The present invention concerns an illumination device for mounting inside a balloon formed by a wall of flexible material which is at least partially transparent or translucent, the illumination device comprising a housing and a light source and a battery power source for the light source both mounted inside the housing.
The applicant's earlier patent specification WO 2008/110832 discloses a party balloon, that is to say a toy balloon, having an illumination device mounted inside, the illumination device comprising a light emitting diode (LED) powered by at least one battery. The LED lights up when a strip of insulating material is withdrawn from between the battery and the LED to complete the circuit and the balloon is thereby illuminated from its interior.
In the applicant's known party balloon the illumination device is mounted to the inside of the balloon wall by having a projection which is engaged from outside the balloon by an attachment element, such as a clip or a band, more specifically an O-ring of elastic material. Projections in the form of a partially spherical button or, more preferably, a flattened button, that is to say a pin with a neck and a flattened head, were proposed.
Although the applicant's earlier specification is primarily concerned with a balloon formed in one piece of elastomeric material, such as latex, the manner of mounting the illumination device inside the wall by means of a projection engaged from outside by a clip or band or similar is also applicable to a balloon formed from two sheets of flexible material connected around their edges, the sheeting being formed of substantially inelastic material, such as metallised plastics material or Mylar.
Other means of mounting an illumination device to the wall of a balloon are possible. For example the device may be attached by adhesive when the balloon wall material is of the substantially inelastic type. The present invention is also applicable to all such embodiments.
Typically it is intended that the illumination device should only operate once the balloon is inflated so as to light up the inflated balloon.
In the event that the balloon bursts when inflated, the illumination device which has been mounted inside may be flung out at some speed. There is a risk, albeit slight, that the device may impact a person in the vicinity, causing pain or injury.
An object of the present invention is to reduce impact force of any projectile formed by a flying or falling illumination device resulting from a bursting balloon.
The present invention provides an illumination device for mounting inside a balloon formed by a wall of flexible material which is at least partially transparent or translucent, the illumination device comprising a housing, and a light source and a battery power source for the light source mounted within the housing, characterised in that the housing is provided as an inner part of a first plastics material in which the battery power source is housed and an outer casing of a second plastics material which at least partially surrounds the inner part and provides a cover for the light source, the second plastics material being transparent and being resiliently deformable.
The resilience/deformability of the plastics material used for the outer casing reduces the energy of impact in the event that the illumination device is flung out upon bursting of the inflated balloon, thus reducing risk of damage or injury if it strikes an object or person.
In preferred embodiments of the invention the housing is provided as at least one co-moulding of the first plastics material and the second plastics material. It is preferred that the housing is provided as a one-piece unit. This reduces the number of component parts and thereby simplifies assembly of the device and reduces cost of its production.
The invention will be described further, by way of example, by reference to the accompanying drawings of a specific practical embodiment in which:
With reference to the drawings, a preferred practical embodiment of the illumination device of the invention comprises four separate parts for assembly, namely:
The housing 10 is formed with an integral projection 18 having a neck 19 and an enlarged head 17 by means of which the housing is to be mounted inside a balloon (not shown) by an elastic band (not shown) engaging from outside the balloon wall around the neck 19 of the projection 18. The head 17 is in the form of a flattened button, ie. a generally circular disc. The projection 18 is, accordingly, T-shaped in cross-section. The strip 40 of insulating material is initially located so that a portion of said strip 40 extends between the battery power source 31, 32 and one contact member 22 of the LED 20. In the fully assembled device, as shown in
As illustrated in
As best shown in
The inner part 12 provides a receptacle 11 for the batteries 31, 32, guide channels 13, 15 for reception of the LED contact elements 22, 24 and a receptacle 21 for a lower part of the LED from which the contact elements extend. The inner part 12 is moulded with an integral spring element portion 25 in the manner of a leaf spring. This integral spring element 25 is at an end of the battery receptacle 11 remote from the LED receptacle 21 and is formed in only one of the mating sections 10A of the housing. The same mating section 10A has its inner part 12 of larger size than that of the other mating section 10B, thereby forming an upstand 41 protruding above the mating edge of the respective outer casing 14 of that mating section 10A, as shown in
The inner part 12 includes strips of material 33 configured to provide part of the hinge connection 16 between the two mating parts 10A, 10B. Again, in modified embodiments the inner part 12 could provide the entirety of the hinge connection 16.
The inner part 12 is also formed with latch projections and co-acting engagement recesses on the respective mating sections 10A, 10B. There are two latch projections 26, 27 along the open side of the section 10B with a co-operating recess 28 formed in the section 10A. Additionally there is a further latch projection 29 near the LED recess 11 of the mating section 10A and a co-operating recess 39 in the section 10B.
The outer casing 14 is of transparent plastics material. A suitable plastics is a thermo plastic vulcanizate TPV. As mentioned, this plastics material is resiliently deformable. It preferably has a co-efficient of restitution in the range 0.4 to 0.6
The second plastics material of the outer casing surrounds, as an outer shell, all of the inner part, in both mating sections 10A, 10B, and at the hinge connection 16, with the sole exception of the projection 18, where the head 17 is covered only on its underside facing the main housing (or optionally not at all in a modified embodiment). This is appropriate as there is no need for full enclosure of the head 17. It saves on the more expensive TPV material and simplifies the moulding production process. Also, the application of the elastic band when the device is subsequently mounted to the balloon wall may be facilitated with a projecting head which is predominantly of the substantially rigid first plastics material making it easier to grip and hold.
The outer casing 14 completes the receptacle for the LED 20, for which it provides a transparent cover.
The overall configuration of the outer casing 14 above is shown for purposes of illustration only in
A typical thickness for the material of the outer casing 14 is in the range 0.5 mm to 1.0 mm.
Each of the mating sections 10A, 10B has a narrow slot 34 cut in from the open, mating edge, extending through both the outer casing 14 and the inner part 12 from the exterior to the battery receptacle 11 at a location between the hinge connection and the LED receptacle 21. However, in modified embodiments such a slot 34 may be provided only in the mating section 10A which provides the spring element 25, and/or in a different location.
The LED 20, as shown in
The steps in the assembly of the components to form the completed illumination device are illustrated in
First, as shown in
The LED 20 is a snug fit into the receptacle half provided by this section 10A and the contact elements 22, 24 locate in the guide channels 13, 15. In particular, the distal limb of the longer contact element 24 overlies and is spring biased by the spring element portion 25. This is shown clearly in the cross-section view of
Second, as shown in
Thirdly, as shown in
The housing 10 is then closed, as shown in
The finished assembly is shown in all of
The foregoing is illustrative and not limitative of the scope of the invention. Many variations in detail of the design are possible in other embodiments within the scope of the appended claims. In particular, the material chosen for the inner and outer parts of the housing may differ and may be any suitable plastics or other material. The detailed configuration of the various components may vary. In other embodiments the housing may not be in one piece, nor have mating sections. Also the light source may be other than an LED. In a slightly modified version of the device, the outer casing may include an additional flap, maybe of just 1 mm width, extending from the mating edge of either the housing section 10A or the housing section 10B, particularly in the region where these abut over the LED, to overlap the adjacent edge of the other housing section, so as to ensure that there is no gap and the LED at least is fully enclosed and protected.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1110437.9 | Jun 2011 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2012/051404 | 6/19/2012 | WO | 00 | 1/16/2014 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/175945 | 12/27/2012 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7147536 | Hartelius | Dec 2006 | B1 |
20150009656 | Chen | Jan 2015 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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30 15 962 | Nov 1981 | DE |
1 600 690 | Nov 2005 | EP |
0141893 | Jun 2001 | WO |
2008110832 | Sep 2008 | WO |
2011095788 | Aug 2011 | WO |
Entry |
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PCT/GB2012/051404 International Search Report and Opinion. |
PCT/GB2012/051404 International Preliminary Report on Patentability. |
GB1110437.9 Search Report. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20140168960 A1 | Jun 2014 | US |