These are presented only by way of indication and are in no way limiting of the invention. The figures show:
The various elements appearing in several figures will have kept the same reference, unless otherwise indicated.
In general terms, it is signified hereinafter that two screens 100 have the same form if they are identical with regard to the dimensions and relative positionings of the four faces that have just been mentioned. The measurement of the distance between the bottom face and the top face gives the thickness of the screen 100.
In the example shown, the top face and the bottom face are planar and parallel, thus conferring on the screen the form of a plate. They could also be regulated surfaces, that is to say generated by a straight line that moves according to a predetermined law. They can also be planar and not be parallel to each other and therefore form an angle with each other. The embodiment with planar surfaces, or regulated according to the same law, is a particularly advantageous characteristic during an operation of stacking the screens 100, a stacking that will be detailed below.
The entry face 101 and the exit face 102 are curved, their radius of curvature being able to be infinite, the entry 101 and exit 102 faces then having a straight line as a generatrix. In the present description the term “curve” means lines, rows or surfaces whose radius may tend towards infinity, the lines or rows then being straight lines and the surfaces planes. The curves defined by the sections of these entry and exit faces in a longitudinal or transverse plane are not necessarily parallel. Their form is above all determined by the function of the device that they equip, and by the position of the device on the vehicle in question.
In the example depicted, a plurality of optical patterns 104 are present at the screen 100. In this example, each optical pattern 104 consists of a through cavity that creates a hole in the thickness of the screen 100, thus constituting reflectors. The optical patterns are here disposed on a first curved row 105 and on a second curved row 106, parallel to the entry face 101, the first curved row 105 being the row closest to the entry face. The first curved row 106 consists of optical patterns of the convergent type 107, while the second curved row 106 consists of divergent or convergent optical patterns 108.
The light beams reach the entry face 101′ in the form of a parallel beam, all these light signals being parallel to one another; the light signals reach the entry face 101 while being perpendicular to the latter; the light signals reaching the entry face 101 while being perpendicular to the latter constitute a light plane. The light signals are here oriented along an axis OX, an axis OZ directed upwards and perpendicular to the top face 103 coming to supplement the other two axes that have just been mentioned in order to form an orthogonal reference frame (OX, OY, OZ). In practice, corresponding to the normal conditions of positioning of screens in the device according to the invention, the axis OZ is vertical.
A parallel beam according to various technical solutions, in particular by using a lamp associated with a recuperating cap, or a lamp associated with a Fresnel screen or a lamp associated with a reflector, or a light-emitting diode associated with a Fresnel system, directly produced on the entry face 101 or 101′ of the optical system 100 or 100′.
This Fresnel system can consist of a conventional Fresnel lens, preferably of revolution about the emission axis of the light source used. It can also consist of a cylindrical Fresnel lens, preferably linear in order to simplify manufacture thereof, and in particular removal from the mould. In the latter case, the beam is collimated solely in the plane parallel to the screen constituting the optical system 100 or 100′.
Starting from the entry face 101′ and moving towards the exit face 102′, the screen 100′ comprises a first series of convergent optical patterns 107 disposed on a first curve 201, then a second series of convergent optical patterns 107 disposed on a second curve 202, and then a third series of divergent optical patterns 108 disposed on a third curve 203, the three curves being parallel to one another and parallel to the entry face 101′. The arrangement of the optical patterns is such that all the light rays 200 are intercepted, each light ray being intercepted only once, that is to say by a single optical pattern. Such an arrangement is an example that makes it possible to give a multisource appearance to the lighting or signalling devices in which the screen 100′ is disposed, the actual source being masked by virtual secondary light sources, corresponding to convergence points 204 present in the body of the screen 100′:
In general terms, the presence of optical patterns 104 contained in the material of the screens according to the invention on the one hand ensures the return of some of the light, for example sunlight, entering the lighting or signalling device through the exit face of the screen in question, thus giving a flashing appearance to the device in question, even when the light source that it includes is not switched on, and secondly also masks the actual sources at the origin of the beams, thus improving the homogeneity of the illuminated system.
In a close example of a stack 300′, visible in
As shown in
In certain embodiments, it is chosen not to superimpose the optical patterns on the vertical axis, corresponding to the axis OZ. The operation of stacking the various screens can be carried out by any appropriate technique. In particular, it is possible to dispose a specific ink between two successive screens to be stacked, advantageously at areas with no optical patterns. This ink converts the light energy emitted by the laser into thermal energy, which enables one or more screens constituting the stack to be heated locally and subsequently to ensure connection by thermofusion of the thermal plastic material. It is also possible to provide this connection via adapted mechanical systems.
The various embodiments of the invention that have just been detailed by way of example thus make it possible to achieve the various objectives sought, namely an appearance of depth even in a switched-off position, the concealment of the light source in the switched-off or on position, a “block of switched-on material” appearance on the switched-on position and an impression of the appearance of secondary light source masking the true origin of the light.
While the form of apparatus herein described constitutes a preferred embodiment of this invention, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to this precise form of apparatus, and that change may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention which is defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
06 03 640 | Apr 2006 | FR | national |