The invention relates to an LED lamp (LED—light emitting diode) in accordance with the preamble of claim 1 and also a mounting for a lamp and a method for operating an LED lamp.
LED lamps have the major economic advantage that in comparison with conventional filament lamps or also with compact fluorescent lamps they only require a fraction of the electrical energy in order to generate light having the same brightness as the conventional incandescent lamps. However, the emission characteristic of the LEDs is restricted, as a result of the technical design. In other words, the light emitted by LED lamps is relatively strongly focused. In this situation, LED lamps typically emit their light in conical light beams. The light thus has an intensity sufficient for an illumination purpose only in a relatively small solid angle. Another designation for lamps of this type is also spot light. In order to increase this emission angle, there are also LED lamps which achieve an emission angle of up to 100° by means of lens units.
In contrast to LED lamps, conventional filament lamps or compact fluorescent lamps have an almost omnidirectional emission characteristic in respect of the light, in other words they emit their light with the same intensity in almost every spatial direction. Many light fittings which are used today in domestic households, ceiling light fittings or table lamps for example, are designed for filament lamps or compact fluorescent lamps, in other words for lamps having an omnidirectional emission characteristic. For the purpose of energy saving, such light fittings can however also be equipped with an LED lamp. In the applicant's company, the corresponding product is known as an LED RETROFIT lamp. Such LED lamps which are used in light fittings for lamps having an omnidirectional emission characteristic have the disadvantage that a smaller spatial area is then illuminated than was previously possible with the same light fitting and a conventional filament lamp or compact fluorescent lamp. In this situation, the light beam of the LED lamp is emitted in particular in a direction predetermined by the mounting of the light fitting. With regard to ceiling light fittings, this is often vertically downwards, which means that the walls of a room are inadequately illuminated.
The object of the present invention is to provide facilities to allow an LED lamp to be used in a more flexible manner in a light fitting for lamps having an omnidirectional emission characteristic.
This object is achieved by a lamp according to claim 1. The object is also achieved by a lamp according to claim 4. The object is furthermore achieved according to the invention by a mounting according to claim 7. Together, these lamps and the mounting enable a method according to claim 8 to be carried out for operating a lamp. Advantageous developments of the invention are set down in the subclaims.
A first solution for the object of the invention given by the invention augments a lamp in accordance with the preamble of claim 1 in such a manner that with regard to the lamp according to the invention, LED illumination means of the lamp are connected to a base of the lamp by way of a mechanism which in a first state couples the illumination means to the base such as to be rotatable around an axis and in a second state couples the illumination means to the base in a rotatably fixed manner. Furthermore, according to the invention the illumination means have an intensity distribution for the emitted light which is asymmetric with respect to the axis around which the illumination means can be rotated.
The intensity distribution of illumination means can be ascertained for example by using a light sensor to sense the intensity of the light emitted by the illumination means at a constant distance from the lamp for different spatial directions. In this situation, all those spatial directions for which the intensity sensed exceeds a predetermined value are jointly referred to as the so-called illumination cone of the lamp. Contrary to the designation “cone”, an illumination cone in the present instance is not however necessarily understood to be a spatial segment which is rotationally symmetrical.
According to the invention, the illumination means of the lamp can be rotated around an axis, whereby an illumination cone produced by the illumination means is formed asymmetrically with respect to this axis or a symmetrical illumination cone is orientated obliquely to the axis. If the illumination means are now rotated around the axis, then the illumination cone of the lamp can thereby be pivoted in a space and directed onto objects which are preferably to be illuminated. By means of the invention it is therefore possible to orientate the illumination cone of the LED lamp even in the case of such light fittings as cannot be pivoted because for example they are designed for omnidirectionally emitting lamps.
A further advantage results in that additional space is available in the interior of the mechanism providing the rotation facility, in which space are accommodated electronic components of the lamp.
The mechanism for rotating the illumination means can preferably be transferred from the first state in which it connects the illumination means to the base in rotatable fashion into the second state by pushing or pulling a part of the mechanism. It is thereby also possible to mount a pivotable illumination means on a base having a screw thread. In order to screw the base into a mounting provided for the purpose the mechanism is brought into the second state such that the illumination means are connected to the base in a rotatably fixed manner. The lamp can then be gripped by the mechanism or by the illumination means and the base can be screwed into the mounting.
If the mechanism is subsequently brought into the first state, the illumination means can be rotated with respect to the screwed-in base. The illumination means can therefore be rotated and the illumination cone of the lamp can thus be orientated in a space without the base being unscrewed from the mounting again.
Provision can also be made such that the mechanism cannot be turned if no external force is exerted by a user and only by pushing or pulling is it made possible to turn the illumination means independently of the base.
A lamp according to the invention, as it has just been described, is thus preferably to be operated with the following steps:
In this situation, the lamp is particularly advantageously designed if it is equipped with a base in accordance with the E24 or E26 or E27 or E14 or GU10 or GU5.5 standard. Conventional light fittings are normally equipped with a mounting for one of these sockets. A lamp according to the invention having a base in accordance with one of the aforementioned standards can thus be used in light fittings without there being a need to structurally modify the light fittings.
A further solution given by the invention results for lamps in accordance with the preamble of claim 4. It thus relates to a lamp, the base of which has a thread, whereby a first contact element for making the electrical connection between an illumination means and a contact point on a mounting is arranged on the base in a region other than the thread. In a development according to the invention of such a lamp, the first contact element is spring-mounted on the base or is itself a spring. Moreover, light emitted by the illumination means has an intensity distribution which is asymmetric with respect to an axis of the thread. This embodiment of the lamp according to the invention can be designed in such a manner that it can be screwed into mountings for conventional filament lamps. With regard to the lamp according to the invention, the light beam emitted by the LED lamp can in this situation be orientated in a simple manner. Because the first contact element is spring-mounted on the base or is itself a spring, the lamp can be rotated back and forth in its mounting without any interruption occurring in this situation in the contact with a contact point on the mounting. By contrast, such an interruption would happen in the case of a lamp according to the prior art. In other words, with regard to this lamp according to the invention, the thread of the mounting is used at the same time as a screw thread for orientating the illumination cone of the lamp.
The spring stroke by which a touching point of the first contact element with the contact point can be moved in relation to the base is preferably chosen to be of such a length that the base can be rotated once completely in a mounting, that is to say by 360°, without the electrical contact between the first contact element and the contact point on the mounting being interrupted in this situation.
With regard to the lamp according to the invention having the spring-mounted contact elements, the intensity distribution of the emitted light is not rotationally symmetrical with respect to the axis of the thread because otherwise no change in the emission characteristic with respect to the mounting of the light fitting would be achievable by means of rotating the lamp in the mounting.
In an advantageous manner, with regard to the lamp according to the invention just described, arranged on the thread itself is a second contact element which is spring-mounted on the base or is itself a spring. Such a further springy contact element can for example be a springy or flexible wire or also a sliding contact. This second springy contact element exerts a force at right angles to the axis of the thread on the base when the latter is screwed into a mounting. This means that the base is then also seated tightly in the mounting if the lamp is screwed a little way out of the mounting in order to pivot the illumination cone.
The lamp according to the invention having a screw thread is preferably equipped with a base in accordance with the E24 or E26 or E27 or E14 standard. The lamp according to the invention can thus be used in conventional light fittings.
A further aspect of the invention relates to a mounting for a lamp having pin contacts. With regard to this mounting, a first body is used for coupling the lamp with the mounting by means of the pin contacts. A second body of the mounting is used for securing the mounting on a light fitting. The first body is rotatably connected to the second body. By means of such a mounting it is therefore possible to insert a lamp having pin contacts into the mounting and subsequently by rotating the first body with respect to the second body to set an emission characteristic relating to the emitted light, in other words an orientation of the illumination cone of the lamp in the space.
Such a mounting according to the invention has the advantage that it can be installed in commercially available light fittings and such light fittings thus enable the flexible usage of LED lamps in a cost-effective manner.
All the described lamps according to the invention are based on the knowledge that by providing a capability for rotating at least one part of a lamp in a conventional light fitting the advantage can be achieved that LED lamps having a focused emission characteristic also make possible a flexible illumination of an area surrounding the light fitting.
A method having the following steps for operating a lamp can thus be carried out with regard to all embodiments of devices:
As a part of the lamp is capable of rotation relative to a part of the mounting, a light beam emitted by the lamp can be pivoted without any structural modification of the light fitting into which the mounting is installed. Adjusting the directional characteristic with respect to the emitted light here means pivoting the illumination cone of the lamp in the space or, in other words, adjusting the emission characteristic of the light fitting. In this situation, this directional characteristic or emission characteristic is related to the light fitting. It thus results from the directional characteristic of the lamp itself and the spatial orientation of the lamp in the space, as determined by the orientation of the mounting.
The invention will be described in detail in the following with reference to exemplary embodiments. In the drawings:
The lamp 10 shown in
The reflector 14 with the LEDs arranged therein is arranged on a mechanism 20 which can be brought into a first position A and a second position B with respect to the base 12. In this situation, a spring mechanism in the interior of the base 12 holds the mechanism 20 in the position A if no further force is exerted on the reflector 14 or the mechanism 20 by a user. When the mechanism 20 is in the position A, the mechanism 20 with the reflector 14 arranged thereon and the LEDs arranged therein can be rotated around an axis 22 in relation to the base 12. Therefore when the base 12 is screwed into a mounting of a light fitting, the reflector 14 can be rotated around the axis 22 without the base 12 becoming unscrewed from the mounting in the process. Thus, by rotating the reflector 14 around the axis 22 a user can pivot the direction 18 in which the LEDs of the lamp 10 emit with the greatest intensity, namely in relation to a light fitting into which the lamp 10 is screwed. In other words, the lamp 10 has an illumination cone which can be orientated in a space by rotating the reflector 14 around the axis 22. This is made possible by the fact that the direction 18 encloses an angle α with the axis 22, whereby the angle α is not equal to 0°. The direction vectors of all the possible directions 18 in this situation thus lie on a lateral surface of an imaginary cone, the axis of which is identical to the axis of rotation 22 and the beam angle of which is twice the angle α.
If a user pushes with a force F on the reflector 14, the spring mechanism in the interior of the base 12 relaxes and the reflector 14 and the mechanism 20 move along an axis which is indicated by the double arrow 24 into a position B. In
In position B, teeth in the interior of the mechanism 20 engage in corresponding teeth in the interior of the base 12. By this means, a rotational movement of the mechanism 20 and the reflector 14 around the axis of rotation 22 is blocked. If a user now turns the reflector 14 the base 12 is also turned, which means that the lamp 10 can be screwed out from a mounting or screwed into a mounting.
The lamp 26 shown in
In the reflector 32, LEDs all point in a preferred direction 38. The LEDs are not illustrated in
In
In accordance with the E24 standard, the base 50 has at its foot a contact element 58 which is electrically insulated from the thread 56 by means of an insulator 60. In contrast to a base from the prior art, with regard to the base 50 however the contact element 58 is spring-mounted on the base, such that the contact element 58 can be pushed along a spring stroke 62 into the base 50. A user can thereby screw the lamp 46 with the base 50 into a corresponding mounting and when the lamp 46 is almost completely screwed in rotate it back and forth without the voltage supply to the lamp 46 being interrupted in the process. That is to say, if the base 50 is screwed in and out progressively in the mounting on account of the turning back and forth, the contact element 58 compensates for a change in position of the base 50 inside the mounting and maintains an electrical contact with a contact point on the mounting. The overall length 64 of the spring stroke 62 of the contact element 58 in this situation is chosen as a function of a helix angle of the thread 56 such that it is possible, if base 50 has at one time been screwed completely into a mounting, to screw it one full revolution out of the mounting again before the contact element 58 loses contact with the corresponding contact point on the mounting.
Even if the base 50 is screwed one full revolution out of the mounting, it is nevertheless securely seated in the mounting. This is ensured by a springy wire 66 which is arranged in a recess in the base 50 in the region of the thread 56. The wire 66 can execute a springy movement in directions which are indicated by the double arrow 68. If the lamp 46 is screwed into a mounting, the springy wire 66 exerts a force on the base at right angles to the axis 54 of the thread. In this situation, the wire 66 can be pushed into the recess to such an extent that the base 50 can be screwed into and out of a corresponding thread of a mounting.
With the mounting 70 shown in
The lamp 72 shown in
The examples illustrate how the invention makes it possible to use LED lamps in conventional light fittings and in this situation to flexibly adjust the emission characteristic of the arrangement comprising light fitting and lamp.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2009 006 420.6 | Jan 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2010/050270 | 1/12/2010 | WO | 00 | 7/28/2011 |