The present invention relates to light strings such as those used for holiday lighting and, more particularly, to shunts in the sockets of the lights in the string.
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 needs to be replaced is tedious. If the string has 50 or more lights and the string is attached to a Christmas tree, finding the burned out or missing bulb can be very tedious.
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 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 bulb and in the socket. The shunts inside the glass bulb are typically coils of wire wrapped around the conductive elements (called Dumet wires). When the filament fails, the oxide coating on the coils of wire 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 type of shunt that is located in the socket, there are two types, namely, solid state shunts 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 bulb holder is inserted into the socket and spring back together when the bulb holder 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 bulb holder) 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 by applicant. This mechanical shunt is a nearly horizontal flat strip of metal held in place between the two electrical terminals in a light socket by a shunt holder. The ends of the shunt extend laterally and slightly downwardly to engage the electrical terminals on the socket wall. When the bulb holder, which is hollow, is inserted into the socket, the shunt holder together with the shunt is received inside the hollow bulb holder, and, as the shunt enters the bulb holder, its 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.
Note with respect to both of the mechanical shunts just described, that a special structural feature of the bulb holder portion of the lamps interacts with the shunt. While forming all the bulb holders of a given string of lights with the structural feature is not a problem, it can present a problem when the user either needs to replace a lamp having the special structural feature with an ordinary lamp or desires to replace the lamp with a lighted ornament. There are, for example, so-called pigtail ornaments, such as that described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,764,205, issued to Peloquin. This type of ornament contains a light or other electrical load (e.g., sound emitting device or motor) that is connected to a cord (or “pigtail”), the distal end of which has a plug that is inserted into a socket of a light string to power the ornament. The plug of the ornament is typically shaped much like a bulb holder. Because the connector on the end of the pigtail does not have the special structure needed to activate the mechanical shunt, these types of ornaments are operated without the shunt protection or cannot be operated because the shunt is never deactivated and the ornament is not energized. This presents a convenience issue to the user.
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, reliability, or compatibility 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 string of lights. The shunt enables the current to by-pass the filament and flow to the opposing terminal in the socket when the lamp is removed from the socket. The present shunt resides in an otherwise typical-looking lamp socket of a string of lights having plural lamps electrically interconnected in series by insulated, conductive wires. Each lamp has a bulb with a coiled filament running between a pair of wires. These wires, called Dumet wires, extend from inside the bulb to its outside. The bulb is secured to a bulb holder and the Dumet wires extend through at least one hole formed in the bulb holder. Once they emerge from the at least one hole in the bulb holder, the Dumet wires are bent back against the outside of the bulb holder.
The bulb holder fits removably into a socket that has two electrical terminals mounted opposite each other on the interior wall of the socket. When the bulb holder is inserted, the Dumet wires on the outside of the bulb holder contact the two electrical terminals on the interior wall of the socket and then pass current, when the terminals are energized, to the filament inside the bulb. These electrical terminals receive electrical current from two insulated wires entering the bottom of socket and coming from either the adjacent lamps in the light string or the 120V connectors at the ends of the light string.
Two alternative paths for the electrical current thus exist depending on whether the light and bulb holder are in the socket or not. The first path runs from the first of the two insulated wires to the first of the two electrical terminals and thence to the first of two Dumet wires and on to the filament, returning through the second of the two Dumet wires, the second of the electrical terminals and finally to the second insulated wire. When the light is removed from the socket, the first electrical terminal rather than being able to pass the current to the first Dumet wire, passes it instead through the shunt to the second electrical terminal and then to the second insulated wire.
The present socket includes a shunt housing inserted in the bottom center of the socket. The shunt housing has a well therein and a push rod is dimensioned to be received in the well. The socket also includes a V-shaped conductive spring with a central portion and two lateral ends that are shaped to reach to the electrical terminals so that it can pass current between them when the lamp is not in the socket. The conductive spring is carried in a race in the shunt housing and passes through the well. The push rod in the well rests on the conductive spring. When the lamp is inserted into the socket, its bulb holder will press down on the pushrod which, in turn, presses down on the central portion of the conductive spring pushing the central portion of the conductive spring further down into the well and causing the lateral ends of the conductive spring to be drawn away from the electrical terminals in favor of the electrical path through the filament. Thus the pushrod and shunt housing substitute for specialized structure on the bottom of the bulb holder; an ordinary, prior art bulb holder will be able to engage the pushrod and operate the shunt.
The push rod is thus an important feature of the present invention. It avoids the need for a specialized bulb holder and allows ordinary bulb holders to be used with the present socket and still deactivate the shunt when the ordinary bulb holder is being used. In addition, the push rod shunt feature allows powered ornaments, including those with a pig-tail wire extending therefrom, to be used with the present socket and still deactivate the shunt.
The interaction between the conductive spring and its shunt housing is another important feature of the present invention. The spring has a flat center so as to receive the push rod and laterally curved ends that normally reach the two electrical terminals on the interior wall of the socket. However, when the pushrod depresses the conductive spring deeper into the well of the shunt housing, the lateral ends are pulled away from the terminals, to break contact.
The interaction of the bulb holder with the push rod relative to the Dumet wires on the outsides of the bulb holder and the terminals on the inside of the socket is another important feature of the present invention. The bulb holder begins to engage the push rod after contact is made between the Dumet wires and the terminals, and releases the push rod before the Dumet wires disengage from the terminals. This relative timing assures that the next electrical path is in place before the first is terminated, thereby preventing arcing.
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 Embodiments accompanied by the following drawings.
In the drawings,
The present invention is socket with a mechanical shunt for use with a lamp in a string of lights. The shunt switches the flow of the electrical current from a first path leading between the electrical terminals in the socket to the filament in the bulb to a second path that bypasses the filament and allows the electrical current to flow from one electrical terminal to the other through the shunt. The path the electrical current takes depends on whether the lamp is present in the socket or not. The term “light string” refers to plural, spaced-apart lights connected in series by insulated electrical wiring. A light string will have an electrical plug at one end and a receptacle at the other end with the plural lights in an electrical series therebetween. The term “light” refers to a lamp and the socket and insulated wiring to which it is connected. The term “lamp” refers to the combination of a bulb with Dumet wires in a bulb holder.
Within socket 16 is a shunt housing 36 centered between electrical terminals 30 and 32. Shunt housing 36 is generally T-shaped with the vertical portion of the T inserted into the bottom of socket 16 to help keep first and opposing second insulated wires 18 and 20 apart. The top of the T-shaped shunt housing 36 insulates the conductive spring 40 from the ends of insulated wires 18 and 20 and provides a well 42 for receiving conductive spring 40. Conductive spring 40 is symmetric left to right and has a flat central portion 44 and first and opposing second curved lateral ends 48 and 50. First and opposing second lateral ends 48 and 50 are dimensioned to extend to electrical terminals 30 and 32 when conductive spring 40 is placed in well 42 but no appreciable force is applied to it. The central portion 44 of conductive spring 40, without a force (a force much more than its own weight), does not rest on the bottom of well 42 but rather somewhat above it.
In addition to conductive spring 40, shunt housing 36 holds a pushrod 54 that rests on the flat central portion 44 of conductive spring 40. Even with pushrod 54 on conductive spring 40, the first and second curved lateral ends 48 and 50, engage first and second terminals 30 and 32. Pushrod 54 has a flat bottom 56 that is dimensioned to rest on central portion 44 of conductor spring 40 and a flat top 58 that is dimensioned to engage the bottom of bulb holder 14. As shown in
Another feature of the present invention is that the shunt is activated and deactivated without arcing. Referring again to
Importantly, bulb holder 14 need not be a specially formed bulb holder, that is, it need not have any special physical features that are designed to engage pushrod 54. Accordingly, a standard replacement bulb will operate the present conductive spring 40 as a shunt. In addition, a pigtail adaptor with a plug 62 from an ornament 64 with an electrical load 72, as seen in
Although the load 72 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 various embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the present invention.
The priority benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/058,249 filed Jun. 3, 2008, which is incorporated herein by reference, is claimed.
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