This invention relates to task lighting, more specifically to task lighting directed towards a tabletop area.
There is a variety of conventional lighting fixtures. They are used for general, ambient, or flood lighting, and for specific, task, or spot lighting. They suspend from ceilings, affix on wall sconces, stand on tables, or attach on floor stands.
In spite of the variety, the prior art is missing a task or spot lighting device that after use could recess inside an adjacent wall or in the side of the table with the press of a button.
Three embodiments of a task lighting device are described in detail. Described embodiments are recessible into the side of a working table, inside a room wall adjacent to the table, or into a dedicated floor stand. The device comprises a lighting source that is equipped with an electric switch and with gripping means for pulling out and repositioning the lighting source, a retracting enclosure having a retracting means and a lock-and-release mechanism, and a cross-sectionally polarized gooseneck connecting the lighting source with the retracting enclosure. The polarized gooseneck carries conducting wires along its length. The retracting enclosure is disposed inside a tableside, inside an adjacent wall, or on a floor stand, or pole stand. The lighting source is disposed in a stowed location on the front side of the retracting enclosure. The user can pull out the lighting source from the recessed location to a task lighting location. The polarized gooseneck holds the lighting source fixed in place in the pulled-out location for the best lighting of the viewing spot. At the end, the user can activate the lock-and-release mechanism and the polarized gooseneck will be retracted into the retracting enclosure while automatically pulling the lighting source out of the user's way towards the recessed location.
The accompanying drawings in conjunction with the detailed description illustrate embodiments of the invention and explain its principles.
While the second and third embodiments represent the invention in its entirety, the first embodiment is a special case that represents a more restricted aspect of the invention than the general case. The general case demonstrated by the second and third embodiments uses cross-sectionally polarized goosenecks with rigidities that vary remarkably with polarities.
On the other hand, the first embodiment employs a specific gooseneck of zero polarity; the gooseneck is circularly symmetric. The first embodiment is a special case of a more general one like the circle is a special case of the ellipsis. While eccentricities of ellipses can vary in the range from zero to one, the circle is a special case of an ellipsis with eccentricity zero. Actually this analogy is very close to the actual gooseneck cross-sections which are vertically elongated, ellipsis being the first approximation of their actual forms.
The above circular cross-section reduces the horizontal displacement of the lighting source when it is retracted out from the exit point at the recessed location. The circular gooseneck can tolerate only small lateral displacements without sagging. The first embodiment can be used only in those applications where horizontal displacements from the recessed locations are not required to be very large (normally less than one foot). By employing the circular gooseneck, recessible lighting device is simpler and less expensive. The first embodiment can be mounted, as an example, on the side of the table in front of which the user is sitting. From that location the unit can be deployed to a suitable lighting position by being retracted typically upwards rather than sideways. The lighting device can be mounted on the sideboard under the edge of the tabletop. It can be installed on the front side of the table, as above mentioned, or alternatively, it can be mounted on the left or on the right side, provided it is within the hand reach of a sitting person.
Faceplate 49 is attached to retracting box 57 with four screws (screws are not shown in drawings) that are driven through four screw holes 71 on the faceplate and four matching screw holes 71A on the retracting box (
Lighting source 45 is shown pulled out in a lighting position in
The exploded view of
Retracting Box
Retracting box 57 houses winding reel 87 and lock-and-release mechanism 80 (
As gooseneck 69 is pulled out, lock-and-release mechanism 80 prevents reel 87 from rolling back, and lighting source 45 is kept indefinitely fixed in the pulled-out position until further action is taken. Rod-guiding support 95 with its rod-guiding opening 81C, and friction pad 79 are the static parts of lock-and-release mechanism 80. These parts are more visible in
As return pushbutton 55 is pressed, stopper wheels 83 move upward and release reel 87, which rewinds pulling back lighting source 45 towards its recessed position. The larger arrow in
On the other hand, lock-and-release mechanism 80 allows reel 87 to rotate freely in the reverse direction as a user pulls out lighting source 45, provided the user's pulling force overcomes the rewinding torques of spiral springs 99, which are not very large for any user. As the user pulls finger-handle 47, reel 87 rotates in the opposite direction to the one shown by the arrows forcing stopper wheels 83 to rotate also in the opposite direction and become loose. The displacement of stopper wheels 83 out of the squeeze removes their locking action allowing reel 87 to rotate freely. Reel 87 rotates around arbor 61, as internal edges of the reel slide on grooves 101 of the arbor. Gooseneck 69 unwinds, and lighting source 45 is pulled out. Using finger-handle 47, the user can pull lighting source 45 out conveniently from the recessed position to any intermediary position, stop there, and pull it again further easily.
Moving parts of lock-and-release mechanism 80 are mounted on rod 81. Axis 93 of stopper wheels 83 rotates on cylindrical holes 81A of rod 81 (
Power springs 99 have inner electric contacts 97 and outer contacts 85, shown in
Block 89 of guiding rollers (
Lighting Source
Lighting source 45 (
Finger-handle 47 is located at the bottom-center of lighting source 45. The use of centrally-positioned finger-handle 47 facilitates the pull-out of lighting source 45. It allows the convenient application of a central force with a one or two-finger and the thumb grip. Finger-handle 47 is also handy in guiding the return of the lighting source to its recessed position.
A plurality of ventilating holes 123 are cut through the inner sides, outer sides, and through the lid of lighting source 45 to allow the convectional flow of air. Free airflow takes away the heat from heat sinks 129 allowing the lighting source to remain cool on the surface.
Light diffusing lenses 48 cover and protect LED-s while focusing and diffusing light outward. The elongated shape of lenses 48, their material, and curvatures of their top and bottom surfaces, determine the sizes of light cones. Any of the three above factors can be modified to satisfy different customer preferences.
Lighting source 45 draws its power from the utility line. It does not need a battery pack. Lighting source 45 is also shock-proof and very durable. Unlike lamps that use light bulbs, this LED lighting source has no parts that can easily break. Another advantage of LED-s is their very long life expectancy. Unlike light bulbs which need to be replaced fairly often, LED-s require little or no replacement.
Circular Gooseneck—Special Case of the Vertically Polarized
Gooseneck 69 (
The circular symmetry makes gooseneck 69 equally bendable in all directions. Although bendable, the gooseneck can hold the lighting source fixed in one position provided the horizontal displacements of the lighting source from the recessed location are limited to substantially one foot, but the exact limiting value depends on other characteristics of the gooseneck: its structure, cross-sectional diameter, etc.
The internal structure of gooseneck 69 has two coils of circularly wound wire. The inner surface of the larger coil is in touch with the outer surface of the smaller coil, enclosing the latter. Segments of two enlarged gooseneck coils are shown in
Furthermore, a gooseneck with a certain degree of rigidity can hold a moderate amount of weight at one end and still preserve its given form. The combination of two coils gives the gooseneck a holding capacity. The more rigid a gooseneck is, the more weight it can hold. Its rigidity is determined by its coil diameters, clearance gaps between coils, coil winding directions, type of coil wire, wire thickness, etc. Various degrees of rigidity are obtained by manipulating the above factors. The chosen gooseneck must be bendable enough to be wound in retracting box 57, and rigid enough to hold lighting source 45 at a fixed position. The lighter in weight is the lighting source and the smaller is its accepted limit of lateral displacement from the gooseneck's exit point, the less rigid the gooseneck can be. This is advantageous in designing the recessible lighting device. The gooseneck can also be lighter in weight, smaller in thickness, and more easily woundable in a reel. The retracting box can also be smaller in size.
While the vertically polarized goosenecks for the second and third embodiment of the device have to be principally new designs based on specifications shown later in this disclosure, its special case, the circular gooseneck of the first embodiment, is already available from gooseneck-manufacturing companies, which accept customer-specified orders. The circularly goosenecks may differ in sizes, materials used, etc. The weight of the lighting-source and its horizontal displacement limit are to be specified by the ordering customer and submitted to the manufacturing company. There are many circular gooseneck manufacturers that can provide the required weight and horizontal displacement. However, the main challenge for manufacturers is the gooseneck bending. The bending limit is defined as the smallest radius of curvature that the gooseneck can safely tolerate at bending. The gooseneck bending limits vary among goosenecks of different structures and different manufacturers. The higher the quality of the gooseneck, the smaller is its bending radius of curvature, and also the smaller is gooseneck's thickness and weight.
Operation
The recessible lighting device is controlled as a conventional lighting fixture in its recessed position on the side of a table. It can be turned on and off by pressing power pushbutton 53. However, the advantageous function of the device is its tasklighting over the table.
The user can grip finger-handle 47 with one or two fingers and the thumb of one hand and pull out lighting source 45 from the side of the table. Pushbutton 53 turns the lighting on and off in any location. The user can stop pulling the part at any intermediary location and resume pulling it until a preferred lighting position over the table is reached. This feature allows the user to concentrate the light as needed by directing it toward and bringing it close to the object intended to be viewed. Turning the lighting source away from user's eyes reduces stray light. Bringing the lighting source near the object increases viewing light. As a result, the freedom of device positioning improves the quality of lighting. In addition, the ample range of controls that the recessible lighting device provides, coupled with its convenience and non-intrusiveness, makes the user feel in control while adjusting positions and directions, and has positive psychological effects.
Lighting source 45 is retractable to its recessed position after use. By pressing return pushbutton 55 the lighting source retracts gradually towards the recessed position on the side of the table. Return pushbutton 55 is kept pressed as the lighting source approaches the faceplate. The user may have to adjust the lighting source's orientation before snapping it into the recessed position. Operations of other embodiments are similar to the operation of the first one.
Uses and Advantages
The recessible task lighting device of the first embodiment can be especially useful for lighting the tabletop of small tables in small rooms or tight spaces, where it can free appreciable tabletop area. It can be used for reading, using the keyboard, or doing other work. Being positioned in the space between the eyes of the viewer and the observed object, the lighting is confined to the viewing area being nonintrusive to other people in the room (e.g. a sleeping child, people in tight watercraft spaces, etc). The tabletop area is left free for other objects as the lighting source in use is positioned above the table as opposed to on the table. Yet another advantage is that the direction of lighting is adjustable easily. Adjustment can be as simple as the back-of-the-hand push, or a light elbow push. Probably, the most valuable advantage of the device is that after use it is recessible in the side under the tabletop and out of the way with the press of a button. The recessible lighting device of the first embodiment can be installed also in the side of countertops or outdoors in the side of a barbeque grill, for example, to light the cooking area.
The second embodiment of the recessible task lighting devise is mountable on a wall adjacent to a table. It can be mounted to a front wall or to a side wall. The mounting location depends on how the table and the sitting person are positioned relative to the walls. The lighting device is mounted within the hand reach of a sitting person. The user can pull out conveniently the lighting source from the wall to a lighting position above the tabletop.
The wall mounted embodiment differs from the table mounted one. The most significant modification is the use of a new gooseneck type that has double-bendability. The new gooseneck is easily bendable on the horizontal plane. The horizontal bending makes the gooseneck woundable in the reel inside the wall and adjustable above the table. On the other hand, the gooseneck is hardly bendable on the vertical plane. The resistance to vertical bending makes the gooseneck capable of extending away from the wall without sagging while holding the lighting source above the table.
The second modification is made in the lighting source, the upper part of which is modified to accommodate a pivotal connection with the gooseneck. The third modification is made in the faceplate, which is extended to include the pushbuttons. The forth modification is made in the retracting box, which is adopted for screw attachment to a wall stud. Its mounting plate is on the side rather than the front of the retracting box. Electric cable enters the retracting enclosure directly from the wall stud.
Polarized gooseneck 209 that has a vertically elongated cross section is combined with gooseneck 69 that has circular cross section. Lighting source 207 is pivotally attached to gooseneck 69 using T-nipple 223 shown separately in the exploded view of
Retracting Box
Retracting box 203 houses winding reel 87 and lock-and-release mechanism 80 (
Lighting Source
Lighting source 207 (
Vertically Polarized Goosenecks
As above mentioned, the polarized gooseneck is characterized by the vertical dimension of its cross section that is longer than the horizontal dimension; in short, the height is larger than width. The polarized gooseneck shown in
Uses and Advantages
The recessible task lighting device of the second embodiment can be pulled out of its recessed mounting in the wall and used to light a tabletop. It can be pulled out as far as needed to find the best lighting position (about 1 to 4 feet from the wall horizontally). Also, it can be pulled out from a wall enclosure, or any other enclosure installed on a side support, to light the laptop of the user. The lighting source is hold up in the air above the tabletop or laptop, letting the area free for other objects. It can be used for reading, using the keyboard, or doing other work. Being positioned in the space between the eyes of the viewer and the observed object, the lighting is confined to the viewing area, the eyes of the viewer are protected, and the lighting source is nonintrusive to other people in the room. The position and direction of lighting are easily adjustable. After use, lighting source is recessible to the wall with the press of a button. It can be very useful in tight quarters of small rooms. The device can be mounted in side walls at a wall height that is around one foot above the cover blankets of the beds. It can be used for single or bunk beds found in cruise liners, children's summer camps, etc. Furthermore, the side-vehicle-enclosing walls are usually made thick for safety purposes. The wall thickness provides enough available space to mount the recessible lighting device inside the vehicle's walls from where it can be pulled out over the laptop of the occupant. Mounting inside the arm rest on the side of the occupant's seat is another option.
The third embodiment of the recessible task lighting device is mountable on a pole stand.
Operation
The recessible lighting device is controlled as a conventional lighting fixture in its recessed position on the pole stand. It can be turned on and off by pressing power pushbutton 53. However, the most advantageous function of the device is shown when it is pulled out over the working area.
The user grips finger-handle 47 with one or two fingers and the thumb of the right hand and pulls the lighting source out while pushing palm—handle 307 with the palm of the left hand. The device shown in the drawings is right handed. In another version, the device can be manufactured also as left handed by positioning the lighting source and the palm handle on the other side.
Pushing palm-handle 307 with the palm of the hand is necessary so that the total forces and lever arms are balanced and the pole stand does not rotate or tip over when the pulling force is applied on finger-handle 47. The rest of the device operation is the same with other embodiments.
Uses and Advantages
The recessible task lighting device of the third embodiment can be pulled out of its recessed attachment on the floor or pole stand and used to light a working area. It can be pulled out a certain distance horizontally (e.g. 2 to 4 feet) to find the best lighting position above the observed area. The combination of two goosenecks provides versatility of source adjustment and precision positioning in almost any location and direction above the working area. The lighting source is positioned in the space between the eyes of the viewer and the working area. The cones of light are directed towards the observed object, the eyes of the viewer are protected, and the quality of lighting is improved. The device can be helpful to doctors and dentists as a highly adjustable lighting source. The recessible lighting device takes less room than lighting sources mounted on conventional wall-mounted articulating arms or floor stands. Furthermore, the gooseneck combination employed by the invention allows fine, continuous, and convenient adjustments of the lighting source that are superior to those of the articulating arms of the prior art.
The third embodiment of the lighting device is also useful as an alternative to lighting devices that doctors and dentists wear on the head. The head-wearable lighting devices have obvious drawbacks. Besides the headlamp, the doctor has to wear a hair cover, and frequently a viewing magnifier or other instrument. Holding two or more objects on the head for many hours of work is inconvenient. Furthermore, the headlamp is accompanied with batteries that the doctor must hold somewhere on its body and electric wires running from the batteries to the headlamp. Other headlights use optical cables that ‘tie’ the doctor to the cart of light-generating equipment.
The recessible task lighting device of the present invention improves the quality of lighting. It can be positioned at the most suitable location for the user. Cones of it light can be moved easily in any selected direction for the best view. The eyes of the viewer exposed only to the back (dark) side the lighting source are protected from direct light, while the lighted area gets the full power of the source. The recessible task lighting device of the present invention lets the surface of the working area free for other objects. The lighting source that is hold fixed in a lighting position up above the table does not use any surface on the working area, letting it free to the user for other objects. After use, the lighting device is recessible to a location out of the way of the user. Anytime the user may need it again, it is always there. The user needs only to pull it out of the recessed location. The easy direction and position control of the lighting device allows the cones of lights to be focused only on the working area of one person. The recessible task lighting device is not intrusive to other people in the room that may not want lighting.
The gooseneck and the other main parts of the device are expected to have variations. For example:
While the second and third embodiments of the disclosure combine two pieces of polarized gooseneck with ratios 2/1 and 1/1, as an alternative, an application might have several pieces or segments of polarized goosenecks of different polarization ratios attached linearly to one another.
Still other applications may employ a polarized gooseneck with polarization ratios that, instead of changing abruptly from one segment to another, can vary gradually along the entire length from the highest value (e.g. 4/1 at the distal end at the exit of the retracting enclosure), to the lowest value (e.g. 1/1 at the proximal end of the gooseneck where the lighting source is attached).
In yet another application, the polarization ratio may be constant throughout the gooseneck's length. For example, the first embodiment of this invention employs a polarized gooseneck of constant polarization ratio 1/1 throughout the gooseneck's length. This special case is suitable only for relatively small horizontal pull-outs from the exit of the retracting box at the recessed location.
Instead of winding reel 87, a compression power spring may be employed to retract the gooseneck inside the table, wall, or pole stand without winding it in a reel. Instead of electric-conductive power springs 99 used in this disclosure, non-electric power springs in combination with sliding electric contacts can be employed. Sliding contacts are in wide use for cable-winding reels; they are shown in numerous patents, and are known to those of ordinary skill in the art.
Instead of using non-electric power spring(s) that drive the gooseneck winding as suggested above, an electric motor can be used. Instead of the lock-and-release mechanism described in the specification, other mechanical mechanisms like those used for controlling cable winding reels, safety belts, or tape measures can be employed. Some lock-and-release mechanisms are activated by pulling down the cable with a short jolt, eliminating the need for a return pushbutton to activate retracting enclosure. The above mechanisms are all well known to those of ordinary skill in the art.
Instead of the mechanical lock-and-release mechanism controlled by a mechanical pushbutton as described in the specification, an electro-mechanical equivalent that employs a ferromagnetic relay and an electric switch is a known replacement that can be used. Additional features can be added to the retracting enclosure, such as a mechanism that secures constant torque, or constant speed as the gooseneck is retracted.
Lighting source 45 can have various shapes, such as rectangular, oval, circular etc.; it can have one, two, three or more LED packages; it can be built using various materials, such as plastic, hard rubber, carbon fiber, or carbon composite, which are well known to those of ordinary skill in the art, and chosen based on properties, cost, and customer preferences.
Finger-handle 47 can be replaced with two or more indents, one on each side of the lighting source. Indents can accommodate two or more user fingers, one on each indent. The user can grip the lighting source with the thumb in one indent and the pointing finger and/or others fingers in the others to pull it down. This is suitable for lighting sources with one LED package, which are narrower than those with two or more. Other forms of finger-handle designs can be used based on the size of the lighting source and customer preferences.
LED-s 125 (
A constant pulling force of the wound gooseneck holds firmly the lighting source in its recessed location on the retracting enclosure. In addition, a variety of snap-on mechanisms, well known to those of ordinary skill in the art, can be used to reinforce the holding firmly of the lighting source on the recessed location. The above variations, and other obvious ones not mentioned, are within the spirit and teachings of this invention.
Special Technical Features
The recessible task lighting device has special technical features that provide functionality and offer convenience of operation. While there are variations that create different embodiments, all embodiments of this invention have in common one or more special technical features.
This invention has gone through a couple of inventive steps. By examining the surroundings of a sitting person in front of a work table, suitable recessed locations were found to free the working area from the lighting device after use (in the side under the top of the table, or inside a nearby wall). By moving the lighting device out of the way after a temporary use and stowing it into these nonintrusive and ready accessible locations an improved use was found that was missing in the prior art. This is also a new installation feature of the lighting device that creates free space on the tabletop. It is liked and required by most people.
The second inventive step is the making use of the single-sided bend-ability of the vertically polarized gooseneck and forcing it to wind into a horizontally mounted reel (the rotation axis of the reel is vertical; vertical polarization and horizontal orientation are of the essence in these application). The winding of a vertically polarized gooseneck into a reel is a special technical feature of this invention that the patent search conducted shows to be unforeseen, unexpected, and not suggested, or implied by any one or more patents or other documents of the prior art.
The above installation and structural features provide functionality and operational convenience that are critical for industrial applicability. The embodiments of the invention involve the same technical features as above mentioned that together form a single general inventive concept. The aforementioned installation and structural features, and others that are clearly shown in the drawings and disclosed in the description, define the contributions of this invention over the prior art.
The individual characteristics of various embodiments enhance the performance of the lighting device as shown in the specific details of the description and drawings.
Accordingly, the scope of the embodiments should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, rather than by the examples given.
This application claims priority of my provisional patent application U.S. 61/256,975 entitled Recessible Task Lighting Device filed on Oct. 31, 2009.
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