US2218629A - Protective device for electrical instruments - Google Patents

Protective device for electrical instruments Download PDF

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US2218629A
US2218629A US145395A US14539537A US2218629A US 2218629 A US2218629 A US 2218629A US 145395 A US145395 A US 145395A US 14539537 A US14539537 A US 14539537A US 2218629 A US2218629 A US 2218629A
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instrument
tube
voltage
circuit
line
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US145395A
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Leland K Swart
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AT&T Corp
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Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01RMEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
    • G01R1/00Details of instruments or arrangements of the types included in groups G01R5/00 - G01R13/00 and G01R31/00
    • G01R1/36Overload-protection arrangements or circuits for electric measuring instruments

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  • PROTECTIVE DEVICE FOR ELECTRICAL INSTRUMENTS Filed May 28, 193'? /5 ans FIHEL INS TQUME'NT T 8
  • This invention relates to protective systems and particularly to apparatus for protecting electrical measuring instruments from damage due to excessive and destructive voltages.
  • This invention is a protective device comprising a three-element gas-filled tube for short-circuiting an electrical instrument upon and in response to the impression of an excessive voltage thereto, 7
  • the device may include two three-element gas-filled tubes each connected in parallel with the instrument to be protected, both tubes being biased to prevent operation in response to normal voltages impressed thereon and so connected that one of the tubes responds to an excessive voltage in one direction and the other tube responds to an excessive voltage in the other direction.
  • Another feature of the invention is a threeelement ionic tube arranged to short-circuit an electrical instrument upon impression of an excessive voltage on the instrument, the grid of the tube being negatively biased to render the tube non-responsive to the maximum voltage normally impressed .on the instrument, a resistance being connected in series with the grid and the source of biasing potential to reduce the bias when a high frequency voltage is impressed across the instrument.
  • Another feature of the invention is the provision of an ionic device for short-circuiting an electrical instrument upon impression of an excessive voltage thereon and other circuit means responsive to the excessive voltage for disconnecting the instrument if the excessive voltage endures after the short-circuiting of the instrument.
  • the instrument to be protected is of the recording type in which case the instrument is protected from injury by excessive voltages by the break-down of the ionic device thereby immediately reducing the potential across the instrument; and, if the excessive voltage continues after the break-down oi the ionic device, the additional circuit means responds to the excessive voltage to open the circuit through the instrument and thereby prevent the instrument from recording the reduced voltage.
  • Fi 1 shows a line L and electrical instrument 20 and a protective circuit arrangement comprising an input transformer 9, gas-filled tube I ll, relays H and I5, and gas-filled rectifier tubes 2
  • Fig. 2 shows gas-filled tubes 3
  • the electrical instrument 20 which may be a thermocouple, a recording oscillograph, or other electrical instrument, is connected in series with resistor I8, the back contact of relay I5 and resistor l9, across the conductors l and 8 of line L for operation by the differences in potential normally impressed across these conductors.
  • the transformer 9 has a high impedance; and the potential induced in its right winding by normal potentials impressed on line L is not suflicient to cause ionization of the gas in tube In, which tube is of the three-element cold-cathode type.
  • and 25 is connected to the line L in parallel with the instrument 20. These tubes, 2
  • is connected through an impedance element, resistor Hi, to conductor 1 of line L, the cathode is connected directly to conductor 8, and the grid or controlelement of tube 2
  • the plate of tube 25 is connected directly to conductor 8, the cathode is connected through resistor l8 to conductor 1, and the control element of tube 25 is connected through'impedance 26, biasing battery 21, and resister i8 to conductor 1.
  • the biasing batteries 23 and 21 are poled to make the grid of each of tubes 2
  • the line voltage at which break-down of the tubes will ,occur may be further con-trolled by inserting biasing batteries 29 and 30 in the conductors which connect to the plate oranode elements.
  • the provision of a '7-volt positive anode bias will enable break-downwhen the voltage impressed on the instrument exceeds 16 volts. 11, however, the maximum difference in potential to which instrument 20 is normally subjected is greater than 23 volts, for instance 30 volts, the provision of a 7-volt negative anode bias will prevent breakdown until the voltage impressed on the instrument exceeds 30 volts.
  • the desired control can be secured by a small negative grid bias instead of the 7-volt negative anode bias.
  • a combination of anode bias and grid bias may be used.
  • l are poled in the drawing to illustrate the provision of a negative anode bias.
  • the voltage across conductors I and 8 When the voltage across conductors I and 8 reaches the tripping point and break-down of one or both of the tubes 2
  • the opening-of the circuit through instrument 20 occurs a very short interval or time, for instance four-thousandths of a second, after tube l0 breaks down, but the instrument 20 might be damaged during this interval except for the shunting of the instrument by the break-down of tube 2
  • relay operates and with register l6 operated, the winding of relay II and the current path through tube
  • Relay continues to operate the release as long as an excessive voltage exists across conductors i and 8 but relay l5 and register I6 remain operated; but when the voltage across these conductors drops below that necessary for breakdown of tube ID, the tube is deenergized and the release of relay causes the release of relay I5 and register IS.
  • the register I5 records the number of times that an excessive potential occurs across the line L; and relay l5, by opening the circuit through instrument 20, prevents this instrument from falsely recording the voltage across tube 2
  • and 35 shown in Fig. 2 are of the mercury-vapor type each having a filamentcathode connected to a winding of a power transformer.
  • each of these tubes has two anodes and is adapted for use as a full wave rectifier
  • the two anodes of each tube are connected together and each of the tubes is operated as a halfwave rectifier.
  • the electrostatic capacity between the elements acts as a shunt on the line but is so small as to be negligible.
  • and the biasing battery 31 connected between this conductor and the anodes of tube 35 are of such a polarity as to oppose break-down and of such a voltage as to permit break-down of the tubes at the minimum difference in potential across line L against which it is necessary to protect instrument 2!].
  • the apparatus to be protected must be able to withstand a l6-volt peak in excess of the normal working voltage.
  • a line an electrical recording instrument connected to said line, an ionic tube connected in parallel with said instrument, means for biasing said tube to render it non-conductive while the impressed difference in potential across said instrument is less than a certain value, and circuit means responsive to an impressed difierence in potential of said certain value for opening the circuit path through the instrument.
  • a line an electrical instrument connected to said line for response to normal operating voltages impressed on said line, and means for protecting said instrument against excessive voltages, said means comprising a three-element gas-filled tube, the anode and cathode of said tube being connected in parallel with said instrument, meansfor negatively biasing the grid element of said tube to render it nonconductive to normal operating voltages, and a resistor connected in series with the anode and cathode for limiting the current through said tube.
  • a line an electrical recording instrument connected to said line, a rectifier connected in parallel with said instrument, said rectifier being effective to shunt said instrument upon the occurrence of a voltage across said line in excess of the maximum normal operating voltage, a resistor connected in series with the rectifier for limiting the current through said rectifier, and circuit means responsive to an excessive voltage being impressed on said line for opening the circuit path through said instrument.
  • a line an electrical instrument connected to said line, and means for protecting said instrument against excessive voltages impressed upon said line, said means comprising a three-element gas-filled tube, the anode and cathode of said tube being connected in parallel with said instrument, and a source of potential for negatively biasing the grid oi said tube to render it non-conductive to normal operating voltages impressed upon said line, and a resistor connected in series with said source of potential.
  • a line an electrical instrument connected to said line for response to voltages normally impressed uponsaid line, and means for protecting said instrument against excessive voltages impressed upon said line, said means comprising a three-element gas-filled tube, the anode and cathode of said tube being connected in parallel with said instrument, a source of potential for negatively biasing the grid of said tube to render it non-conductive to normal operating voltages impressed upon said line, and a source of potential connected in the anodecathode circuit path for controlling the dinerence in potential necessary to render the tube conductive.
  • an electrical circuit an electrical recording instrument connected to said circuit, means comprising a three-element rectifierconnected in parallel with said instrument for shunting said instrument responsive to the impression of a voltage in excess of a certain value on said circuit, and means comprising a three-element gas-filled tube coupled to said circuit and a relay controlled by said tube for opening the circuit path through said instrument in response to the impression of a voltage on said circuit in excess of said certain value.
  • an electrical circuit a recording instrument connected to said circuit, means comprising two three-element rectifiers connected to said circuit in opposite relation and each in parallel with said instrument for shunting said instrument responsive to the applica tion of a voltage in excess of a certain value to said circuit, and means comprising a three-element gas-filled tube coupled to said circuit and a relay controlled by said tube for opening the circuit path through said instrument in reponse to the application of a voltage to said circuit in excess of said certain value 10.
  • an electrical circuit an electrical instrument connected to said circuit, means comprising a three-element rectifier i'or shunting said instrument in response to the application of a voltage in excess of a certain value v to said circuit, means for negatively biasing the grid of said rectifier, a resistor connected in series with the grid element of said rectifier, said resistor being efiective upon application of high frequency surges to said circuit to decrease the grid bias, and means comprising a gas-filled triode for opening the circuit path through said instrument in response to the application of a voltage in excess of said certain value to said circuit.
  • a circuit a recording instrument connected to said circuit for recording the voltage impressed thereon, a gas-filled triode connected to said circuit in parallel with said instrument, said triode being eflective only upon impression of an excessive voltage on said circuit to shunt said instrument to protect it from injury, a resistance in series with the instrument and the triode for reducing the voltage across the instrument while said triode is shunting the instrument, and means for preventing the instrument from recording the voltage while the instrument is shunted by said triode, said means comprising a three-element gas-filled tube coupled to said circuit and a relay controlled by said tube for opening the circuit through the instrument, said tube and relay being operatively responsive to said excessive voltage.
  • a line an electrical recording instrument connected to said line, means comprising a gas-filled tube operatively responsive to the application of an excessive voltage to said line for opening the connection between said line and instrument, and means comprising a gas-filled tube instantaneously responsive to the application of an excessive voltaa'e to said line for shunting said instrument to protect the instrument against damage prior to the opening of the connection between said line and instrument.

Description

0d. 22, 1940. sw 2,218,629
PROTECTIVE DEVICE FOR ELECTRICAL INSTRUMENTS Filed May 28, 193'? /5 ans FIHEL INS TQUME'NT T 8 PROTECTED lNl/ENTOR L. K. SWART BY PM; Oct 22, 1940 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE PROTECTIVE DEVICE FOEEIECTBICAL INSTRUDIENTS New York, N.
Y., a corporation of New York Application May as, 1937, Serial No. 145,395
12 Claims.
This invention relates to protective systems and particularly to apparatus for protecting electrical measuring instruments from damage due to excessive and destructive voltages.
It is the object of the invention to improve the reliability and efficacy of protective devices used to protect electrical instruments from damage by potentials in excess of those which the instrument is designed to withstand.
This invention is a protective device comprising a three-element gas-filled tube for short-circuiting an electrical instrument upon and in response to the impression of an excessive voltage thereto, 7
the grid of the tube being negatively biased to render it non-responsive to the maximum voltage normally impressed upon the instrument. Features of the invention are the provision of current limiting means in series with the anode and cathode for limiting the current through the tube and the provision of anode-cathode bias in addition to the grid bias for controlling the difference in potential necessary to render the tube conductive. The device may include two three-element gas-filled tubes each connected in parallel with the instrument to be protected, both tubes being biased to prevent operation in response to normal voltages impressed thereon and so connected that one of the tubes responds to an excessive voltage in one direction and the other tube responds to an excessive voltage in the other direction.
Another feature of the invention is a threeelement ionic tube arranged to short-circuit an electrical instrument upon impression of an excessive voltage on the instrument, the grid of the tube being negatively biased to render the tube non-responsive to the maximum voltage normally impressed .on the instrument, a resistance being connected in series with the grid and the source of biasing potential to reduce the bias when a high frequency voltage is impressed across the instrument.
Another feature of the invention is the provision of an ionic device for short-circuiting an electrical instrument upon impression of an excessive voltage thereon and other circuit means responsive to the excessive voltage for disconnecting the instrument if the excessive voltage endures after the short-circuiting of the instrument. Such an arrangement is of particular utility where the instrument to be protected is of the recording type in which case the instrument is protected from injury by excessive voltages by the break-down of the ionic device thereby immediately reducing the potential across the instrument; and, if the excessive voltage continues after the break-down oi the ionic device, the additional circuit means responds to the excessive voltage to open the circuit through the instrument and thereby prevent the instrument from recording the reduced voltage.
The drawing which forms a part of this specification shows, schematically, circuit arrangements embodying the features of this invention. The invention is, of course, not limited in its application to the particular arrangements shown.
Referring to the drawing:
Fi 1 shows a line L and electrical instrument 20 and a protective circuit arrangement comprising an input transformer 9, gas-filled tube I ll, relays H and I5, and gas-filled rectifier tubes 2| and 25;
Fig. 2 shows gas-filled tubes 3| and connected for use in place of tubes 2| and 25 in Fig. 1.
The electrical instrument 20, which may be a thermocouple, a recording oscillograph, or other electrical instrument, is connected in series with resistor I8, the back contact of relay I5 and resistor l9, across the conductors l and 8 of line L for operation by the differences in potential normally impressed across these conductors. The transformer 9 has a high impedance; and the potential induced in its right winding by normal potentials impressed on line L is not suflicient to cause ionization of the gas in tube In, which tube is of the three-element cold-cathode type. Each of the gas-filled tubes 2| and 25 is connected to the line L in parallel with the instrument 20. These tubes, 2| and 25, are of the three-element hot-cathode type. heated by current through its heater winding and the secondary winding 24 of a power transformer; and the cathode of tube 25 is heated by current through its heater winding and the secondary winding 28 of another power transformer. The plate or anode of tube 2| is connected through an impedance element, resistor Hi, to conductor 1 of line L, the cathode is connected directly to conductor 8, and the grid or controlelement of tube 2| is connected through impedance 22 and biasing battery 23 to conductor 8. The plate of tube 25 is connected directly to conductor 8, the cathode is connected through resistor l8 to conductor 1, and the control element of tube 25 is connected through'impedance 26, biasing battery 21, and resister i8 to conductor 1. The biasing batteries 23 and 21 are poled to make the grid of each of tubes 2| and 25 negative with respect to the cathode and are of such a voltage as to permit break-down of the tubes only when the voltage The cathode of tube 2| is impressed on the instrument exceeds that which may be safely applied to the instrument. The line voltage at which break-down of the tubes will ,occur may be further con-trolled by inserting biasing batteries 29 and 30 in the conductors which connect to the plate oranode elements. The
amount and characterof the anode bias required,
depends upon the character and constants of the tubes and the minimum voltage at which protection of the instrument is required. For instance, if the voltage required for operation of tubes 2| and 25 with no anode bias is 23 volts, and the maximum diiference in potential to which the instrument 20 is normally subjected is 16 volts, the provision of a '7-volt positive anode bias will enable break-downwhen the voltage impressed on the instrument exceeds 16 volts. 11, however, the maximum difference in potential to which instrument 20 is normally subjected is greater than 23 volts, for instance 30 volts, the provision of a 7-volt negative anode bias will prevent breakdown until the voltage impressed on the instrument exceeds 30 volts. In the latter case the desired control can be secured by a small negative grid bias instead of the 7-volt negative anode bias. Or, if desired, a combination of anode bias and grid bias may be used. The batteries 29 and 3|l are poled in the drawing to illustrate the provision of a negative anode bias. When a difi'erence in potential of constant polarity and equal to or in excess of the break-down value is impressed across conductors and 8, tube 2| breaks down if the difirence in potential is in one direction and tube 25 breaks down if the difference inpotential is in the other direction. If the excessive diiference in potential is alternating in character, tube 2| breaks down on one-half cycle, and tube 25 breaks down on the other half cycle. When the voltage across conductors I and 8 reaches the tripping point and break-down of one or both of the tubes 2| and 25 occurs, the voltage across the tubes and therefore across the instrument is reduced to a constant value, for instance 16 volts; the strength of current through the tube varies with the line voltage and the drop in potential through resistor I8 is equal to the diflerence between this line voltage and the constant drop in potential through the tube or tubes. As soon as the line voltage drops below the sustaining voltage of 16 volts, the tube restores and is nonconductive until the next occurrence of a potential difference sufficient to cause break down.
There is, of course, some electrostatic capacity between the anode and grid of each'of tubes 2| and 25 but the impedance is so high that the current therethrough at normal voltages is negligible. If, however, an excessive alternating current potential occurs and the frequency is high, the drop in potential through impedance 22 or 25, due to the plate-grid current, decreases the negative bias on the grid and the break-down of the tube is thereby accelerated. The-tubes will, of course, operate to protect the instrument 2|! if the impedances 22 and 26 are omitted.
Upon the occurrence of a voltage equal to or greater than that which is effective to break down tube 2| or tube 25, the difference in potential induced in the secondary winding oftransformer 9 between the anode element of tube Illand the one or the other of the cathode elements is sufiicient to ionize the gas in tube l and the resulting current through the windings of relays H and I5 is effective to operate these relays. The operation of relay H is delayed slightly during the charging of condenser i2. Relay |5opens the circuit through instrument 20 and closes a circuit through register IS. The opening-of the circuit through instrument 20 occurs a very short interval or time, for instance four-thousandths of a second, after tube l0 breaks down, but the instrument 20 might be damaged during this interval except for the shunting of the instrument by the break-down of tube 2| or tube 25. When relay operates and with register l6 operated, the winding of relay II and the current path through tube ||l are shunted by a circuit path through resistor 13 and the contacts of relay II and register l6. This shunt is effective to cause the release of relay II and to deionize tube ID. If an excessive potential still exists across conductors and 8 the tube is immediately reenergized and after the charging of condenser l2, relay reoperates. Relay continues to operate the release as long as an excessive voltage exists across conductors i and 8 but relay l5 and register I6 remain operated; but when the voltage across these conductors drops below that necessary for breakdown of tube ID, the tube is deenergized and the release of relay causes the release of relay I5 and register IS. The register I5 records the number of times that an excessive potential occurs across the line L; and relay l5, by opening the circuit through instrument 20, prevents this instrument from falsely recording the voltage across tube 2| or tube 25 after break down and during the continued energization of these tubes is being the voltage then existing across the line The tubes 3| and 35 shown in Fig. 2 are of the mercury-vapor type each having a filamentcathode connected to a winding of a power transformer. While each of these tubes has two anodes and is adapted for use as a full wave rectifier, the two anodes of each tube are connected together and each of the tubes is operated as a halfwave rectifier. The electrostatic capacity between the elements acts as a shunt on the line but is so small as to be negligible. The biasing battery 33 connected between conductor 8 and the cathode of tube 3| and the biasing battery 31 connected between this conductor and the anodes of tube 35 are of such a polarity as to oppose break-down and of such a voltage as to permit break-down of the tubes at the minimum difference in potential across line L against which it is necessary to protect instrument 2!]. For instance, if the normal line voltage is two volts, two-volt biasing batteries are provided and breakdown of the tubes occurs when the voltage applied to the tubes exceeds two volts. The current through the tubes does not become very large until the applied voltage reaches about 18 volts at which time the drop in potential through the tube is 16 volts and this drop in potential does not increase if the applied voltage is further increased, the resistor |8 being efiective to limit the current to prevent damage to the tubes. With this arrangement the apparatus to be protected must be able to withstand a l6-volt peak in excess of the normal working voltage.
What is claimed is:
1. In combination, an electrical circuit, an electrical recording instrument connected to said circuit, a rectifier connected in parallel with said instrument, said rectifier being effective to shunt said instrument upon the occurrence of an excessive voltage in said circuit, and circuit means responsive to said excessive voltage for opening the circuit path through the instrument.
2. In an electrical system, a line, an electrical recording instrument connected to said line, an ionic tube connected in parallel with said instrument, means for biasing said tube to render it non-conductive while the impressed difference in potential across said instrument is less than a certain value, and circuit means responsive to an impressed difierence in potential of said certain value for opening the circuit path through the instrument.
3. In an electrical system, a line, an electrical instrument connected to said line for response to normal operating voltages impressed on said line, and means for protecting said instrument against excessive voltages, said means comprising a three-element gas-filled tube, the anode and cathode of said tube being connected in parallel with said instrument, meansfor negatively biasing the grid element of said tube to render it nonconductive to normal operating voltages, and a resistor connected in series with the anode and cathode for limiting the current through said tube.
4. In an electrical system, a line, an electrical recording instrument connected to said line, a rectifier connected in parallel with said instrument, said rectifier being effective to shunt said instrument upon the occurrence of a voltage across said line in excess of the maximum normal operating voltage, a resistor connected in series with the rectifier for limiting the current through said rectifier, and circuit means responsive to an excessive voltage being impressed on said line for opening the circuit path through said instrument.
5. In an electrical system, a line, an electrical instrument connected to said line, and means for protecting said instrument against excessive voltages impressed upon said line, said means comprising a three-element gas-filled tube, the anode and cathode of said tube being connected in parallel with said instrument, and a source of potential for negatively biasing the grid oi said tube to render it non-conductive to normal operating voltages impressed upon said line, and a resistor connected in series with said source of potential.
6. In an electrical system, a line, an electrical instrument connected to said line for response to voltages normally impressed uponsaid line, and means for protecting said instrument against excessive voltages impressed upon said line, said means comprising a three-element gas-filled tube, the anode and cathode of said tube being connected in parallel with said instrument, a source of potential for negatively biasing the grid of said tube to render it non-conductive to normal operating voltages impressed upon said line, and a source of potential connected in the anodecathode circuit path for controlling the dinerence in potential necessary to render the tube conductive.
7. In combination, an electrical circuit, an electrical recording instrument connected to said circuit, means for shunting said instrument, said means being operatively responsive to the impression of a voltage in excess of a certain value on said circuit, and means responsive to the impreesionoiavoltageinexcessoisaidcertain value ior opening the circuit through the instrument to prevent the making oi a false record after the instrument is shunted.
8. In combination, an electrical circuit, an electrical recording instrument connected to said circuit, means comprising a three-element rectifierconnected in parallel with said instrument for shunting said instrument responsive to the impression of a voltage in excess of a certain value on said circuit, and means comprising a three-element gas-filled tube coupled to said circuit and a relay controlled by said tube for opening the circuit path through said instrument in response to the impression of a voltage on said circuit in excess of said certain value.
9. In combination, an electrical circuit, a recording instrument connected to said circuit, means comprising two three-element rectifiers connected to said circuit in opposite relation and each in parallel with said instrument for shunting said instrument responsive to the applica tion of a voltage in excess of a certain value to said circuit, and means comprising a three-element gas-filled tube coupled to said circuit and a relay controlled by said tube for opening the circuit path through said instrument in reponse to the application of a voltage to said circuit in excess of said certain value 10. In combination, an electrical circuit, an electrical instrument connected to said circuit, means comprising a three-element rectifier i'or shunting said instrument in response to the application of a voltage in excess of a certain value v to said circuit, means for negatively biasing the grid of said rectifier, a resistor connected in series with the grid element of said rectifier, said resistor being efiective upon application of high frequency surges to said circuit to decrease the grid bias, and means comprising a gas-filled triode for opening the circuit path through said instrument in response to the application of a voltage in excess of said certain value to said circuit.
11. In combination, a circuit, a recording instrument connected to said circuit for recording the voltage impressed thereon, a gas-filled triode connected to said circuit in parallel with said instrument, said triode being eflective only upon impression of an excessive voltage on said circuit to shunt said instrument to protect it from injury, a resistance in series with the instrument and the triode for reducing the voltage across the instrument while said triode is shunting the instrument, and means for preventing the instrument from recording the voltage while the instrument is shunted by said triode, said means comprising a three-element gas-filled tube coupled to said circuit and a relay controlled by said tube for opening the circuit through the instrument, said tube and relay being operatively responsive to said excessive voltage.
12. In an electrical system, a line, an electrical recording instrument connected to said line, means comprising a gas-filled tube operatively responsive to the application of an excessive voltage to said line for opening the connection between said line and instrument, and means comprising a gas-filled tube instantaneously responsive to the application of an excessive voltaa'e to said line for shunting said instrument to protect the instrument against damage prior to the opening of the connection between said line and instrument.
Li -LAND K. BWAR'I.
US145395A 1937-05-28 1937-05-28 Protective device for electrical instruments Expired - Lifetime US2218629A (en)

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Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2459186A (en) * 1943-07-19 1949-01-18 Sherman Ralph Testing and protection of electrical distribution systems
US2488168A (en) * 1945-10-15 1949-11-15 Gen Electric X Ray Corp Protective equipment
US2497918A (en) * 1945-09-21 1950-02-21 Edward C Taylor Current-control apparatus for potential-measuring apparatus
US2509027A (en) * 1948-12-24 1950-05-23 Gen Electric Overload protection for meters
US2516756A (en) * 1948-11-16 1950-07-25 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Meter protection circuit
US2519295A (en) * 1944-11-15 1950-08-15 Remco Electronic Inc Peak-to-peak detector
US2530184A (en) * 1944-01-19 1950-11-14 Curtiss Wright Corp Strain measuring instrument
US2583130A (en) * 1947-12-06 1952-01-22 Jerome Wrolson Ohm measuring instrument
US2665395A (en) * 1950-11-18 1954-01-05 Albert E Feinberg Measuring circuit
US2701965A (en) * 1946-12-31 1955-02-15 Sherman Alex Maintenance of conductivity in electrical distribution systems

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2459186A (en) * 1943-07-19 1949-01-18 Sherman Ralph Testing and protection of electrical distribution systems
US2530184A (en) * 1944-01-19 1950-11-14 Curtiss Wright Corp Strain measuring instrument
US2519295A (en) * 1944-11-15 1950-08-15 Remco Electronic Inc Peak-to-peak detector
US2497918A (en) * 1945-09-21 1950-02-21 Edward C Taylor Current-control apparatus for potential-measuring apparatus
US2488168A (en) * 1945-10-15 1949-11-15 Gen Electric X Ray Corp Protective equipment
US2701965A (en) * 1946-12-31 1955-02-15 Sherman Alex Maintenance of conductivity in electrical distribution systems
US2583130A (en) * 1947-12-06 1952-01-22 Jerome Wrolson Ohm measuring instrument
US2516756A (en) * 1948-11-16 1950-07-25 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Meter protection circuit
US2509027A (en) * 1948-12-24 1950-05-23 Gen Electric Overload protection for meters
US2665395A (en) * 1950-11-18 1954-01-05 Albert E Feinberg Measuring circuit

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