US268155A - van choate - Google Patents

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US268155A
US268155A US268155DA US268155A US 268155 A US268155 A US 268155A US 268155D A US268155D A US 268155DA US 268155 A US268155 A US 268155A
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electrodes
spring
lamp
post
secured
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B7/00Heating by electric discharge
    • H05B7/18Heating by arc discharge
    • H05B7/22Indirect heating by arc discharge

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  • the general object of my invention is to produce asimple,com pact, and durable electric lamp, suitable for either outdooror indoor use,
  • My invention consists, first, in certain novel devices for forming and determining the length of are between two pieces of refractory material whose rate of consumption is so slow as not to require an adjustment of the pieces toward one another during the time for which the light is ordinarily required to burn without intermission; second, in an improved con,- struction of the supporting 1,)arts,applicable in some features not only to arc-lamps employing a refractory non-volatilizable material, but also to those in which a strip or rod of high electrical resistance, heated to incandescence by the passage ofthe current, is used.
  • Figure l is an elevation of my lamp mounted upon a post.
  • Fig. 2 is an enlarged vertical section of the lamp proper.
  • Fig.3 isavertical section, drawn to another scale,of the complete lamp with its hood and reflector, showing the means employed for securing the reflector to the globe surrounding the light.
  • Fig. 4 is a top view of the support or holder in which are contained the supportingrods or conductors leading to the electrodes.
  • Fig. 5 is a sectional view of a modification.
  • A represents a hollow post, of cast-iron or other suitable material, upon which the lamp is mounted.
  • a cylinder or tube of brass, B secured in place by screws 'or bolts passing through the hollow post and into the tube.
  • the springsocket upon the upper end of D holds one of the electrodesof the light, said electrode consisting in the present case of a copper wire or pin, 0, to the upper end of which is secured, by riveting or otherwise, a block of any suitable refractory material, E, between which and a similar block, E, the electric arc is formed.
  • This material may be an alloy of arsenicum, copper, and chloride of sodium, in the proportion of two to three parts of arsenic, live to six parts of copper, and a suitable proportion of chlorideot' sodium, combined by heat in a closed crucible, after the manner described in an application for Letters Patent of the United States filed by me April 18, 1881, No. 31,143.
  • the block E is secured to a copper pin on wire, which is seated in a spring-socket formed in the upper end of a rocking elbow-lever, F, pivoted or fulcrumed at g in a bracket, Gr, secured to the lower side of the upper plug, a.
  • a flat spring, h secured in the lower end of the lever F, and bearing upon the inner side of the insulating-tube 0, tends to swing the lever so as to separate the electrodes E and E.
  • Spring H may be adjusted to any desired tension by means of its extensionp and the screw 7'.
  • the spring H serves not only to bring the electrodes into contact, but also to complete the circuit between the lever F and the lower conducting-rod, K.
  • no current is passing its tension is sufficient to overcome the strength of spring h, and thus hold the electrodes in contact.
  • the current passes it is heated and lengthens, so as to cease acting upon the lever, and at the same time allow the weaker spring, h, which is not in the electrical circuit, to act and separate the electrodes so as to form the arc.
  • the distance to which the electrodes shall be separated is determined by the adjustable stopscrew 8, against which the lever F is thrown by the action of the smaller spring.
  • the sockets in the upper end of the holders D and F are made to grasp the electrodes firmly by splitting or sawing them longitudinally, while sliding collars t, of brass or other suitab e material, which may be moved up and down,serve to more securely hold the wires 6 c in place.
  • the burners E and E are secured to the ends of the pins 0 and c by swaging the tops of the pins, thus making good contact. They may he of any suitable material which is highly refractory and consumes but slowly under the action of the arc.
  • the spring sockets or holders D and F allow of a ready and convenient replacement of theburners and make good electrical connection.
  • a globe, L of translucent material, surrounds the light proper, and is formed with a neck at its bottom, ground to fit in a sleeve, M, of brass or other suitable material, within which it is secured by cement or otherwise.
  • This sleeve is slotted, in the manner shown in Fig. 1 at q, upon diametrically-opposite sides, after the manner of a bayonet-joint, and looks upon pinsPP,projectingfrom thetubeB.
  • the lower edge of the cylinder M when the globe is in place, is seated closely upon a step or shoulder, to, upon the post A, thus effectually excluding dirt and dust from the globe.
  • a conical reflector and hood N.
  • the reflector 2 is placed with its apex downward, so as to effectually difiuse the light-rays in the proper directions, and is secured at its larger end to an ornamental cap-piece of sheet metal.
  • the configuration of these various parts forms the subject of aDesign Patent filed of even date herewith.
  • the hood and reflector are secured to the globe by the devices shown in Fig. 3.
  • the conical reflector 2 is hollow and is truncated.
  • lts truncated portion is seated upon and embraces the upper portion of the globe, which is itself perforated at the top, and provided with an upwardly-projecting neck, 4, which is embraced by a metallic collar, 5, secured to the inside of the opening in the reflector.
  • a plug, 10, of suitable material surrounds the bolt at the point where it passes through the neck and serves to keep the rod in a central position.
  • the construction of the holder or support for the electrodes herein described may be used with advantage for incandescent electric lights.
  • the incandescentportion of the light would consist simply of an inverted-U or other desirable shaped piece of refractory conducting material seated in the upper spring-sockets.
  • the parts employed for separating and adjusting the electrodes would not be necessary, and F could be of the same con struction and would be supported in the same way as the rod and socket D.
  • the various parts may be supported in a bracket instead of upon a post.
  • Fig. 5 is a sectional elevation, showing the manner in which my lamp is constructed when it is desired to avoid the use of a ladder, or the removal of the translucent globe and hood when the burners of the lamp are to be renewed or repaired, or when the spring is to be adjusted.
  • 11 is a metallic tube fitted into the top of post A, and serving as the finishing or terminal casing of carriers or sockets 12; and the case or cylinder 13 is a round tube of suitable metal or material carrying or containing the mechanisms which insulate and regulate the terminals or burners of the lamp.
  • the tube or case corresponds to the tube G b in Fig. 2, except that it is not secured to the tube 11, corresponding to B, Fig. 2, by screw-pins, but is so constructed as to slide or move up and down freely in the hollow formed in the tube and post.
  • a rod or projecting tang, 14 is connected to the movable case 13, and extends downward within the hollow of the post suffieiently to be within reach of a person when standing on the sidewalk.
  • a fixture or projection, 15, is At the lower extremity of handle or tang 14 which,
  • a fixture or projection, 16, attached to the post A At or near the point where the projection 16 and lower end of the tang are located is a door or opening, 17,in the side of the post, and by the opening of which the tang or rod can be unlocked and lowcred at pleasure, so as to bring down the case and the burners of the lamp to a point opposite the opening in the post, and in such a manner that the burners of the lamp can be inserted and the spring adjusted, replaced, or repaired without removing the globe or hood at the top of the post.
  • the wires 18 18, forming the conductors of the lamp are flexible, so as to allow the free movement of the cylinder 13 up and down iuthe lamp.

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Plasma & Fusion (AREA)
  • Fastening Of Light Sources Or Lamp Holders (AREA)

Description

(No Model.) 3 Sheets-Sheet 1.
s. P. VAN GHOATE.
. ELECTRIC ARC LAMP. No 268,155. Patented Nov. 28, 1882.
ATTESTI INVENTDRI S F Va n Chum MM 57 W (No Model.) 3 Sheets-Sheet 2.
S. F. VAN CHOATE.
ELECTRIC ARG LAMP. No. 268,155. Patented Nov. 28, 1882.
wmwxxw r ATTESTI INVENTUR:
SET/an C/Zocue N. PETERS PfwlwLiihogmphcn W-ululglon. u. c.
3 Sheets-Sheet 3.
(No Model.)
s. F. VAN GHOATE.
ELECTRIC ARC LAMP.
No. 268,155. Patented Nov. 28, 1882.
INVENT DR S. F Va/zC/wate. 4 7* M w A ATT EST i PATENT OFFICE.
SILVANUS F. VAN CHOATE, OF NEXV YORK, N. Y.
ELECTRIC-ARC LAMP.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 288,155, dated November 28, 1882-.
Application filed June 1, 1881.
To all whom it may concern: Be it known that I, SILVANUS F. VA GHOATE, a citizen of the United States, residing at New York, in the county of New York and State of New York, have invented new and useful Improvements in Electric-Arc Lamps, of which the following is a specifica tion.
The general object of my invention is to produce asimple,com pact, and durable electric lamp, suitable for either outdooror indoor use,
without the employment of clock-work regulators and electromagnetic devices, and to dispense with all parts or attachments which in lights of the are type obscure the light and produce shadows.
My invention consists, first, in certain novel devices for forming and determining the length of are between two pieces of refractory material whose rate of consumption is so slow as not to require an adjustment of the pieces toward one another during the time for which the light is ordinarily required to burn without intermission; second, in an improved con,- struction of the supporting 1,)arts,applicable in some features not only to arc-lamps employing a refractory non-volatilizable material, but also to those in which a strip or rod of high electrical resistance, heated to incandescence by the passage ofthe current, is used.
In the accompanying drawings, Figure l is an elevation of my lamp mounted upon a post. Fig. 2 is an enlarged vertical section of the lamp proper. Fig.3isavertical section, drawn to another scale,of the complete lamp with its hood and reflector, showing the means employed for securing the reflector to the globe surrounding the light. Fig. 4 is a top view of the support or holder in which are contained the supportingrods or conductors leading to the electrodes. Fig. 5 is a sectional view of a modification.
A represents a hollow post, of cast-iron or other suitable material, upon which the lamp is mounted.
Within the upper part of the post is a cylinder or tube of brass, B, secured in place by screws 'or bolts passing through the hollow post and into the tube.
Entering the upper part of the tube B, and secured therein by screws 0, is a tube of insu- (No model.)
lating material, C, surrounded with a thin sup porting-cylinder, I), of brass or other metal, at whose upper and lower ends are insulatingplugs, or a, secured by screws passing through the tube 0, in the manner shown in Fig. 4.
A conductingrod of copper, D, passing through both plugs and secured by a screw, n, terminates at its upper end in a springsocket, while its lower end extends below the plug a, and is also provided with a socket and a binding-screw, (1, for the reception of an insulated conducting-wire, I, which conveys the electricity to or from the light. The springsocket upon the upper end of D holds one of the electrodesof the light, said electrode consisting in the present case of a copper wire or pin, 0, to the upper end of which is secured, by riveting or otherwise, a block of any suitable refractory material, E, between which and a similar block, E, the electric arc is formed.
This material may be an alloy of arsenicum, copper, and chloride of sodium, in the proportion of two to three parts of arsenic, live to six parts of copper, and a suitable proportion of chlorideot' sodium, combined by heat in a closed crucible, after the manner described in an application for Letters Patent of the United States filed by me April 18, 1881, No. 31,143.
The block E is secured to a copper pin on wire, which is seated in a spring-socket formed in the upper end of a rocking elbow-lever, F, pivoted or fulcrumed at g in a bracket, Gr, secured to the lower side of the upper plug, a. A flat spring, h, secured in the lower end of the lever F, and bearing upon the inner side of the insulating-tube 0, tends to swing the lever so as to separate the electrodes E and E. Then the lamp is not in use, and before the current is turned on, this tendency on the part of the spring h is overcome by the action of a stout spring, H, of suitable metalsuch as brass-which fits tightly in a perforation in the short arm of the lever F, and is riveted or flattened at its upper end, so that it may exert a downward pull upon the arm. The other end passes through and is clamped in a lug projecting from a conducting-rod, K, secured inplacebyascremr. TherodK,likeD,passes through the lower plug, a, and is provided at its lower end with a socket and clamp-screw for the reception of one of the conductingwires 1. Spring H may be adjusted to any desired tension by means of its extensionp and the screw 7'. The spring H serves not only to bring the electrodes into contact, but also to complete the circuit between the lever F and the lower conducting-rod, K. When no current is passing its tension is sufficient to overcome the strength of spring h, and thus hold the electrodes in contact. When, however, the current passes it is heated and lengthens, so as to cease acting upon the lever, and at the same time allow the weaker spring, h, which is not in the electrical circuit, to act and separate the electrodes so as to form the arc. The distance to which the electrodes shall be separated is determined by the adjustable stopscrew 8, against which the lever F is thrown by the action of the smaller spring. The sockets in the upper end of the holders D and F are made to grasp the electrodes firmly by splitting or sawing them longitudinally, while sliding collars t, of brass or other suitab e material, which may be moved up and down,serve to more securely hold the wires 6 c in place. The burners E and E are secured to the ends of the pins 0 and c by swaging the tops of the pins, thus making good contact. They may he of any suitable material which is highly refractory and consumes but slowly under the action of the arc. The spring sockets or holders D and F allow of a ready and convenient replacement of theburners and make good electrical connection.
A globe, L, of translucent material, surrounds the light proper, and is formed with a neck at its bottom, ground to fit in a sleeve, M, of brass or other suitable material, within which it is secured by cement or otherwise. This sleeve is slotted, in the manner shown in Fig. 1 at q, upon diametrically-opposite sides, after the manner of a bayonet-joint, and looks upon pinsPP,projectingfrom thetubeB. Asshown in Fig. 2, the lower edge of the cylinder M, when the globe is in place, is seated closely upon a step or shoulder, to, upon the post A, thus effectually excluding dirt and dust from the globe.
For the purpose ofutilizing the rays from the light which would otherwise pass upward and be lost, I attach to the upper partof the globe a conical reflector and hood, N. The reflector 2 is placed with its apex downward, so as to effectually difiuse the light-rays in the proper directions, and is secured at its larger end to an ornamental cap-piece of sheet metal. The configuration of these various parts forms the subject of aDesign Patent filed of even date herewith. The hood and reflector are secured to the globe by the devices shown in Fig. 3. The conical reflector 2 is hollow and is truncated. lts truncated portion is seated upon and embraces the upper portion of the globe, which is itself perforated at the top, and provided with an upwardly-projecting neck, 4, which is embraced by a metallic collar, 5, secured to the inside of the opening in the reflector. A bolt, 6, between the headed end of which and the inner surface of the globe is interposed a washer, 8, of some suitable material like copper, to form an extended bearing-surface for the bolt upon the inner surface of the globe, passes upward through the neck, while an ornamental screw-nut, 9, resting upon the upper portion of the hood or cap-piece 1, engages with a screw-thread upon the upper end of the bolt and serves to hold the parts firmly together. A plug, 10, of suitable material, surrounds the bolt at the point where it passes through the neck and serves to keep the rod in a central position.
By the above construction it will be seen that I dispense entirely with the use of supporting arms or rods about the globe, which tend to obscure the light and produce shadows. In this respect the construction of the supports for the electrodes and the light proper, as shown in Figs. 2 and 3, possesses advan tages, as itis very compact and does not obscure the light and produce shadows in adownward direction.
It is obvious that the construction of the holder or support for the electrodes herein described may be used with advantage for incandescent electric lights. In such case the incandescentportion of the light would consist simply of an inverted-U or other desirable shaped piece of refractory conducting material seated in the upper spring-sockets. In the latter case the parts employed for separating and adjusting the electrodes would not be necessary, and F could be of the same con struction and would be supported in the same way as the rod and socket D. It is obvious that the various parts may be supported in a bracket instead of upon a post.
Fig. 5 is a sectional elevation, showing the manner in which my lamp is constructed when it is desired to avoid the use of a ladder, or the removal of the translucent globe and hood when the burners of the lamp are to be renewed or repaired, or when the spring is to be adjusted. In this figure,Ais the hollow castiron or other support. 11 is a metallic tube fitted into the top of post A, and serving as the finishing or terminal casing of carriers or sockets 12; and the case or cylinder 13 is a round tube of suitable metal or material carrying or containing the mechanisms which insulate and regulate the terminals or burners of the lamp. The tube or case corresponds to the tube G b in Fig. 2, except that it is not secured to the tube 11, corresponding to B, Fig. 2, by screw-pins, but is so constructed as to slide or move up and down freely in the hollow formed in the tube and post.
A rod or projecting tang, 14, is connected to the movable case 13, and extends downward within the hollow of the post suffieiently to be within reach of a person when standing on the sidewalk. At the lower extremity of handle or tang 14 is a fixture or projection, 15, which,
Ils
upon turning the tang to one side, can be held in position by a fixture or projection, 16, attached to the post A. At or near the point where the projection 16 and lower end of the tang are located is a door or opening, 17,in the side of the post, and by the opening of which the tang or rod can be unlocked and lowcred at pleasure, so as to bring down the case and the burners of the lamp to a point opposite the opening in the post, and in such a manner that the burners of the lamp can be inserted and the spring adjusted, replaced, or repaired without removing the globe or hood at the top of the post. The wires 18 18, forming the conductors of the lamp, are flexible, so as to allow the free movement of the cylinder 13 up and down iuthe lamp.
I am aware that it is not new to employ a straight rigid expansible piece for holding the electrodes together in the same way as the spiral spring herein described, and I therefore make no claim to sucha construction. Bythe employment of a spring I am enabled to more readily adjust the lamp, and the action is more delicate and prompt.
What I claim as my invention is- *1. The combination, substantially as described,of the insulating-tube G, withits plugs a a, rod D, the pivoted lever F, conductingspring H, and spring h, the two latter for adjusting the electrodes and conveying the current thereto.
2. The combination, with the movable holder, of two springs acting in opposition to one another upon the holder, one of said springs serving to convey the currentto the electrodes and when not acted upon by the current to hold them in contact, and the other weaker than the first, but acting when the first spring is elongated by the heating efi'eots of the current to separate the electrodes and form the are.
3. The combination, substantially as described, of a stationary and a movable electrode of refractory material, a spring acting upon the movable electrode and tending to separate the electrodes to form the arc, a spiral conducting-spring acting upon the same electrode, and tending, when not heated by the current, to force the electrodes into contact, and an adjustable stop for determining the amount of separation of the electrodes.
4. The combination, with the rocking holder G, carrying one of the refractory electrodes, of the conducting spiral spring H, fixed at one end to a stationary support and connected at the other to the rocking holder, said spring being applied, in the manner described, so as to tend, when cold, to pull the electrodetoward its opposite electrode, and when heated by the passage of the current through it to relax so as to allow the electrodes to be separated.
5. The combination, with the movable holder carrying one of the refractory electrodes, of an adjustable spiral actuatingspring, forming a path for the current, and tending, when cold, to hold the electrodes together, and means for separating the electrodes when the spiral spring is relaxed by the heating effects of the current passing through it.
6. The combination of the hollow post, provided with a door or opening with the tube or plug 13, supporting the light and adapted to slide up and down in said post, and means whereby the tube or plug may be held in a raised position.
7. The combination of the hollow post, provided with a door or opening, with a carrier or support for the operating parts of the light, and means, substantially as described, where- .by said carrier may be raised and lowered or held in a raised position, substantially as described.
8. The combination, with the carrier or support 13 for the operating parts of the lamp, of the tang or rod 15 and the step or support 16, substantially as and for the purpose described.
sILvAnos 1r. VAN OHOATE. Witnesses:
JOHN J. DIFFLEY, H. (J. TOWNSEND.
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