US1691330A - Insulator - Google Patents

Insulator Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1691330A
US1691330A US197976A US19797627A US1691330A US 1691330 A US1691330 A US 1691330A US 197976 A US197976 A US 197976A US 19797627 A US19797627 A US 19797627A US 1691330 A US1691330 A US 1691330A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
insulator
string
flange
insulators
supplemental
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US197976A
Inventor
Arthur O Austin
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Ohio Brass Co
Original Assignee
Ohio Brass Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Ohio Brass Co filed Critical Ohio Brass Co
Priority to US197976A priority Critical patent/US1691330A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1691330A publication Critical patent/US1691330A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01BCABLES; CONDUCTORS; INSULATORS; SELECTION OF MATERIALS FOR THEIR CONDUCTIVE, INSULATING OR DIELECTRIC PROPERTIES
    • H01B17/00Insulators or insulating bodies characterised by their form
    • H01B17/42Means for obtaining improved distribution of voltage; Protection against arc discharges

Definitions

  • the insulators of smaller diameter will be largely protected and kept clean so that there will be'less danger of arcover, eitherfrom falling material or from accumulations of conducting material. "By thus maintaining. the normal insulation of the small members, there is less danger of arcover under severe fog or storm conditions.
  • the large members inthe string may be so designed that they willrnot carry undue stress by properlyregulating their electrostatic capacity, surface resistance,and section length. The same result for protection from falling I with a possible resulting are.
  • trough or retarding or dlrectlng means may I v g r v 1,691,330
  • the protecting flange may be in the form of a separate ring and attached to the insulator coupling or to the insulating flange by suitable means.
  • the protecting ring may have a trough or depression to prevent a stream of conducting material falling rapidly The same be used Where the large hood or flange is an integral part of the insulating member.
  • This invention relates to electric 1n'sula-- flanges are integral with the string they tend to keep the are away from the smaller members in case of a flashover.
  • the numeral 10 designates a supporting member, such as an I-beam of a high tension line tower. Suspended from the member 10 is a string of insulators 11 having flanges or petticoats 12 otusual form. The uppermost insulator 13 of the string is provided with a flange i i of larger diameter the top of the string aflords suflicient protection tor the entire string.
  • the string in this instance is shown as carrying a high tension line 17 supported by a saddle member 18 suspended from the lowermost insulator.
  • the insulator 13 is provided with a separate flange member 1 L made to fit over a restricted portion of the insulator,'such as the cap, and rest on a rib 2O commonly provided at the lower edge of the cap.
  • the flange member 1% is turned up at its edges to provide a gutter 21 for retaining any material deposited on the flange and preventing such material from falling in a stream from the edge of the flange at one time.
  • a flange member 22 is provided which is shaped to rest upon the insulator petticoat 12 instead of the supporting cap. Where the flanges are made detachable or separate they may be readily attached to lines already installed without the necessity of replacing one of the insulator units. As shown in the drawing, the separate flange members 14 and 22 have otiset reinforcing ribs extending about their central openings.
  • I claim Y 1 The combination with a series string of detachably connected insulators, each having an upper approximatel cylindrical restricted portion and a re ially projecting flange, of supplemental flanges of dielectric material, each having a diameter greater than the maximum diameter of said insulators, said supplemental flanges each having an opening therethrough of a size to receive the upper restricted portion of one of said insulators to permit the supplemental flange to rest on the flange-of the insulator and support said supplemental flange on said insulator, said supplemental flanges each having a retaining groove in theupper face thereof adjacent to the outer edge of said supplemental flan e and having a reinforcement extending about the periphery of the opening through the supplemental flange, one of said supplemental flanges being carried on the uppermost insulator of the string and another of said supplemental flanges being carried on an insulator between the ends of the string, the intervening insulators of the string being without supplemental f

Description

Nov. 13, 1928. 1,691,330
A. O. AUSTIN INSULATOR Original Filed April 6. 1921 fvei/or? alinement, as is the usual arrangement. yB'y;
" 'subautute;m a ncmon seml 1C0. asaosafn-ieaapru 6,1921. w 8efla1'NoJ197876.
l v particularly Patented Nov. 13,, 1928; l L
r smemmsrmm onto, assieudafny'ivmsnu teammates; "ro irnn omo muss-commas; or mansrmnn, c1110, A 'conr oim'rion JERSEY.
- This application is a substitute for my abandoned application, Serial Number 459 '063,filed=April6,1921. r. i
tors, and es aeei ally to suspension insulators in :series,' and has for 1 one: of itsobjectsthe I. protection of such i'nsu'lators from for.- eign 'matter which occasionally causes injurious-andde'structive arcing, e r I A "further object 'is to provide mechanism oftheclass named which shall be'of improved constructionand operation.
.. The invention islexemphfied in the "com-v bination and arrangement of parts shown in the accompanying :drawing and describedin the following specification,.-andit is more out in the appended pointed claims. -In -the draWingI Y Fig. l iSflIl BlGVBllOll of a series of insulators showing one 1 embodiment of the pres-- ent inventionyand A fieation. e p I In insulatorpracticeiit sometimeshappens that falling matter, suclr as adroppings from birds, will strike a string of insulators and running from the edge of the uppermost insulator of the string will, form flipfltll' from one "insulator toanother in the string, cause ingaanundesirable and "injurious are. o, Foreign matters accumulating on the uppermost insulator will sometimes wash off in rain and form a stream connecting theedgesofi the insulators where theedges are in substantial placing insulator members'having large'diameters tatidiflerent-lpoints in the string a stream of conducting material which will T permit an arc to form, may be broken'up and the are prevented. The insulators of smaller diameter will be largely protected and kept clean so that there will be'less danger of arcover, eitherfrom falling material or from accumulations of conducting material. "By thus maintaining. the normal insulation of the small members, there is less danger of arcover under severe fog or storm conditions. The large members inthe string may be so designed that they willrnot carry undue stress by properlyregulating their electrostatic capacity, surface resistance,and section length. The same result for protection from falling I with a possible resulting are.
trough or retarding or dlrectlng means may I v g r v 1,691,330
w f 1 T insULA'roR- material may =be'obtainedby placing a large.
metal hood at the top of a string on by-attachthe string, or to theinsulating flanges. This, however may ben1ore eXpensiVe,'or if the metal slneldsare cheaply made'theywillde' teriorate in a few years and'cause trouble by-coming loose. "lheipresence of a metal or conducting hood} tends to take I the electrical stress off the members at the upper part ofthe string; sincethemembers at the upperpart of thestring ordinarilyhave a lower stless c the protecting i covering for the upp'er lpart F lg. 2' is a" vertical sectional view of amod1- the string Without disturbing the electrical gradient as woulclbe the caseavith 'a meta-l shield. NVhere' it is desired to'obtain the advantage of the large protecting hood'and Where its insulating properties as-an integral member of theregular-insulating flangelisnot' desirable, the protecting flange may be in the form of a separate ring and attached to the insulator coupling or to the insulating flange by suitable means. The protecting ring may have a trough or depression to prevent a stream of conducting material falling rapidly The same be used Where the large hood or flange is an integral part of the insulating member. By placing a small insulating member on the tower side of the large protecting hood This applicationnled uune 10, ran.
p y ing-hoods' orflanges at dili'erent points'in This invention relates to electric 1n'sula-- flanges are integral with the string they tend to keep the are away from the smaller members in case of a flashover.
In the drawing, the numeral 10 designates a supporting member, such as an I-beam of a high tension line tower. Suspended from the member 10 is a string of insulators 11 having flanges or petticoats 12 otusual form. The uppermost insulator 13 of the string is provided with a flange i i of larger diameter the top of the string aflords suflicient protection tor the entire string. The string in this instance is shown as carrying a high tension line 17 supported by a saddle member 18 suspended from the lowermost insulator.
The insulator 13 is provided with a separate flange member 1 L made to fit over a restricted portion of the insulator,'such as the cap, and rest on a rib 2O commonly provided at the lower edge of the cap. The flange member 1% is turned up at its edges to provide a gutter 21 for retaining any material deposited on the flange and preventing such material from falling in a stream from the edge of the flange at one time.
In Fig. 2 a flange member 22 is provided which is shaped to rest upon the insulator petticoat 12 instead of the supporting cap. Where the flanges are made detachable or separate they may be readily attached to lines already installed without the necessity of replacing one of the insulator units. As shown in the drawing, the separate flange members 14 and 22 have otiset reinforcing ribs extending about their central openings.
I claim Y 1. The combination with a series string of detachably connected insulators, each having an upper approximatel cylindrical restricted portion and a re ially projecting flange, of supplemental flanges of dielectric material, each having a diameter greater than the maximum diameter of said insulators, said supplemental flanges each having an opening therethrough of a size to receive the upper restricted portion of one of said insulators to permit the supplemental flange to rest on the flange-of the insulator and support said supplemental flange on said insulator, said supplemental flanges each having a retaining groove in theupper face thereof adjacent to the outer edge of said supplemental flan e and having a reinforcement extending about the periphery of the opening through the supplemental flange, one of said supplemental flanges being carried on the uppermost insulator of the string and another of said supplemental flanges being carried on an insulator between the ends of the string, the intervening insulators of the string being without supplemental flanges.
2. The combination with a series strin of detachably connected insulators, each aving an upper approximately 0 lindrical re- .stricted portion and a radial y projecting flange of supplemental flanges of dielectric material, each having a diameter greater than the maximum diameter of said insulators, one of said supplemental flanges having an opening therethrough of a size to receive the upper restricted portion of one of said insulators, to permit the supplemental flange to rest on the flange of the insulator and support said supplemental flange on said insulator, said supplemental flange being carried on the uppermost insulator of the string and having a reinforcement extending about the periphery of the opening therethrough, another of said supplemental flanges being carried on an insulator between the ends of the string, the intervening insulators of the string being without sup lernental flanges.
In testimony whereoi I have signed my name to this specification on this 6th day of June, A. D. 1927.
ARTHUR o. AUSTIN.
US197976A 1927-06-10 1927-06-10 Insulator Expired - Lifetime US1691330A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US197976A US1691330A (en) 1927-06-10 1927-06-10 Insulator

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US197976A US1691330A (en) 1927-06-10 1927-06-10 Insulator

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1691330A true US1691330A (en) 1928-11-13

Family

ID=22731494

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US197976A Expired - Lifetime US1691330A (en) 1927-06-10 1927-06-10 Insulator

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1691330A (en)

Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2660113A (en) * 1946-11-27 1953-11-24 Ditto Inc Rotary offset duplicator
US2875265A (en) * 1954-12-30 1959-02-24 Ite Circuit Breaker Ltd Metal enclosed isolated phase bus structure
US2884479A (en) * 1956-02-07 1959-04-28 Lapp Insulator Company Inc Electrical insulators
DE1072669B (en) * 1960-01-07 Farbwerke Schroeder iS. Stadelmann Aktiengesellschaft, Oberlahnstein Rod insulator
US3848076A (en) * 1973-12-17 1974-11-12 H Greber Supplemental insulation with bypass impedance for electrical lines
DE2614760A1 (en) * 1975-04-07 1976-10-21 Central Electr Generat Board INSULATOR
US20040187433A1 (en) * 2000-12-26 2004-09-30 Barker James W. Method and arrangement for providing a gas-tight housing joint
US6831232B2 (en) 2002-06-16 2004-12-14 Scott Henricks Composite insulator
US6952154B2 (en) 2002-06-16 2005-10-04 Maclean-Fogg Company Composite insulator for fuse cutout
US7028998B2 (en) 2001-04-30 2006-04-18 Maclean-Fogg Company Stabilizer bar
US20090153286A1 (en) * 2007-12-14 2009-06-18 Maclean-Fogg Company Insulator for cutout switch and fuse assembly
US20120217052A1 (en) * 2009-08-21 2012-08-30 State Grid Corporation Of China Suspension Insulator and Suspension Insulator Group
US20180106846A1 (en) * 2016-10-18 2018-04-19 Sediver Sa Insulator for overhead power lines with a protected leakage currents detector

Cited By (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1072669B (en) * 1960-01-07 Farbwerke Schroeder iS. Stadelmann Aktiengesellschaft, Oberlahnstein Rod insulator
US2660113A (en) * 1946-11-27 1953-11-24 Ditto Inc Rotary offset duplicator
US2875265A (en) * 1954-12-30 1959-02-24 Ite Circuit Breaker Ltd Metal enclosed isolated phase bus structure
US2884479A (en) * 1956-02-07 1959-04-28 Lapp Insulator Company Inc Electrical insulators
US3848076A (en) * 1973-12-17 1974-11-12 H Greber Supplemental insulation with bypass impedance for electrical lines
DE2614760A1 (en) * 1975-04-07 1976-10-21 Central Electr Generat Board INSULATOR
FR2307352A1 (en) * 1975-04-07 1976-11-05 Central Electr Generat Board IMPROVEMENTS IN ELECTRICAL INSULATORS
US4053707A (en) * 1975-04-07 1977-10-11 Central Electricity Generating Board Method and apparatus for high voltage insulation
US7041913B2 (en) 2000-12-26 2006-05-09 Barker Jr James W Method and arrangement for providing a gas-tight housing joint
US20040187433A1 (en) * 2000-12-26 2004-09-30 Barker James W. Method and arrangement for providing a gas-tight housing joint
US7180004B2 (en) 2000-12-26 2007-02-20 Maclean-Fogg Company Method and arrangement for providing a gas-tight joint
US7028998B2 (en) 2001-04-30 2006-04-18 Maclean-Fogg Company Stabilizer bar
US6952154B2 (en) 2002-06-16 2005-10-04 Maclean-Fogg Company Composite insulator for fuse cutout
US6831232B2 (en) 2002-06-16 2004-12-14 Scott Henricks Composite insulator
US20090153286A1 (en) * 2007-12-14 2009-06-18 Maclean-Fogg Company Insulator for cutout switch and fuse assembly
US7646282B2 (en) 2007-12-14 2010-01-12 Jiri Pazdirek Insulator for cutout switch and fuse assembly
US20100102919A1 (en) * 2007-12-14 2010-04-29 Jiri Pazdirek Insulator for Cutout Switch and Fuse Assembly
US20120217052A1 (en) * 2009-08-21 2012-08-30 State Grid Corporation Of China Suspension Insulator and Suspension Insulator Group
US8912437B2 (en) * 2009-08-21 2014-12-16 Zibo Taiguang Electric Power Equipment Factory Suspension insulator and suspension insulator group
US20180106846A1 (en) * 2016-10-18 2018-04-19 Sediver Sa Insulator for overhead power lines with a protected leakage currents detector
US10274531B2 (en) * 2016-10-18 2019-04-30 Sediver Insulator for overhead power lines with a protected leakage currents detector

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1691330A (en) Insulator
BR112015026421A2 (en) multi-electrode corona ring arrester
US3296366A (en) Outdoor high tension insulator having long creepage path
US20190392965A1 (en) High-voltage insulator having an arc protection ring
US1880259A (en) Insulating device for high voltage lines
US2884479A (en) Electrical insulators
US2179297A (en) Porcelain-surface protection
US1725097A (en) Insulator structure
CN210896805U (en) Multi-chamber gap lightning arrester structure with external air gap
US1863080A (en) Protection of wood poles by an interrupted or shunt path
US1926871A (en) Fused grading shield
US1241528A (en) Insulator.
US1847421A (en) Transmission tower having insulating sections with protecting gaps or resistance
US1901572A (en) Transmission line device
US2036225A (en) Lightning guard for transmission lines
US1847460A (en) Means for increasing flash-over voltage and resistance between high tension conductors and ground
US1691329A (en) High-tension installation
US652861A (en) Overhead-wire lightning-protector.
US1811536A (en) Field control device
US1854459A (en) Insulator
US2007141A (en) Grading ring
US289449A (en) Assigxoe of oxe-half to
US1730169A (en) High-potential insulator structure
US1811530A (en) Insulating device
US1887181A (en) Transmission insulator