This application claims priority of United Kingdom Patent Application No. 0129610.2, filed Dec. 11, 2001.
The present invention relates to signal lamps and apparatus and particularly, although not exclusively, to railway signal lamps and apparatus and particularly to lamps and apparatus utilising Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) as light emitters instead of normal filament bulbs.
An LED signal consist of a multiplicity of LEDs which collectively produce a monochromatic light emitting from a viewing aperture equivalent in size to a conventional filament lamp light signal aperture. Since the source is not a single filament as in a bulb, the LEDs are arranged in a pattern of points over the aperture. Use of LEDs has the advantage over single filament bulbs that, whilst individual LEDs may fail, this does not cause complete failure of the signal lamp as occurs with a bulb single filament failure. A failure in the control supply to the LEDs would, however, cause a complete failure.
According to one aspect of the present invention an LED signal lamp comprises at least two separate LED arrays which have separate power feeds and wherein the LEDs of the arrays are positioned with respect to each other such that when lit they provide a composite light signal output and such that when the LEDs of only one of the two arrays are lit they provide a light signal with a visible distinctive pattern.
According to one embodiment of the invention an LED signal lamp is formed with two LED arrays, each forming half of the signal display and each having separate control electronics supplied from the signalling supply. Hence if either half fails, either in the electronics or some of the LEDs such that current ceases to flow in the array, then half of the LEDs extinguish. The LEDs of the two arrays are arranged such that, on extinguishing of one array with the remaining half of the LEDs formed by the other array remaining alight, a distinctive pattern is revealed, either lit or dark. Typically this pattern may be formed as a letter such as “X” or “F” or may be formed as a striped effect, for example. A viewer (typically a train driver) of a signal in this state will interpret the displayed signal as a valid signal, but a signal that has to be reported as defective in appearance, resulting in a maintenance alert where the defective aspect of the signal can be replaced.
An LED signal lamp typically takes less power (6 Watts) than an equivalent filament lamp type signal (30 Watts). Hence when replacing Filament lamp signals with LED signal lamps in the existing railway signalling, the LED signal current needs to be ballasted to equate with that of a Filament lamp when lit, to enable the existing signal interlocking circuitry to detect a dark signal failure. The ballasting is effected utilising a ballast resistor in parallel with the LED signal across the signal supply. With the typical levels of power consumption mentioned above, this ballast resistor will take approximately 80% of the supplied current.
In the existing railway signalling network, it is substantial cessation of supply current during a signal operation phase that indicates signal failure. It is, therefore, imperative that some form of interlock be applied to ensure that, if LED current stops, the ballast load is also disconnected from the supply. This has typically been performed by a fuse blow circuit. However because of the active nature of this circuit, it is inherently less reliable than the dropped relay version as applied to a filament lamp which is inherently fail safe.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, an LED signal apparatus comprises input signal power supply terminals for the apparatus; a series connection of switch means and a ballast load connected across the supply terminals; an LED signal lamp connected to the terminals to be supplied with current therefrom; and switch operating means, in the supply path to the LED lamp, for controlling the state of the switch means in the series connection, whereby, during operation of the apparatus, total failure or substantially total failure of the current to the LED signal lamp results in said switch operating means causing said switch means to open to disconnect the ballast load from power from the supply terminals.
Advantageously, the switch operating means may comprise an optocoupled diode for controlling an electronic switch such that, if electric current flows through the diode, the electronic switch closes and vice versa.
In preferred embodiments of the invention, the LED signal lamp comprises at least two separate LED arrays arranged jointly to provide a signal light output for the lamp and wherein each of said arrays has an individual switch control means in its supply path and said ballast load is connected to said supply terminals through a plurality of switch means each controlled by a respective one of the switch control means and the arrangement is such that provided current flows to one of said arrays, the corresponding switch control means controls its respective switch means to permit current to flow through the ballast load. Preferably, in such an arrangement, detection means are provided to detect that not all the switch means are permitting flow of current to the ballast load and to provide a non-urgent alarm signal to that effect. Such an alarm signal would normally indicate failure of current flow through the array associated with the corresponding switch control means. The detection means may comprise a relay with its relay coil connected between switch means controlled points, in the supply to the ballast load, that are at substantially the same voltage during closure of all switch means but which are at different voltages, in the event of opening of only one of the switch means, such that relay operating current flows through the relay coil.
Preferably, a pair of switch control means are connected in parallel in the supply to an array such that supply of current to the array is not interrupted solely as the result of failure of a single switch control means. Additionally there may be a pair of switch means each associated with a respective one of the pair of switch control means.
For a better understanding of the present invention, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings, in which, solely by way of example:
In both figures, the same references have been used for the same or corresponding elements.
The circuit arrangement of
Two signal power terminals for the apparatus are referenced 7 and 8 and the signal supply voltage and current are shown as V and I respectively. These supply terminals are connected directly, to supply signal power thereto, to the control electronics units 3 and 4. A ballast load 6 is connected across terminals 7 and 8, one end being connected directly to terminal 8 with the other end being connected to terminal 7 through two pairs of switches S1, S4 and S3, S2. The switches of each pair of switches are connected in series between terminal 7 and said other end of the ballast load 6. The junction between the switches of each pair of switches are connected via the coil of a relay 5. Switch contacts S5 of relay 5 are coupled to a “non-urgent alarm” output 9. The switching state of each of the switches S1 to S4 is controlled by the correspondingly numbered optocoupled diodes D1 to D4.
As indicated, the LED signal lamp is formed with two LED arrays 1 and 2, each forming half of the signal display and each having separate control electronics supplied from the signalling supply. Hence, if either half fails, either in the electronics or in the LED array such that current ceases to flow in the array, then half of the LEDs extinguish. The LEDs of the two arrays are arranged such that, on extinguishing of one array with the remaining half of the LEDs formed by the other array remaining alight, a distinctive pattern is revealed, either lit or dark. Typically this pattern may be formed as a letter such as “X” or “F” or may be formed as a striped effect, for example. As a result, a viewer (typically a train driver) of a signal in this state will interpret the displayed signal as a valid signal but one that has to be reported as defective in appearance, resulting in a non-urgent maintenance alert where the defective aspect of the signal can be replaced.
In the
In the case where current stops flowing through one or other LED array (causing it not to be lit), then two switches will open. For example if LED array 1 fails, then S1 and S2 open and current then flows via S3, the relay coil and S4 to the ballast load 6. Similarly if LED array 2 fails then S3 and S4 open and current then flows via S1, the relay coil 5 and S2 to the ballast load 6. Hence in either of these partial failure cases, the non-urgent alarm output 9 is signalled by the opening of contact S5. However the signal load current, although reduced slightly, is still sufficient to indicate to the interlocking control that the lamp is operational. This is equivalent to the first filament failure alarm in a conventional signal.
In the very rare event that current stops being supplied to both LED arrays, then all 4 switches SI to S4 open and the ballast load is removed from circuit. This effect, plus the loss of current to both arrays results in a loss of load current from the interlocking control arrangement sufficiently to guarantee the asserting of an Urgent Alarm in the interlocking control, which sets safe operation of the signalling. In this case the non-urgent alarm is not set but that is not a problem since it is overridden by the Urgent Alarm. The operation of the Urgent Alarm circuit is thus fault tolerant, and hence very reliable. Combined with the duplex operation of the LED arrays this arrangement may enable the meeting of a UK specified railway signalling reliability target of <1 undetected dark signal lamp in 1011 hours.
The arrangement of
This circuit arrangement provides a reliable switch S1 in series with S2, respectively operated optically by DI and D2 passing current. In the case of LED array 1 stopping taking current (either by the LED array 1 or the control electronics unit 3 failing), a voltage is generated across R2 sufficient to cause activation of the non-urgent alarm relay 5 with current flowing through the coil via resistance RI. Similarly, if LED array 2 stops taking current then S3 and S4 are opened and a voltage is generated across RI sufficient to activate the non-urgent alarm relay 5 via R2.
The circuit arrangement of
In combination with the distinctively patterned LED arrays, which will alert drivers to a partially failed lamp for these to be independently reported, reliability is further enhanced.
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0129610 | Dec 2001 | GB | national |
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20030137427 A1 | Jul 2003 | US |