The present application is related to PCT application EP 99/07278 filed on Oct. 1, 1999 and claims the priority data thereof.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a relay, having: a base which defines a base plane; a magnet system arranged on the base and having a coil, a core and an armature; at least one pair of closing spring contacts and at least one pair of opening spring contacts, each pair of spring contacts including an active and a passive spring contact, and each spring contact being secured in the base, standing perpendicular to the base plane, and bearing at its end remote from the base a contact portion; and an actuating slide which is movable parallel to the base plane and which acts on each movable spring contact, in each case in the vicinity of the contact portion.
2. Summary of the Prior Art
A relay of this type with forcibly guided contacts is known from DE 195 40 739 A1. There, the individual contact springs are arranged insulated from one another, with special structural measures also being taken to prevent short circuits in the event that contact portions become detached from the spring contacts. In this known relay, the active spring contacts, below the contact portions, are guided and actuated in laterally open slots in a slide. Laterally open actuating portions alter the stability of the slide, however, with the result that such slides already have a tendency to warp even during manufacture and do not retain optimum dimensional stability in operation either. A further problem with relay constructions of this kind consists in the fact that the force for opening the opening springs has to be overcome at the beginning of the movement of attraction of the armature, while the force for closing the closing contacts occurs towards the end of the armature movement of attraction. Since the force of an electromagnet system is small at the beginning of the armature movement of attraction, however, and only rises steeply towards the end of the movement of attraction, when the operational air gap is almost closed, application of the opening force is a problem which is typically solved by making the magnet system large in size, with this over-sizing not being necessary to close the closing contacts.
The object of the present invention is to construct a relay of the type mentioned at the outset such that the characteristic curve of the spring can be better adapted to that of the magnet system.
According to the invention, this object is achieved in that the slide acts on the active opening spring contacts at a different spacing as regards the way it is secured in the base from that at which it acts on the active closing spring contacts.
The formation of a slide, according to the invention, having different points of action on the opening spring contacts and the closing spring contacts as regards the way they are clamped in the base is achieved in that the opening contacts are opened with as small a force as possible and as long a distance as possible, while the closing contacts are closed with a short lever arm over a short distance. In this way, the force to be applied to open the opening contacts is therefore adapted to the force of the magnet system, smaller at the beginning of the movement of attraction, while the great magnetic force at the end of the movement of attraction of the armature is sufficient to actuate the closing contacts over a short distance, that is to say with a small lever arm. The result is an adaptation of the characteristic curve of the spring to that of the magnet system which is more precise overall, so that the magnet system itself is relatively small in size.
In a preferred-embodiment of the relay according to the invention, it may furthermore be provided that all the active spring contacts are of the same construction, so that neither the active opening spring contacts nor the active closing spring contacts are pre-tensioned in the direction of the associated passive spring contacts. The opening spring contacts are then actuated by an armature spring, while the closing spring contacts are actuated by the magnet system.
Further advantageous embodiments are specified in the subclaims.
The relay illustrated in
The magnet system serving to actuate the relay has a U-shaped core yoke 31 with a core limb 32 and a yoke limb 33. A coil body 34 bears an excitation coil 35 and receives the core limb 32 in an axial through opening. Since this core limb has a smaller width than the yoke limb 33, because of the limited width of the core, an additional flux guide part 36 is inserted into the interior of the coil, together with the core limb 32. In this way, the cross-section of iron within the coil is enlarged, as are the pole surfaces 32a and 36a, with which an armature 37 co-operates. This armature is mounted at the free end of the yoke limb 33 with the aid of an armature spring 38, and forms an operational air gap in a conventional manner with the pole surfaces 32a, 36a. Two restoring limbs 39 of the armature spring 38 provide the rest position for the contacts, in the non-excited condition of the magnet system.
Movement of the armature 37 is transmitted by way of an armature extension portion 37a to a slide 40 and by way of the latter to the active spring contacts 25. Since the spring contacts are arranged on the side of the magnet system opposite the armature, the slide has a connection portion 41 which extends above the coil and is adjoined by an actuating portion 42 which is set back in a stepped manner, downwardly in the direction of the base plane. This actuating portion forms, together with a central longitudinal wall 43 and side walls 44 and transverse walls 45 and 46 respectively, frames for each individual spring contact, which screen these spring contacts, with the exception of the respectively first passive spring contacts 24R and the respectively last passive spring contacts 23R and 23A2, which are in the end regions of the actuating portion 42 of the slide 40 and thus do not need any screening on one side with respect to an adjacent spring contact. By way of explanation, it should be noted here that the active and passive spring contacts 25 and 23 in
Those transverse walls or blocking walls 46, which each separate co-operating active and passive spring contacts, each have an approximately semi-circular recess 49 to match the round contour of the contact portions. A movable contact portion 26 of the active spring contacts 25 is guided respectively in this recess 49. This means that the active spring contact can itself bear snugly against the blocking wall 46 or a blocking rib 50 projecting from the blocking wall. Moreover, the slide forms actuating lugs 52 which project inwards in each case from the side walls 44 and actuate the active operational spring contacts or the active rest spring contacts respectively at different heights. The active spring contacts are in this case each arranged within the window 47 and are guided between the respective blocking rib 50 and the associated actuating lug 51 or 52 with a small amount of play. This means that if a contact welds, all the other active spring contacts are also blocked with respect to any further switching actuation.
When the relay is put together, first of all the assembled magnet system is inserted in the recess 11 in the base 1, with the armature spring 38 being secured between the yoke limb 33 and the base. The slide 40 is placed with its connection portion 41 on the magnet system, with the restoring limbs 39 of the armature spring 38 suspended in the apertures 41a in the slide. The armature itself is at the same time mounted on the yoke limb 33 and suspended by means of its extension portion 37a in the aperture 41b in the slide 40.
Once the slide 40, which is seated with its longitudinal partition wall 43 on the longitudinal wall 13 and with the longitudinal walls 44 on the side walls 12 of the base 1, has been mounted, the spring contacts are mounted. For this, all the spring contacts are inserted through the appropriate windows 47 and 48 in the slide, into the chambers 15 of the base, and secured in the plug-type slots 16. All the fixed contact beams 21 with the passive spring contacts 23 are of the same construction and straight, so that they can be inserted into the base perpendicularly with respect to the base plane. Moreover, all the active spring contacts 25 with their spring contact beams 22 are of the same construction and straight, so that they can be inserted through the associated windows 47 in the slide, perpendicularly with respect to the base plane, regardless of their function as operational spring contacts 25A1, 25A2 or rest spring contacts 25R. The slide 40 is for this purpose held in a central position in opposition to the pre-tension of the armature spring 38.
With this construction, all the spring contacts must be inserted into the base from above through the already mounted slide 40, because the end portions of the spring contacts, at least those of the active spring contacts 25 having the contact portions 26, have a larger cross-section than the windows 47, so that the slide cannot be pushed from above over the spring contacts afterwards. As a result of these relative sizes, on the one hand the slide is made stable because of the closed frames around the spring contacts, and on the other hand a broken-off contact portion cannot fall through a window 47 down into a spring chamber and there perhaps cause a short circuit.
In the non-excited condition of the magnet system, the slide is drawn into the rest position by the restoring force of the armature spring 38, that is to say to the right in FIG. 4. During this, the rest spring contacts 25R, which are straight in the untensioned condition, are drawn to the right, into the position shown in
When the magnet system is excited, the slide is moved to the left in
Since, moreover, all the active spring contacts are constructed to be straight, they have the effect of opening by themselves. If for example an actuating lug 51 or 52 on the slide breaks, then the active spring contact (opening contact) concerned opens, or is not closed (in the case of a closing contact). If by contrast the armature spring 38 breaks, then all the rest contacts (opening contacts) open and all the closing contacts are not closed again.
As can be seen from the description and in particular from
In the graph of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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198 47 831 | Oct 1998 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP99/07278 | 10/1/1999 | WO | 00 | 5/19/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO00/24019 | 4/27/2000 | WO | A |
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5160910 | Tsuji | Nov 1992 | A |
5568108 | Kirsch | Oct 1996 | A |
5831502 | Kirsch | Nov 1998 | A |
5945900 | Shibata et al. | Aug 1999 | A |
6034582 | Fausch | Mar 2000 | A |
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969 149 | May 1956 | DE |
2517263 | Oct 1976 | DE |
3437544 | Apr 1986 | DE |
19540739 | Jan 1997 | DE |
19600314 | Jul 1997 | DE |
2379904 | May 1977 | FR |
2423855 | Apr 1979 | FR |
618013 | Feb 1949 | GB |