The present invention relates to shunts for lamps, particularly lamps arranged in an electrical series with other lamps to prevent all the lamps in the series from losing power when one lamp is removed from its socket.
Lamps such as those in decorative light strings are often arranged electrically in series. When thus arranged, the removal of one lamp will cause an open circuit and the entire series will lose electric power. In a set of Christmas lights on a Christmas tree, for example, it is a tedious task to find which socket is missing its bulb. Unless the empty socket is spotted by luck, one must begin at one end of the string and look at each socket in turn until all of the empty sockets are found.
There have been many attempts to produce shunts to keep power flowing to subsequent lamps in the light series when a lamp in the series burns out or is removed. Most of these involve a shunt wire, often with an oxide coating, or a solid state device, placed either in the lamp globe or in the socket such as a set of diodes that pass current to the next light when the filament burns out. Another approach involves use of a mechanical shunt in the socket to address the particular problem of loose or missing lamps. An example of such a shunt is found in U.S. Pat. No. 6,257,740, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference, and is issued to the present inventor and is commonly owned.
The device described in the '740 patent shows a pair of conductive spring terminals that are forced apart when the lamp and its base are inserted into the socket and spring together when the lamp and lamp base are withdrawn. This device works well but nonetheless there remains a need for other ways of shunting the current in a series light string.
According to its major aspects and briefly recited, the present invention is a lamp having a mechanical shunt, which lamp is useful in strings of lights where the lights are arranged in an electrical series. The present lamp includes a transparent globe with a filament and two external Dumet wires, a base to which the globe is attached and through which the Dumet wires extend, a socket for receiving the base, two conductive electrical contacts inside the socket, parallel to its long dimension, and attached to the interior of the socket wall, a conductive shunt and a shunt holder. The shunt holder is carried by the socket along with the shunt and holds the shunt in a nearly horizontal orientation except for its lateral edges. The edges of the shunt extend to opposing sides of the shunt holder and depend at a small angle in order to engage the electrical terminals on the socket wall. In addition, the shunt holder has non-conductive bar extensions extending laterally below the shunt to facilitate insertion of the shunt holder into the socket and to further isolate the shunt electrically when the lamp base is inserted into the socket.
The base of the present lamp is hollow with an opening in the bottom so that, when the base is lowered into the socket, it receives the shunt holder within its hollow interior through the opening and is thus between the holder and the socket. As the lamp base is lowered over the shunt holder, it cams the shunt's resilient lateral edges down and away from the electrical terminals thus breaking electrical contact. Conversely, when the lamp base is lifted clear of the socket, the resilient lateral edges of the shunt spring back into engagement with the electrical terminals to allow the electrical current to pass from one electrical contact to the other.
An important feature of the present invention is the resilient lateral edges of the shunt holder that can be cammed away from the electrical contacts of the socket by insertion of the base into the socket.
Another important feature of the present invention is the slightly longer base with a vertical slit formed in each side from the bottom edge of the base upward and dimensioned to receive the Dumet wires that extend from the globe down through the upper part of the base. These wires are pulled upward through the slits and are bent outward and upward through the slits on each side. The slits help to hold and center the Dumet wires so that they make good contact with the electrical terminals when the globe and its base are seated in the socket. Moreover, the dimensions of the lamp base are such that the Dumet wires remain in contact with the electrical terminals as the lamp and lamp base are removed so that there is no electrical arcing when the shunt finally engages the terminals. Avoiding arcing prevents pitting of the contact surfaces from excessive heat. The insertion of the lamp base also avoids arcing by allowing the Dumet wires to make contact with the terminals before the shunt breaks contact.
Another feature of the present invention is the use of a conductive shunt with a simple shape and holder. The present shape is simpler to manufacture than other shunts.
Still another feature of the present invention is that it allows a larger shunt, which in turn allows greater electrical current to be passed by the shunt without appreciable increase in temperature.
Yet another feature of the present invention is the plastic lamp base extension that fits snuggly (a “gas fit”) against the contact surface of the shunt lateral ends and which thereby helps to keep them free of corrosion from exposure to the atmosphere. In addition, when the lamp base is removed and inserted, it rubs these shunt contact surfaces, keeping them free of dirt, grease and corrosion. Finally, the plastic lamp base isolates the shunt ends from other metals, which helps to avoid Galvanic corrosion.
Any yet another important feature of the present invention is the bar extensions. These non-conductive extensions enable a user to insert the shunt holder into the socket and provide electrical isolation of the shunt from the electrical contacts and the wiring connected to them when the lamp base is inserted into the socket.
These and other features and their advantages will be apparent to those skilled in the art of lamp design from a careful reading of the Detailed Description of Preferred Embodiments accompanied by the following drawings.
In the drawings,
Slits 76, 78, help to position Dumet wires 48, 50 and are therefore an important feature of the present invention. Because of the way prior art lamps are made, in particular without securing Dumet wires 18, 20 in position prior on the sides of base 14 prior to insertion of base 14 into socket 16, Dumet wires 18, 20 often twist or otherwise become misaligned. Indeed, the initial failure rate of lamps approaches 25%. The time required to correct these failures caused by misalignment between the Dumet wires and the electrical terminals attached to the inside wall of the socket, is considerable. Moreover, in addition to the present invention's improvement in positioning Dumet wires 48, 50, the width of the electrical terminals the Dumet wires 48, 50 must engage can be made narrower, thus saving a small amount of metal (usually copper) for each lamp, which, collectively, given the millions of such lamps made each year, is a large savings.
When shunt holder 62 is inserted into socket 46, bar extensions 68, 69, facilitate gripping shunt holder 62 and forcing it into position, sometimes against the undercut wires 96, 98 and thereby help to electrically isolate shunt 60 from wires 96, 98, especially in the event of a high voltage spike when arcing might otherwise occur.
Shunt 60 can be larger than prior art coated filament shunts, for example, and, if so, will allow greater electrical current, well in excess of 9 amps for example, to be passed without undue heating of shunt 60.
The present lamp design prevents arcing and corrosion in the lamp socket by the timing of the breaking and making of contacts with shunt 60. Dumet wires 48, 50, do not break contact with the electrical terminals 90, 92, until lateral ends 64, 66, of shunt 60 come into contact with electrical terminals 90, 92, to avoid arcing. The movement of the lamp base 44 and its “gas-tight” fit, not only rubs dirt, dust, grease and corrosion, if any, off lateral ends 64, 66, but electrically isolates them and electrical terminals 90, 92, so that no Galvanic corrosion takes place and access to air and its moisture are restricted. A “gas-tight” fit substantially limits the free flow of gas between surfaces at atmospheric pressure; a gas-tight fit is a snug fit along all points of contact.
In use the present lamp 40 as part of a light string is easy to troubleshoot. If a lamp falls out, the string will continue to be lighted because the empty socket will pass the current. If the whole string is out, each bulb can be removed, one at a time, to see which bulb, when removed, re-lights the string. When a bulb is found that, when removed from its socket, causes the string to re-light, the removed bulb is the defective one because the removal will allow the shunt to pass current and it is the defective bulb's presence that prevents the current from being passed. There is no need to stick a screw driver, for example, in the socket to pass current, as in prior art light string trouble shooting. Furthermore, when a bulb is removed, the electrical potential in the socket is near zero rather than 120 volts and three amps as in prior art, un-shunted lamp sockets, so the present socket is much safer.
It is intended that the scope of the present invention include all modifications that incorporate its principal design features, and that the scope and limitations of the present invention are to be determined by the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents. It also should be understood, therefore, that the inventive concepts herein described are interchangeable and/or they can be used together in still other permutations of the present invention, and that other modifications and substitutions will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the foregoing description of the preferred embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the present invention.
The priority benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/873,659, filed Dec. 8, 2006, is claimed
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