US2228440A - Bushing - Google Patents

Bushing Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2228440A
US2228440A US301430A US30143039A US2228440A US 2228440 A US2228440 A US 2228440A US 301430 A US301430 A US 301430A US 30143039 A US30143039 A US 30143039A US 2228440 A US2228440 A US 2228440A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
conductor
shell
bushing
cap
base
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
US301430A
Inventor
Leonard B Chubbuck
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.)
CBS Corp
Original Assignee
Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing 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 Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Co filed Critical Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Co
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2228440A publication Critical patent/US2228440A/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
    • H01B17/34Insulators containing liquid, e.g. oil

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to insulating bushings, particularly those for insulating the leads of high-tension electrical apparatus, and has particular reference to an improved closure cap for the exposed end of the bushing weathercasing.
  • Bushings of the type here involved usually comprise a substantially cylindrical shell of dielectric material, such as porcelain, through which extends the conducting lead or stud from electrical apparatus enclosed in an oil filled tank.
  • the bushing is suitably secured to such tank in fluid tight relation and the outer end thereof is provided with a hollow cap, or expansion chamher, having a terminal for connection to an external circuit.
  • both ends of the conductor are fixed in relation to the respective ends of the dielectric shell, and in view of the different coeflicients of thermal expansion of these elements, destructive forces will occur upon changes in ambient temperature.
  • Bushings of the type here contemplated may, by way of example, be of the type shown in the United States Patent No. 2,078,219, issued April 27, 1937 to G. A. Burr et al in which the conductor is surrounded by a wrapping of alternate layers of paper and conducting foil to constitute an insulator of the condenser type.
  • the wrapping is sufliciently thick adjacent the midpoint thereof that it is hermetically sealed in a mounting flange which will be secured about the opening in the tank of a circuit breaker or transformer.
  • a porcelain shell is supported at its lower end upon said mounting flange, and sealed thereto, and the upper end of the shell is closed by a cap having a terminal for connection to an external circuit.
  • the single flgure (Cl. ilk-l2) of which is a view in vertical section of a portion of a bushing embodying the invention, the conductor 2 extends through a porcelain shell or weather-casing 4 which may be provided with a plurality of creepage flanges 6 in a usual manner. It is to be understood that in the drawing only a portion of the upper section of the shell 4 is illustrated and the condenser wrapping starts below the cutoff portion of the conductor. It is to be understood, of course, that the invention is not limited to the condenser type of bushing which is referred to herein merely by way of example.
  • the shell 4 is surmounted by a cylinder 4 of transparent material such as glass gasketed or cemented as at III in a fluid-tight manner.
  • an insulating fluid i2 which may be oil or gum having the desired dielectric properties, fllls the casing around the conductor to-a point above the lower edge of the cylinder I whereby a visual indication of the height of such fluid is afforded.
  • the outer end of the cylinder 8 is provided with a cap i4 and the latter is surmounted by a terminal l4 for connection to an external circuit.
  • the cap comprises a relatively rigid metallic ring it having a depending peripheral lip designed to protect a asket 20.
  • the upper face of the ring it is provided with a plurality of upstanding lugs or projections 22 to constitute spaced seats for a stack of spring washers 24.
  • One or more washers 24 may be provided depending upon the degree of resiliency desired, and the projections 22 engage the underside adjacent to the outer periphery thereof.
  • a spacing member or sleeve 28 loosely surrounds the conductor 2 and is provided with a depending portion 24 at its lower end of approximately the same outer diameter as the internal diameter of the washers 24. This depending portion retains the washers 24 of the stack in proper superimposed relation upon the lugs 22.
  • the spacing member 28 is enlarged to form an annular shoulder designed to bear upon the face of the upper washer 24 adjacent to its inner periphery.
  • the enclosure member for the base It, spacer 26 and washers 24 comprise a flexible metal housing 28 which may be spun, pressed or otherwise formed.
  • spring washers 24 and spacer 28 are assembled in operative relationship and the sheet metal is then spun or otherwise fltted over these elements to the shape shown with upper and lower inwardly extending flanges extending respectively over the top of the spacer 24 and the bottom of the base If.
  • the lower flange is formed complementally to the under contour of the base and provides a seat for the cap upon the gasket 20.
  • the outer surface of the spacing member 26 is provided with a concave surface of revolution adjacent the upper end thereof and in the forming operation the housing 2!
  • the cap it may have soldered or otherwise suitably attached to it a threaded socket I2 for receiving one end of an arcing horn 34, and a filling plug 36 is also suitably secured to the wall of the cap I! as by soldering or brazing.
  • a filling plug 36 is also suitably secured to the wall of the cap I! as by soldering or brazing.
  • the bushing or add more liquid or gum thereto it is introduced through the normally closed filling plug 36 and, in view of the spaced lugs 22 on the base II, it then flows into the interior of the shell 4.
  • the interior of the cap serves as an expansion chamber and the spaced lugs afford free fluid access to the interior from the shell I.
  • a bushing for high-tension electrical apparatus including a cylindrical shell of dielectric material having a conductor extending therethrough, a cap for closing the end of said shell comprising a ring-shaped base, resilient means paratus including a cylindrical shell of dielectric material having a conductor extending therethrough, a cap for closing the other end of said shell comprising a ring-shaped base, resilient means disposed around said conductor and supported by said base, a member surrounding the conductor and engaging said resilient means, a flexible metal enclosure having a side wall portion formed to the contour of a portion of the side surface of said member and a portion formed to the contour of the side of said base with a lower flange extending between said base and the end face of said shell, an upper flange on said enclosure engaging and overlying a peripheral portion of said member, and means acting on said member through said upper flange to compress said resilient means to resiliently clamp said flanges in operative position.
  • a bushing including a cylindrical shell of dielectric material having a conductor extending therethrough, a cap for closing the other end of said shell comprising a rigid ring-shaped base, a gasket between said base and the end face of said shell, a spring washer surrounding said conductor supported adjacent its outer periphery on said base, a spacer member loosely surrounding said conductor and bearing at one end upon said spring washer adjacent to the inner periphery thereof, a terminal member threaded on said conductor to exert a force on said spacer member to deflect said spring washer a desired amount, and a flexible spun-metal enclosure having inturned upper and lower flanges disposed respectively between the top of said spacer and terminal member and between said base and said gasket.
  • a bushing for high-tension electrical apparatus including a cylindrical shell of dielectric material having a conductor extending therethrough, a cap for closing the other end of said shell comprising a rigid ring-shaped base, a
  • a bushing for high-tension electrical apparatus including a cylindrical shell of dielectric material having a conductor extending therethrough, a cap for closing the other end of said shell comprising a rigid ring-shaped base, a gasket between said base and the end face of said shell, a spring washer surrounding said conductor supported adjacent its outer periphery on said base, a spacer member loosely surrounding said conductor and bearing at one end upon said spring washer adjacent to the inner periphery thereof, a terminal member threaded on said conductor to exert a force on said spacer member to deflect said spring washer a desired amount, a flexible metal enclosure having internal upper and lower flanges disposed respectively between the top of said spacer and terminal member and between said base and said gasket, said spacer having a depending lower portion fitting the opening in said spring washer, and a longitudinally curved surface of revolution intermediate its ends. said enclosure being formed to closely embrace said surface.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Oil, Petroleum & Natural Gas (AREA)
  • Insulators (AREA)

Description

Jan. 14, 1941.
L B. CHUBBUCK BUSHING Filed Oct. 26, 1939 INVENTOR leonara fi C/Iubbucrd O Force/01h WITNESSES: d I
Patented Jan. 14, 1941 UNITED STATES BUSHING Leonard B. Chubbuck, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, asslgnor to Westinghouse Electric a Manufacturing Company, East Pittsburgh, Pa., a corporation of Pennsylvania Application October 26, 1939, Serial No. 301,430 In Canada September 20, 1939 Claims.
The present invention relates to insulating bushings, particularly those for insulating the leads of high-tension electrical apparatus, and has particular reference to an improved closure cap for the exposed end of the bushing weathercasing.
Bushings of the type here involved usually comprise a substantially cylindrical shell of dielectric material, such as porcelain, through which extends the conducting lead or stud from electrical apparatus enclosed in an oil filled tank. The bushing is suitably secured to such tank in fluid tight relation and the outer end thereof is provided with a hollow cap, or expansion chamher, having a terminal for connection to an external circuit. Usually both ends of the conductor are fixed in relation to the respective ends of the dielectric shell, and in view of the different coeflicients of thermal expansion of these elements, destructive forces will occur upon changes in ambient temperature. This usually may be taken care of by a resilient connection between the conductor and one end of the shell but in all expedients which have been found successful, the resulting construction becomes quite complicated because, principally, of the necessity of maintaining the interior of the shell fluid tight to prevent the entrance of air and moisture due to "breathing" of the bushing upon changes in ambient temperature.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved bushing cap construction which, although it meets the requirements of the somewhat rigorous conditions encountered in service, is unusually simple in construction and inexpensive to assemble.
Other objects of the invention will be apparent from the following description read in conjunction with the accompanying drawing in which the single figure is a view in vertical section of the upper portion of a bushing surmounted by a cap constructed in accordance with the present inventlon.
Bushings of the type here contemplated may, by way of example, be of the type shown in the United States Patent No. 2,078,219, issued April 27, 1937 to G. A. Burr et al in which the conductor is surrounded by a wrapping of alternate layers of paper and conducting foil to constitute an insulator of the condenser type. As disclosed in that patent, the wrapping is sufliciently thick adjacent the midpoint thereof that it is hermetically sealed in a mounting flange which will be secured about the opening in the tank of a circuit breaker or transformer. A porcelain shell is supported at its lower end upon said mounting flange, and sealed thereto, and the upper end of the shell is closed by a cap having a terminal for connection to an external circuit.
In the accompanying drawing, the single flgure (Cl. ilk-l2) of which is a view in vertical section of a portion of a bushing embodying the invention, the conductor 2 extends through a porcelain shell or weather-casing 4 which may be provided with a plurality of creepage flanges 6 in a usual manner. It is to be understood that in the drawing only a portion of the upper section of the shell 4 is illustrated and the condenser wrapping starts below the cutoff portion of the conductor. It is to be understood, of course, that the invention is not limited to the condenser type of bushing which is referred to herein merely by way of example.
The shell 4 is surmounted by a cylinder 4 of transparent material such as glass gasketed or cemented as at III in a fluid-tight manner.
Normally, an insulating fluid i2, which may be oil or gum having the desired dielectric properties, fllls the casing around the conductor to-a point above the lower edge of the cylinder I whereby a visual indication of the height of such fluid is afforded. The outer end of the cylinder 8 is provided with a cap i4 and the latter is surmounted by a terminal l4 for connection to an external circuit.
In the present embodiment the cap comprises a relatively rigid metallic ring it having a depending peripheral lip designed to protect a asket 20.
The upper face of the ring it is provided with a plurality of upstanding lugs or projections 22 to constitute spaced seats for a stack of spring washers 24. One or more washers 24 may be provided depending upon the degree of resiliency desired, and the projections 22 engage the underside adjacent to the outer periphery thereof.-
A spacing member or sleeve 28 loosely surrounds the conductor 2 and is provided with a depending portion 24 at its lower end of approximately the same outer diameter as the internal diameter of the washers 24. This depending portion retains the washers 24 of the stack in proper superimposed relation upon the lugs 22. The spacing member 28 is enlarged to form an annular shoulder designed to bear upon the face of the upper washer 24 adjacent to its inner periphery.
The enclosure member for the base It, spacer 26 and washers 24 comprise a flexible metal housing 28 which may be spun, pressed or otherwise formed. In assembling the housing 29, before the cap is placed upon the bushing the base It, spring washers 24 and spacer 28 are assembled in operative relationship and the sheet metal is then spun or otherwise fltted over these elements to the shape shown with upper and lower inwardly extending flanges extending respectively over the top of the spacer 24 and the bottom of the base If. The lower flange is formed complementally to the under contour of the base and provides a seat for the cap upon the gasket 20. It should also be noted that the outer surface of the spacing member 26 is provided with a concave surface of revolution adjacent the upper end thereof and in the forming operation the housing 2! is shaped to conform to and closely embrace such surface of revolution. These elements may then be placed upon the shell 4 with the gaskets 20 in position, an upper gasket It placed on top of the assembly and the terminal it screwed down along the conductor 2. In the screwing down operation the spring washers 24 are depressed a sufficient amount so that upon expansion of the conductor 2 relative to the shell I there will always be compression exerted upon the gaskets 20 and 30, as well as upon any other gaskets between the spring and the mounting flange of the bushing, throughout the temperature range encountered in service.
The cap it may have soldered or otherwise suitably attached to it a threaded socket I2 for receiving one end of an arcing horn 34, and a filling plug 36 is also suitably secured to the wall of the cap I! as by soldering or brazing. When it is necessary to flll the bushing or add more liquid or gum thereto, it is introduced through the normally closed filling plug 36 and, in view of the spaced lugs 22 on the base II, it then flows into the interior of the shell 4. Similarly, the interior of the cap serves as an expansion chamber and the spaced lugs afford free fluid access to the interior from the shell I. By using a sheetmetal cap enclosure in accordance with the invention, a substantial reduction in expense results with an attendant simplification of design and assembly problems. Further there are no seams or bolted joints with the accompanying possibility of leakage, and the possibility of electrostatic stresses of a character to cause interference with radio broadcast reception.
The construction described is unusually simple, but at the same time effective, and various modifications of the specific construction shown may be resorted to without departing from the spirit and scope of my invention.
I claim as my invention:
1. In a bushing for high-tension electrical apparatus including a cylindrical shell of dielectric material having a conductor extending therethrough, a cap for closing the end of said shell comprising a ring-shaped base, resilient means paratus including a cylindrical shell of dielectric material having a conductor extending therethrough, a cap for closing the other end of said shell comprising a ring-shaped base, resilient means disposed around said conductor and supported by said base, a member surrounding the conductor and engaging said resilient means, a flexible metal enclosure having a side wall portion formed to the contour of a portion of the side surface of said member and a portion formed to the contour of the side of said base with a lower flange extending between said base and the end face of said shell, an upper flange on said enclosure engaging and overlying a peripheral portion of said member, and means acting on said member through said upper flange to compress said resilient means to resiliently clamp said flanges in operative position.
3. In a bushing including a cylindrical shell of dielectric material having a conductor extending therethrough, a cap for closing the other end of said shell comprising a rigid ring-shaped base, a gasket between said base and the end face of said shell, a spring washer surrounding said conductor supported adjacent its outer periphery on said base, a spacer member loosely surrounding said conductor and bearing at one end upon said spring washer adjacent to the inner periphery thereof, a terminal member threaded on said conductor to exert a force on said spacer member to deflect said spring washer a desired amount, and a flexible spun-metal enclosure having inturned upper and lower flanges disposed respectively between the top of said spacer and terminal member and between said base and said gasket.
4. In a bushing for high-tension electrical apparatus including a cylindrical shell of dielectric material having a conductor extending therethrough, a cap for closing the other end of said shell comprising a rigid ring-shaped base, a
gasket between said base and the end face of said shell, a spring washer surrounding said conductor supported adjacent its outer periphery on said base, a spacer member loosely surrounding said conductor and bearing at one end upon said spring washer adJacent to the inner periphery thereof, a terminal member threaded on said conductor to exert a force on said spacer member to deflect said spring washer a desired amount. and a flexible metal enclosure having inturned upper and lower flanges disposed respectively between the top of said spacer and terminal member and between said base and said gasket, said spacer having a depending lower portion fitting the opening in said spring washer.
5. In a bushing for high-tension electrical apparatus including a cylindrical shell of dielectric material having a conductor extending therethrough, a cap for closing the other end of said shell comprising a rigid ring-shaped base, a gasket between said base and the end face of said shell, a spring washer surrounding said conductor supported adjacent its outer periphery on said base, a spacer member loosely surrounding said conductor and bearing at one end upon said spring washer adjacent to the inner periphery thereof, a terminal member threaded on said conductor to exert a force on said spacer member to deflect said spring washer a desired amount, a flexible metal enclosure having internal upper and lower flanges disposed respectively between the top of said spacer and terminal member and between said base and said gasket, said spacer having a depending lower portion fitting the opening in said spring washer, and a longitudinally curved surface of revolution intermediate its ends. said enclosure being formed to closely embrace said surface.
LEONARD B. CHUBBUCK.
US301430A 1939-09-20 1939-10-26 Bushing Expired - Lifetime US2228440A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA2228440X 1939-09-20

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2228440A true US2228440A (en) 1941-01-14

Family

ID=4175503

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US301430A Expired - Lifetime US2228440A (en) 1939-09-20 1939-10-26 Bushing

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2228440A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3029410A (en) * 1958-07-28 1962-04-10 Penn Union Electric Corp Transformer connector
US3041574A (en) * 1958-07-28 1962-06-26 Penn Union Electric Corp Transformer connector
US3760089A (en) * 1972-04-27 1973-09-18 Westinghouse Electric Corp Electrical bushing assembly having resilient means enclosed within sealing means
US6332785B1 (en) 1997-06-30 2001-12-25 Cooper Industries, Inc. High voltage electrical connector with access cavity and inserts for use therewith

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3029410A (en) * 1958-07-28 1962-04-10 Penn Union Electric Corp Transformer connector
US3041574A (en) * 1958-07-28 1962-06-26 Penn Union Electric Corp Transformer connector
US3760089A (en) * 1972-04-27 1973-09-18 Westinghouse Electric Corp Electrical bushing assembly having resilient means enclosed within sealing means
US6332785B1 (en) 1997-06-30 2001-12-25 Cooper Industries, Inc. High voltage electrical connector with access cavity and inserts for use therewith
US6338637B1 (en) 1997-06-30 2002-01-15 Cooper Industries Dead front system and process for injecting fluid into an electrical cable

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2228440A (en) Bushing
US3953815A (en) Cast-resin insulated instrument transformer, in particular potential transformer
US3278883A (en) Combined gasket and grounding device for bushings
US2768231A (en) Lead-in construction
US4054351A (en) Connection between a device in a metallic sheath and a transformer
US1870141A (en) High tension condenser
US2360801A (en) Switch operating mechanism
US2285594A (en) Bushing cap
US2564181A (en) Insulator bushing assembly
US2189610A (en) Condenser bushing
US2169857A (en) Protective device for liquid immersed electrical apparatus
US2228089A (en) Transformer bushing
US1775530A (en) High-tension bushing having insulated supports
US2381787A (en) Bushing
US1996423A (en) Oil insulated electrical apparatus
US1972590A (en) Means for controlling the electrostatic field for insulator bushings
US1788380A (en) Insulating bushing
US2021912A (en) Electrical junction box and connection therefor
US2282255A (en) Bushing cap
US2300195A (en) Electrical apparatus
US2321793A (en) Bushing insulator
US1160702A (en) Insulator.
US1957985A (en) High voltage terminal construction
US2930841A (en) Sealing arrangement for electrical insulating bushings
US3129310A (en) Potential-tap assembly for relatively high-voltage equipment