main barrel shaped reflector surrounding a light emitting portion of the main lamp and mounted at a distance from the lamp mounting surface so that a large portion of the light being emitted from the auxiliary lamp is reflected to the area below by the barrel reflector. A downward portion of the light being emitted from the auxiliary lamp and much of the light reflected from the lamp mounting surface is redirected by the barrel reflector to provide an illumination pattern similar to the pattern created by the normal operation of the HID lamp. The luminaire may also have a lamp cover attached to the housing enclosing the auxiliary lamp, main lamp, lamp mounting surface, and optionally a barrel reflector. This lamp cover may have prisms forming a lens that spreads the light being emitted from the auxiliary lamp, main lamp, and light reflected from the lamp mounting surface and optional barrel reflector to desired areas to be illuminated.
The present invention may best be understood by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying figures. The figures illustrate specific embodiments in which the invention may be practiced and it is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized as structural changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
The housing 11 may hold the wiring, ballasts, auxiliary light switch, battery, and any other electrical equipment that may be associated with the main lamp 14 and auxiliary lamp 13. On the bottom of housing 11 is a lamp mounting surface 12. This lamp mounting surface 12 in this embodiment is round and covers most of the lower portion of housing 11 and may serve as the lower wall of housing 11. Lamp mounting surface 12 may have an anodized reflective surface, and as shown in the embodiment in the figures, may have ridges and troughs forming facets that reflect the light from the main lamp 14 and auxiliary lamp 13 to the desired areas.
Main lamp 14 is a HID lamp that is mounted into HID lamp socket 15 which is centrally located within lamp mounting surface 12. Lamp socket 15 is attached to lamp mounting surface 12 at a recessed center of lamp mounting surface 12 so that light emitted from lamp 14 is at a specific predetermined distance from lamp mounting surface 12.
Auxiliary lamp 13, a high output compact fluorescent circular lamp, is mounted annularly around lamp socket 15 and main lamp 14. Auxiliary lamp 13 is mounted to lamp mounting surface 12 with circular lamp socket 16 and lamp mounting brackets 401. Circular lamp socket 16 is attached near the outer edge of lamp mounting surface 12 at a non-recessed portion at a specific predetermined distance from lamp mounting surface 12 and provides an electrical connection to the lamp 13 electrodes and power supply, not shown.
Main lamp 14 extends downwardly from lamp mounting surface 12 while auxiliary lamp 13 is a circular lamp that has its light emitting portion closer to lamp mounting surface 12. This configuration allows main lamp 14 to project its light downwardly and radially with the aid of lamp mounting surface 12 and optionally barrel reflector 201 without having shadowing or refraction from auxiliary lamp 13 since main lamp 14 has its light emitting portion below auxiliary lamp 13. Additionally, both auxiliary lamp 13 and main lamp 14 have light emitting portion centrally located with lamp mounting surface 12. This configuration provides symmetry to the luminaire 10 which improves the consistency in the direction and pattern of light being emitted from the luminaire 10 when the source of light is changed between HID lamp 14 and auxiliary lamp 13. The symmetry of lamp 14 and lamp 13 also improves the aesthetics of the luminaire 10.
FIG 10 is aperspective view of an embodiment of the luminaire of
The Garage Light Luminaire With Circular Compact Fluorescent Emergency Lighting Optics of the present invention is an aesthetically appealing luminaire that has both a main lamp and an auxiliary lamp where the auxiliary lamp efficiently and reliably provides uniform illumination without asymmetries or shadows to the area below. The luminaire of the present invention meets the objectives previously set forth by having a high output compact fluorescent auxiliary lamp, HID main lamp, optional barrel reflector, and optional prismatic lenses within a lamp cover symmetrically located within the luminaire. The horizontal placement of the high output compact fluorescent auxiliary lamp, HID main lamp, optional barrel reflector and lens, in relation to the reflective lamp mounting surface provides for an efficient and consistent distribution of light to the area below.
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 11/535,138, filed Sep. 26, 2006, which will issue under U.S. Pat. No. 7,374,310 on May 20, 2008, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/865,301, filed Jun. 10, 2004, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,121,684, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1498054 | Manley | Jun 1924 | A |
7121684 | Barozzini et al. | Oct 2006 | B2 |
7374310 | Barozzini et al. | May 2008 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080212317 A1 | Sep 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11535138 | Sep 2006 | US |
Child | 12119757 | US | |
Parent | 10865301 | Jun 2004 | US |
Child | 11535138 | US |