The present invention relates to light strings such as are used for holiday lighting.
Strings of lights are typically wired electrically in series. Consequently, when one light burns out or is removed, all the lights in the string go out. Determining which light has burned out or finding a missing bulb takes time when the string has 50 or more lights. If the string of lights is attached to a Christmas tree, locating the “bad” bulb or missing bulb is an especially tedious task.
For a number of years, this problem has been solved, or at least avoided, by the use of shunts that allow current to pass from one of the terminals in the socket of the defective lamp to the other terminal. A shunt passes the current through the lamp and allows the remaining lamps to continue to operate. Prior art shunts are sometimes placed in the glass globe of a lamp and sometimes in its socket. The shunts inside the glass globe are typically coils of wire around the conductive elements. When the filament fails, the oxide coating on the wires that theretofore prevented direct conduction of electricity is burned off and the coil welds to the elements thereby passing current.
The shunts in the socket are also of two types, solid state and mechanical. Among the mechanical, for example, there is a set of spring contacts that are the subject of U.S. Pat. No. 6,257,740. These contacts are pushed apart when the lamp base is inserted into the socket. This type is strictly for use when the bulb (and its base) is removed. This type works well and has enjoyed commercial success.
There are a huge number of light strings manufactured and sold each year throughout the world. The number is so large that even small changes that, for example, reduce material requirements or improve safety, may make a huge difference in costs of manufacture. Accordingly, there remains a need for a better mechanical shunt for use in sockets of light strings.
According to its major aspects and briefly recited, the present invention is a mechanical shunt for use in a socket of a string of lights. The shunt resides in an otherwise typical lamp of a string of lights having plural lamps electrically interconnected in series by conductive wires. Each lamp has a globe with a coiled filament running between a pair of wire conductors called Dumet wires. The Dumet wires extend outside the globe through holes formed in a base for the globe and are bent back against the outsides of the base. The base is inserted into a socket carrying two opposing electrical terminals affixed to its interior walls. These terminals are each attached to one of two insulated wires entering the bottom of socket from the next lamps in the series. As the base is inserted, the Dumet wires come into contact with the terminals and, if the insulated wires the terminals are attached to are energized, the filament incandesces.
The present shunt is a resilient spring that is held in a horizontal position by a shaped holder located inside a socket of a lamp of a light string. The shunt is positioned between the two conducting terminals. When the base is inserted, a prong on the bottom of the base presses the center of the spring shunt down against a V-shaped interior surface of the holder so that shunt itself takes on the V-shape with its lateral ends pivoted up and away from engagement with the two terminals on either side of the shunt in the socket. When the base is removed, the spring shunt resiliently returns to its original, horizontal, flat configuration, with its lateral ends back in engagement with the terminals. The spring shunt may be a flat leaf spring or a finely coiled wire.
An important advantage of the present invention is that it saves small amounts of material and is more easily manufactured than prior art mechanical shunts. Given the huge volumes of lamps manufactured every year, individual small savings collectively become a significant improvement.
These and other features and their advantages will be apparent to those skilled in the art of light string electrical design from a careful reading of the Detailed Description of Preferred Embodiments accompanied by the following drawings.
In the drawings,
The present invention is a lamp with a mechanical shunt for use as part of a string of lights. The term light string refers to plural, spaced-apart lamps interconnected in an electrical series by insulated electrical wiring. The term lamp refers to the combination of a bulb in a base inserted into a socket. The bulb is a partially-evacuated, transparent globe with a coiled filament and a pair of Dumet wires inside but with the Dumet wires extending from the interior to the exterior of the transparent globe. The base holds the bulb and also has two holes formed therein through which the Dumet wires pass and, once through, are folded back against the outsides of the base.
The socket includes a first and an opposing second electrical terminal connected by insulated wires entering the bottom of the socket from the adjacent lamps of the lamp set. When the base is inserted into the socket and the insulated wires are energized, current passes to the filament via the terminals on the walls of the socket and through the Dumet wires.
As base 44 continues to a fully seated position, as shown in
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 application Ser. No. 60/971,374, filed Sep. 11, 2007, is claimed.
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