Claims
- 1. A resistor, which comprises:
- (a) a substrate adapted to have resistive films applied thereto,
- said substrate having a front side and a back side, said substrate being so constructed and shaped that it will fracture substantially instantaneously in response to thermal shock when a high voltage is applied to the below-stated resistive films on said front and back sides of said substrate,
- (b) a resistive film applied to said front side of said substrate,
- (c) a resistive film applied to said back side of said substrate, and
- (d) termination means connected to said films to connect the same into an electrical circuit,
- said termination means including electrically conductive termination traces on opposed end regions of said front side of said substrate and on opposed end regions of said back side of said substrate,
- said traces being respectively spaced from outer end portions of said resistive films and being adapted to break substantially instantaneously when said end regions of said substrate fracture in response to a high voltage applied to said films,
- said resistive films, substrate, and termination means being such that said thermal shock fracture breaks the circuit through both of said resistive films and thus through said resistor.
- 2. The invention as claimed in claim 1, in which said substrate is a ceramic that is continuous and is resistant to mechanical breakage.
- 3. The invention as claimed in claim 2, in which said substrate is sufficiently thin to fracture in response to a high-voltage overload applied to said resistive films, and is sufficiently thick to withstand substantial mechanical stresses.
- 4. The invention as claimed in claim 3, in which said substrate has a thickness on the order of 0.040 inch.
- 5. The invention as claimed in claim 3, in which said termination means further comprises electrically conductive lower traces applied to both said front side and said back side of said substrate and connected to said resistive films thereon, and also comprises pins mounted on said substrate and soldered to said lower traces for connection to a circuit board.
- 6. The invention as claimed in claim 1, in which said resistive films are shaped substantially correspondingly to each other, and are substantially registered with each other.
- 7. The invention as claimed in claim 1, in which said resistive film on said front side of said substrate is connected in parallel relation with said resistive film on said back side of said substrate.
- 8. The invention as claimed in claim 5, in which said resistor is mounted on a circuit board, said pins being inserted in holes in said board, and in which said circuit board has heatsink elements thereon at said pins.
- 9. The invention as claimed in claim 8, in which said pins are soldered to said substrate by a relatively high melting-point solder, and are soldered to said board by a relatively low melting-point solder.
- 10. The invention as claimed in claim 3, in which glass coatings ar e provided over said films and traces.
- 11. The invention as claimed in claim 1, in which said high voltage is 600 volts.
- 12. A film-type resistor with built-in circuit breaking capability in response to sudden overload, which comprises:
- (a) a flat ceramic substrate,
- (b) resistive film means applied on said substrate,
- (c) termination traces applied on said substrate and connected to said film means,
- (d) termination pins mounted on said substrate and connected to said traces,
- said resistive film means, said substrate, and said traces being constructed and oriented so that said substrate and thus said traces undergo thermal shock fracture when a high-voltage overload is suddenly applied to said pins, thereby breaking said traces and thus the circuit through said resistive film means, and
- (e) heat-responsive circuit breaker means provided on said substrate in circuit with said resistive film means,
- said circuit breaker means being adapted to melt and break the circuit through said resistive film means in response to sustained excessive flow of current through said resistive film means, as distinguished from application of a high-voltage overload thereto.
- 13. The invention as claimed in claim 12, in which said substrate is elongate, and in which said termination traces include a trace portion disposed between an end of said resistive film means and an end of said substrate, the relationship being such that a corner portion of said substrate, and said trace portion, fracture as the result of said high-voltage overload, and in which said heat-responsive circuit breaker means is mounted on a portion of said substrate not at said corner portion thereof.
- 14. The invention as claimed in claim 12, in which said resistor is mounted on a circuit board, said termination pins being inserted in holes in said board, and in which said circuit board has heatsink elements thereon at said pins.
- 15. The invention as claimed in claim 14, in which said pins are soldered to said board by a relatively low melting-point solder, in which said heat-responsive circuit breaker means includes a relatively high melting-point solder, and in which said pins and heatsink elements are such that said relatively high melting-pint solder melts before said relatively low melting-point solder melts.
- 16. The invention as claimed in claim 12, in which said high-voltage overload is 600 volts, and in which said relationships are such that said fracture occurs substantially instantaneously.
- 17. The invention as claimed in claim 12, in which glass film is provided over said film means and said traces.
- 18. Telephone circuit balancing resistors, comprising:
- (a) an elongate flat rectangular substrate having a front surface and a back surface,
- (b) resistive films applied to said front surface and back surface of each half of said substrate,
- the resistive films on each surface of said substrate being separated from each other at a gap region, said front and back resistive films on each side of said gap regions forming one of two resistors,
- said resistor on each side of said gap regions being balanced in value relative to said resistor on the other side of said gap regions,
- (c) four pins mounted along the lower edge of said substrate, there being two pins for the resistive films on the front surface and back surface of said substrate at opposite sides of said gap regions, and
- (d) termination traces applied to said substrate and connected between said pins and said films,
- said termination traces and the two pins on one side of said gap regions connecting in parallel with each other said films on said front surface and back surface of said substrate on said one side of said gap regions,
- said termination traces and the two pins on the other side of said gap regions connecting in parallel with each other said films on said front surface and back surface of said substrate on said other side of said gap regions, said substrate, said resistive films and said termination traces being such that application of a high-voltage overload to said pins causes sudden thermal shock fracture of said substrate and thus said traces, to substantially simultaneously break the circuit through both the front and back resistive films of at least one of said resistors,
- characterized in that said termination traces include end traces regions extending along each end portion of said substrate in spaced relationship from said respective resistive films, and respectively connected between two of said pins and edge portions of said films,
- the relationship being such that high voltage applied to said pins causes thermal shock fracture of said substrate and thus said trace regions at said substrate end portions, the fracture being only at parts of said substrate that do not include said gap regions.
- 19. The invention as claimed in claim 18, in which said substrate has continuous front and back surfaces and is resistant to mechanical breakage.
- 20. The invention as claimed in claim 18, in which a stressed spring wire is soldered to said substrate and connected in circuit with said traces for at least one of said resistors, the solder for said spring wire being adapted to melt at one end of said stressed spring wire so that said one end springs away from said substrate and breaks the circuit when excessive heating occurs.
- 21. The invention as claimed in claim 20, in which there are two such spring wires located in at least one of said gap regions, one end of each of said wires being connected to said front and back resistive films on said front and back of said substrate.
- 22. The invention as claimed in claim 18, in which said termination traces further include bottom trace regions extending along the bottom edge portions of said substrate near said end portions of said substrate and spaced below said respective resistive films, said bottom trace regions connecting respectively to the bottom ends of said end trace regions and being in the circuits between said films and said two pins, said end trace regions and bottom trace regions on said front surface of said substrate being substantially mirror images of each other, said end trace regions and bottom trace regions on said back surface of said substrate being substantially mirror images of each other, and in which a stressed spring wire is soldered to said substrate and connected in circuit with said traces for at least one of said resistors, the solder for said spring wire being adapted to melt at one end of said stressed spring wire so that such one end springs away from said substrate and breaks the circuit.
- 23. The invention as claimed in claim 18, in which said front and back resistive films on one side of said gap regions are substantially correspondingly shaped and sized and are substantially registered with each other, and in which said front and back resistive films on the other side of said gap regions are substantially correspondingly shaped and sized and are substantially registered with each other.
- 24. The invention as claimed in claim 18, in which said termination traces further include bottom traces regions extending along the bottom edge portions of said substrate near said end portions of said substrate and spaced below said respective resistive films, said bottom trace regions connecting respectively to the bottom ends of said end trace regions and being in the circuits between said films and said two pins, said end trace regions and bottom trace regions on said front surface of said substrate being substantially mirror images of each other, said end trace regions and bottom trace regions on said back surface of said substrate being substantially mirror images of each other.
- 25. The invention as claimed in claim 18, in which glass coatings are provided over said traces and over said resistive films to minimize arcing therefrom during said thermal shock fracture.
- 26. A combination resistor-breaking element, which comprises:
- (a) a substrate having a front and a back,
- (b) resistive films provided on said front and back of said substrate,
- (c) termination means provided on said substrate and connected to said films,
- (d) an elongate electrically-conductive spring element mounted on said substrate in a circuit with both of said films,
- said spring element being under a stressed condition such that one end thereof constantly attempts to spring away from said substrate, and
- (e) solder means to hold said one end of said spring element in place on said substrate despite such stressed condition of said spring element,
- said solder means being adapted to melt, in response to overheating of said resistive films and any associated elements, and thus permit separation therefrom of said one end so that said circuit is broken and said resistive films and any other elements in said circuit are protected.
- 27. The invention as claimed in claim 26, in which said substrate is flat and formed of a ceramic.
- 28. The invention as claimed in claim 27, in which said spring element is a spring wire the other end of which is return-bent around one edge of said substrate.
- 29. The invention as claimed in claim 28, in which one of said resistive films and said spring wire are on one side of said substrate, and in which the other of said resistive films is on the other side of said substrate and is connected to said return-bent end of said spring wire on said other side of said substrate.
- 30. The invention as claimed in claim 27, in which said resistive films and said ceramic are constructed and oriented to cause thermal shock fracture of said ceramic, and thus breaking of said circuit through said films, in response to application of high voltage to said termination mean.
- 31. The invention as claimed in claim 30, in which said resistive films and said termination means are such that said thermal shock fracture does not break the region of said ceramic underlying said spring wire, so that said spring wire does not fall off said substrate in response to said thermal shock fracture.
- 32. The invention as claimed in claim 31, in which said termination means includes pins soldered to said substrate and adapted to be soldered to a circuit board, in which said pins are projected through holes in a circuit board and soldered thereto, and in which said solder means on said substrate has a substantially higher melting point than does the solder which secures said pins to said board.
- 33. The invention as claimed in claim 32, in which heatsink pads are provided on said board at said holes therein to conduct heat away from said pins.
- 34. The invention as claimed in claim 27, in which said films are applied by thick-film screen printing on said substrate, in which said termination means includes termination traces on said substrate, and in which an arc-minimizing overglaze is screen-printed onto said substrate over said films and said traces.
- 35. A telephone resistor adapted to break a telephone circuit in response to two types of overload conditions, said resistor comprising:
- (a) a thin substrate having front and back flat surfaces,
- (b) a resistive film provided on said substrate,
- (c) terminal means for said film, to connect the same in a telephone circuit,
- said substrate being adapted to thermal-shock fracture, and break said circuit through said film, in response to sudden application of a 600-volt overload to said terminal means, said breakage being so fast that fine wires in the telephone circuit will not melt, and
- (d) heat-responsive breaker means mounted on said substrate and connected in said circuit to break said circuit through said film in response to a protracted current overload.
- 36. The invention as claimed in claim 35, in which said flat surfaces are continuous.
- 37. A method of breaking, in response to a sudden high-voltage overload, a telephone circuit having a resistor therein, which comprises:
- (a) providing said resistor in the form of a resistive film on a flat thin substrate adapted to thermal shock fracture,
- said substrate having front and back surfaces each of which is continuous,
- (b) intentionally selecting the thermal shock feature characteristics of said substrate having said film thereon, so that said substrate will substantially instantaneously fracture in response to a 600-volt overload such as results when a power line comes in contact with telephone lines, and will break the circuit through said film,
- (c) connecting said resistor to a circuit board in a telephone circuit that will be subjected to high-voltage overloads when a power line comes in contact with a telephone line connected to said telephone circuit, and
- (d) effecting said connecting through electrically conductive trace portions on said substrate and that are located at opposed end portions of said substrate in spaced relationship from said film thereon and generally perpendicular to said circuit board.
- 38. A method of making a resistor and of breaking a circuit through the resistor, which comprises:
- (a) providing a resistive film on a substrate,
- (b) providing a small diameter stainless steel wire,
- (c) bending said wire to stress it,
- (d) connecting at least one end of said stressed wire to said substrate by a solder consisting essentially of tin an d silver, and
- (e) connecting said wire and said resistive film in a circuit with each other to thereby break said circuit when said tin-silver solder melts.
- 39. The invention as claimed in claim 38, in which said method further comprises providing terminal pins on one edge of said substrate and connecting the same to said resistive film, and securing said pins to said substrate by said tin-silver solder, and by the same operation.
- 40. The invention as claimed in claim 38, in which said method further comprises employing as said stainless steel wire a stainless steel wire that is silver plated.
- 41. A balancing network for telephone circuits, which comprises:
- (a) a generally rectangular thin ceramic substrate having front and back surfaces that are parallel to each other,
- (b) two upper horizontal conductive traces applied to said front substrate surface in general alignment with each other and separated from each other by a gap,
- (c) two upper horizontal conductive traces applied to said back substrate surface in general alignment with each other and separated from each other by a gap,
- (d) two lower horizontal conductive traces applied to said front substrate surface in general alignment with each other and separated from each other by a gap,
- (e) two lower horizontal conductive traces applied to said back substrate surface in general alignment with each other and separated from each other by a gap,
- (f) first and second resistive films applied to said front surface and separated from each other by a gap,
- (g) third and fourth resistive films applied to said back surface and separated from each other by a gap,
- said first and third resistive films being on one half of said substrate, and each extending between said upper and lower traces on such one half,
- said second and fourth resistive films being on the other half of said substrate and each extending between said upper and lower traces on such other half,
- (h) first and second terminal pins mounted on the lower edge of said one half of said substrate,
- (i) third and fourth terminal pins mounted on the lower edge of said other half of said substrate,
- (j) means to connect said second and third pins, respectively, to said lower traces on said one half and said other half of said substrate, and
- (k) means to connect said first and fourth pins, respectively, to said upper traces on said one half and said other half of said substrate,
- said last-named means including electrically conductive end trace portions that are located at opposed ends of said substrate in spaced relationship from said respective resistive films.
- said first and third films thus being connected in parallel with each other,
- said second and fourth films thus being connected in parallel with each other,
- said parallel-connected films on said one half of said substrate being balanced in combined resistance value relative to said parallel-connected resistive films on said other half of said substrate,
- said substrate, traces and resistive films being so related that application of 600 volts to said first and second pins, and to said third and fourth pins, will substantially instantaneously thermal-shock fracture said substrate at the upper-outer corner regions thereof and will break all of the circuits through all of said resistive films.
- 42. The invention as claimed in claim 41, in which there are no traces on said substrate between said upper horizontal conductive traces and the upper substrate edge, and in which said last-named means further includes bottom traces that are spaced below said lower horizontal traces and below the bottoms of said resistive films, and that are respectively near the opposite ends of said substrate, and that connect to said end trace portions.
- 43. The invention as claimed in claim 41, in which said means to connect said first and fourth pins, respectively, to said upper traces comprises substantially vertical end traces located between the outer ends of said conductive films and the ends of said substrate, said end traces being adapted to break in response to said fracture of said substrate, said end traces being said end trace portions, said end traces being spaced from the outer ends of said lower horizontal traces.
- 44. The invention as claimed in claim 41, in which glass coatings are provided on opposite sides of said substrate over said resistive films and traces thereon.
- 45. The invention as claimed in claim 41, in which said means to connect said second and third pins, respectively, to said lower traces on said one half and said other half of said substrate comprises conductive springs that extend over the top edge of said substrate, said springs being stressed in such manner that end portions thereof tend to spring away from said substrate, and in which solder is provided to hold said ends in contact with said substrate except after excess heat has melted said solder.
- 46. The invention as claimed in claim 45, in which said balancing resistor network is mounted on a telephone circuit board having holes therein respectively adapted to receive said pins, and in which heat sink pads are provided on said circuit board around said holes to create a high thermal gradient between said substrate and said circuit board.
- 47. A film-type resistor element, which comprises:
- (a) a thin substrate having a front surface and a back surface,
- (b) a resistive film applied to said front surface of said substrate,
- (c) a resistive film applied to said back surface of said substrate,
- (d) first and second pads respectively provided on said back and front surfaces of said substrate in substantially registered relationship to each other,
- (e) a hook-end conductive spring wire,
- the hook end of said spring wire extending around an edge of said substrate in the vicinity of said pads,
- (f) solder to connect the extreme end of said hook end of said spring wire to said first pad, and to connect the adjacent region of said spring wire to said second pad,
- said spring wire being stressed when said hook end is thus soldered to said pads, so as to spring away from said substrate,
- (g) a third pad provided on said substrate on the same side thereof as the main body of said wire,
- (h) solder to connect a free end of said spring wire, remote from said hook end thereof, to said third pad,
- (i) means to connect one edge of one of said resistive films to said first pad, and
- (j) means to connect the corresponding edge of the other of said resistive films to said second pad,
- whereby said corresponding edges of said resistive films are connected to each other by the portion of said spring wire that hooks around said substrate edge.
- 48. The invention as claimed in claim 47, in which said films and substrate are so constructed and related to each other that said substrate fractures, at regions spaced from said hook-end spring wire, in response to sudden application of 600 volts to said films.
- 49. The invention as claimed in claim 47, in which said hook end is held by spring bias against said first pad and said second pad.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This is a continuation of copending application(s) Ser. No. 07/758,605 filed on Sep. 12, 1991, abandoned, which is a continuation-in-part of co-pending patent application Ser. No. 07/679,603, filed Apr. 2, 1991, now abandoned, for Resistor Combination and Method.
US Referenced Citations (5)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
| Number |
Date |
Country |
| 2109760 |
Sep 1971 |
DEX |
| 3245629 |
Dec 1982 |
DEX |
| 2163307 |
Aug 1994 |
GBX |
Continuations (1)
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| Parent |
758605 |
Sep 1991 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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679603 |
Apr 1991 |
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