This invention relates to timers for operating electric appliances at Saturday and Holyday according to Jewish religious law, both stand alone and built into the appliances.
In Jewish religious law, there are limitations for using electricity at Saturday and Holyday. Manual switching on and off is forbidden. Automatic switching electric appliance on and off at times programmed before beginning Saturday or Holyday is allowed. A timer is known, called “Saturday watch”, which enables such kind of programming. It is used, for example, for operating heating appliances at Saturday or cooking ovens at Holyday. In fact, any programmable timer is suitable for this. The problem with it is inflexibility, when the heater is activated independently on the weather, and the oven at pre-defined times only.
The Jewish law allows also manual actions, which delay switching on or off, but do not cancel it. So, opening door of a refrigerator, when the motor is active, delays the motor switching off and is allowed.
The difference between Saturday and Holyday is which appliances can be used, and not how to operate them, so, we will use here “Saturday” term for both of them.
It would clearly be beneficial to provide for a control device enabling manual operating electric appliances when needed within the frame of the law. The timer of the invention does it via allowable delay of the switch off action.
It is an object of the invention to provide a control device which allows manual operating electric appliances at Saturday and Holyday within the frame of Jewish religious law.
The invention achieves this by periodic activating the appliance for a short time period and allowable delay of deactivating it when needed.
In accordance with the first aspect of the invention, there is provided a timer for operating electric appliances at Saturday and Holyday in accordance to Jewish law, activating the appliance and deactivating it, the timer comprising:
a first timing device, activating and deactivating the appliance from time to time, and
a second timing device, which, when activated, delays the appliance deactivation by the first timing device.
According to a second aspect of the invention, there is provided an electric appliance, comprising the timer according to the first aspect of the invention built in. In addition to this timer, which is a Saturday operating device, the appliance can include a secular operating device and a switch for selecting one of these operation modes. Some parts, like a mechanical timer, can be common for both operating devices.
With the timer in form of a stand-alone device, the timer must be initiated and an appliance connected to it before Saturday begins. With the appliance having the timer built in, the Saturday operation mode must be initiated before Saturday.
In order to understand the invention and to see how it may be carried out in practice, some preferred embodiments will now be described, by way of non-limiting examples only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In all figures, similar components are identified by identical reference numerals.
When the timer 1 closes its contact, the relay S1 accepts the electric current, and both pairs of its contacts are closed. The appliance is connected to the grid via S1-2 contact. In a short time after this, the timer contact 1 is opened. If the second (mechanical) timer 11 is not activated at this time, the relay S1 looses the current and opens its contacts, and so disconnects the appliance from the grid. If the timer 11 is activated, its switch 3 is closed, the relay S1 is connected to the current via contacts S1-1 and 3, its contacts S1-1 and S1-2 stay closed, and the appliance stays connected to the grid until the timer 11 terminates its reverse stroke, and the switch 3 opens.
If the timer 11 is of spring-driven reverse stroke, it is preferable to install thereto a stopper (not shown), preventing the timer reverse stroke when the appliance is disconnected from the grid, and so enabling the delay period counting only when the appliance is activated. With motor-driven timer, the same effect is achieved by connecting the motor in parallel to the appliance.
If at the time of switching the contacts TR-1, TR-2 and TR-3 to their initial positions the timer 11 is activated, with its switch 4 open, the timer TR looses its power supply. The appliance stays connected and the timer 11 counts the time until the handle 10 comes to “0” of the time scale, the switch 4 is closed and the timer TR is connected to the power supply. Then a new cycle begins.
There is a wide choice of timers, which can be used as the first timing device 1 or TR. As an example of an electro-mechanical version of these timers, in
It will be appreciated that the both timing devices may be of different kinds, and the electric scheme should be suited to these timers, without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3610753 | Neubauer | Oct 1971 | A |
3930359 | Flumm et al. | Jan 1976 | A |
4198576 | Staton | Apr 1980 | A |
5808278 | Moon et al. | Sep 1998 | A |
6066837 | McCormick et al. | May 2000 | A |
6703591 | Daum et al. | Mar 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090050458 A1 | Feb 2009 | US |