This application is related to commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 7,253,556, issued Aug. 7, 2007.
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 in the string burns out or is removed, all the lights in the string go out. Determining which light has burned out is tedious. Although finding a missing bulb in a string of lights is a little easier, even if the string has 50 lights, it can still be quite a task when the string of lights is attached to a Christmas tree.
For a number of years, this problem has been solved, or at least avoided, by the use of shunts that allow current to pass directly between the terminals of the defective lamp, bypassing the missing or defective bulb filament. Passing the electrical current from one lamp to the next regardless of the condition of the bulb in any individual lamp allows the remaining lamps to continue to operate.
Shunts are typically found in two places in prior art lamps, namely, in the glass globe and in the socket. The shunts inside the glass globe are typically coils of wire wrapped around the conductive elements (called Dumet wires). When the filament fails, the oxide coating on the wires that theretofore prevented direct conduction of electricity is burned off and the coil welds itself to the Dumet wires, thereby providing a new electrically conductive path for passing the electrical current.
Of the two types of shunts that are located in the socket, there are also two types, namely, solid state and mechanical shunts. Among the mechanical shunts, for example, there is a set of spring contact terminals that is the subject of U.S. Pat. No. 6,257,740. These spring contacts are pushed apart when the lamp base is inserted into the socket and spring back together when the base is removed, thereby allowing the current to pass from one terminal to the other directly. This type is strictly for use when the bulb (and its base) is removed and does not address the issue of a burned out bulb. This type of shunt works well and has enjoyed commercial success.
Another mechanical shunt is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,253,556, which is invented by the present inventor and is commonly owned. This mechanical shunt is a generally horizontal flat strip of metal held in place between the two electrical terminals in a light socket by a shunt holder. The lateral ends of the shunt extend laterally to engage the electrical terminals on the socket wall. When the lamp base, which is hollow, is inserted into the socket, the shunt holder with its shunt is received inside the hollow base, and, as the shunt enters the base, its lateral ends are bent down and away from the electrical terminals, thereby allowing electrical current to pass to and through the Dumet wires and thence to the filament in the bulb rather than directly through the shunt.
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, simplify manufacturing, or improve safety or reliability, make a huge difference in the costs to manufacture. Accordingly, there remains a need for a better mechanical shunt for use in the sockets of the lamps 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 lamp in an electrical series of lights such as a holiday light string. A string of lights has plural lamps interconnected in an electrical series by conductive insulated wires. Each lamp includes a globe that houses a pair of Dumet wires with a filament running between them. The Dumet wires extend from the inside the globe outside it and into holes formed in a base. The base is insertable into a socket which has two electrical terminals affixed to the interior surface of its wall, each terminal being to one of the electrically conducting wire entering the bottom of the socket from the next lamps in the string. The base has two downwardly depending flanges with slits formed therein. The Dumet wires emerge from the holes in the base between the depending flanges and are then passed through the slits to the outside of the base. Once through the slits, the Dumet wires are folded up against the outside of the base where, when the base is inserted into the socket, they will engage the electrical teminals on the socket wall.
The present shunt is a T-shaped spring, preferably a single piece of resilient metal folded in half and then folded at roughly a 90° angle near each end to form a T. Then its lateral ends are curved down and slightly inward toward the center fold to define curved portions. The folded center of the shunt spring is held in position in a slot in a shunt holder and the holder itself is positioned in the bottom of the socket so that the curved portions of the lateral ends engage the electrical terminals on the socket wall. When the base is inserted into the socket, the depending flanges of the base cam the curved lateral ends of the spring inward, away from the terminals so that the conductive path runs through the Dumet wires and the filament in the globe rather than through the shunt. When the base is removed, the curved lateral ends of the spring shunt resiliently spring apart and back into engagement with the terminals.
An important advantage of the present invention is that it saves small amounts of material in the base and the shunt and its holder are more easily manufactured and assembled than prior art mechanical shunts. Given the huge volumes of lamps manufactured every year, individual small savings constitute collectively a significant improvement.
An important feature of the present invention is the shape of the shunt. The center fold makes it easier to install into the slot of the shunt holder and that slot does not have to meet fine tolerances. The depending flanges of the base more easily cam the curved portions of the lateral ends more easily and more repeatably.
Still another feature of the present invention is the depending flanges of the base. These opposing flanges require less material than the hollow, box-like shape of the base disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,523,556. Furthermore, they perform the same three functions, namely, moving the curved lateral ends of the shunt away from the electrical terminals, isolating the shunt electrically from the terminals, and centering the Dumet wires on the terminals.
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 in a socket of a lamp that is part of a string of lights in which the lights of the string are arranged electrically in series. It is also a method for making a mechanical shunt for a lamp that is part of a light string.
The term light string refers to plural spaced-apart lamps interconnected in an electrical series by electrical wiring. The term lamp refers to the whole of a bulb in a base inserted into a socket. The bulb is a partially evacuated transparent globe with electrically conducting Dumet wires extending from inside of it to its exterior and with a coiled wire filament between the ends of the Dumet wires inside the globe. The base holds the bulb and brings them into engagement with the electrical terminals mounted to the interior walls inside the socket when the base is in the socket.
The present invention is an improvement to prior art mechanical shunts and is in particular and improvement to that described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,253,556, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Referring now to
As illustrated in
As base 44 is progressively inserted deeper into socket 46 (compare
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.
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