US2650321A - Lamp unit and support structure therefor - Google Patents

Lamp unit and support structure therefor Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2650321A
US2650321A US716936A US71693646A US2650321A US 2650321 A US2650321 A US 2650321A US 716936 A US716936 A US 716936A US 71693646 A US71693646 A US 71693646A US 2650321 A US2650321 A US 2650321A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
tube
lead
lamp unit
support structure
lamp
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
US716936A
Inventor
Edward B Noel
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.)
General Electric Co
Original Assignee
General Electric 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 General Electric Co filed Critical General Electric Co
Priority to US716936A priority Critical patent/US2650321A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2650321A publication Critical patent/US2650321A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J61/00Gas-discharge or vapour-discharge lamps
    • H01J61/84Lamps with discharge constricted by high pressure
    • H01J61/90Lamps suitable only for intermittent operation, e.g. flash lamp

Definitions

  • My invention relates to gaseous electric discharge devices, and is particularly concerned with constructional features of a type of lamp unit comprising a convoluted discharge tube mounted in an enclosing jacket or envelope and, in turn, adapted to enclose another lamp within its convolutions.
  • FIGs. 1 and 2 are elevations, partly in section, of a lamp unit embodying my invention
  • Fig. 3 is a bottom view thereof.
  • the unit comprises a helically coiled gaseous electric discharge tube I of glass or quartz containing a suitable ionizable atmosphere, such as a filling of Xenon, and having a cathode 2 and an anode 3 sealed in its ends.
  • the tube I is supported within a framework of rigid support and current lead wires 4, 5 and 6 which extend upward from contact prongs or terminals I, 8 and 9, respectively, on an insulating base shell Ill.
  • the anode lead 3 is connected by a flexible stranded section II to lead 4, while the cathode I2 is connected by a similar flexible section I3 to the lead 5.
  • the tube I is secured t the support lead 6 by an auxiliary support strip or tie wire I6 which is looped around the turns of the tube I and secured at its ends, preferably by welding to the lead 6.
  • the tube I is additionally supported between auxiliary supporting spud wires I4, I4 and I5, I5 extending laterally from the leads 4 and 5 respectively across the adjacent portions of the top and bottom of the helix I, but terminating short of the space enclosed by the helically coiled tube I, as shown in Fig. 2 of the drawing.
  • the lead 6, with its tie loop I6, serves additionally as an external triggering or starting electrode upon which a high voltage is impressed to ionize the gas in the tube I and thereby cause a discharge to take place between the cathode 2 and anode 3 which may be connected across a condenser so as to emit a flash of light of high intensity for photographic purposes.
  • a suitable circuit of that type is illustrated, for example, in Patent 2,277,697 to H. E. Grier.
  • the one U-shaped 1 Claim. (Cl. 313-198) lead 6 thereby serves both the functions of a support and also an external triggering electrode on two sides of the helix I to increase the capacitative effect for starting purposes.
  • this construction leaves unobstructed access t the interior of the helix I for insertion of an incandescent modelling lamp 23 (Fig. 2) through an opening 20 in the base I0, without reducing clearances to the point where flashover might occur.
  • One way of supporting the said modelling lamp in the helix is disclosed in application Serial No. 503,068, filed September 20, 1943, by this applicant and P. B. Davis, now U. S. Patent No. 2,469,607, issued May 10, 1949.
  • the unit shown in the drawing is mounted on a base or support member by inserting its prongs I, 8, 9 into contact members on said base which carries a socket supporting the modelling lamp in position to be enclosed within the helix I.
  • the supporting framework is additionally supported from the enclosing glass jacket or envelope 2I by four spring strip braces 22 which are welded to the upper ends of the leads 4, 5 and Ii and the end portion I8 of lead 6, the said upper ends of the leads being located at the corners of a square to form a firm support.
  • the braces 22 on supports 4 and 5 also serve to maintain those supports against the helix I which is thereby snugly cradled between the spuds I4, I4 and I5, I5 extending from the said supports.
  • spuds I4, I4 and I5, I5 on leads 4 and 5 has the advantage over the tie wires like I6 and I9 in that such tie wires, if used on leads 4 and 5, are apt to lead to electrolysis and failure of the bulb of the enclosed modelling lamp 23 when it touches the tie wire I6 01 I9 and a similar tie wire on lead 4 or 5.
  • Fig. 2 I have illustrated one way in which the modelling lamp 23 may be supported within the helical tube I.
  • the lamp 23 is carried by a socket 24 which is supported on wires 25, 26 carried by a plug 27 which, in turn, is carried by a flexible disc 28.
  • the disc 28 is provided with holes corresponding in number and spacing to the prongs I, 8 and 9 and by means of which it is slipped over the said prongs.
  • a lamp unit the combination of a helically coiled light-transmitting gaseous conduction tube having electrodes in the ends thereof, a light-transmitting tubular jacket surrounding said tube and open at one end, a base member attached to the said one end of the jacket and provided with an opening in alignment with the axis of the coiled tubev for insertion therethrough of a modelling lamp, a plurality of rigid conductive support wires secured to said base and extending longitudinally of and spaced around the outside of said coiled tube within said jacket, one of said support wires constituting a triggering electrode for said tube and being bent to an inverted U-shape extending across the top of the coiled tube and down its opposite side and having both legs of the U clamped to said tube by tie wires secured at their ends to said legs and looped around the turns of said tube, and two others of said support wires constituting current lead-in conductors electrically connected to respective ends of said tube and being provided with spuds extending laterally in

Landscapes

  • Vessels And Coating Films For Discharge Lamps (AREA)

Description

Aug. 25, 1953 E. a. NOEL LAMP UNIT AND SUPPORT STRUCTURE THEREFOR Filed Dec. 1 8, 1946 InvenTor' Edwqr-d B. Noel,
His ATTOFF\ LJ.
Patented Aug. 25, 1953 LAMP UNIT to General Electric New York AND SUPPORT STRUCTURE THEREFOR Edward B. Noel, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, assignor Company, a corporation of Application December 18, 1946, Serial No. 716,936
My invention relates to gaseous electric discharge devices, and is particularly concerned with constructional features of a type of lamp unit comprising a convoluted discharge tube mounted in an enclosing jacket or envelope and, in turn, adapted to enclose another lamp within its convolutions.
It is an object of my invention to provide a lamp of sturdy and simplified construction. Various features and advantages of the invention will be more particularly pointed out in the following description and in the claim.
In the drawing, Figs. 1 and 2 are elevations, partly in section, of a lamp unit embodying my invention, and Fig. 3 is a bottom view thereof.
Referring to the drawing, the unit comprises a helically coiled gaseous electric discharge tube I of glass or quartz containing a suitable ionizable atmosphere, such as a filling of Xenon, and having a cathode 2 and an anode 3 sealed in its ends. The tube I is supported within a framework of rigid support and current lead wires 4, 5 and 6 which extend upward from contact prongs or terminals I, 8 and 9, respectively, on an insulating base shell Ill. The anode lead 3 is connected by a flexible stranded section II to lead 4, while the cathode I2 is connected by a similar flexible section I3 to the lead 5. The tube I is secured t the support lead 6 by an auxiliary support strip or tie wire I6 which is looped around the turns of the tube I and secured at its ends, preferably by welding to the lead 6. The tube I is additionally supported between auxiliary supporting spud wires I4, I4 and I5, I5 extending laterally from the leads 4 and 5 respectively across the adjacent portions of the top and bottom of the helix I, but terminating short of the space enclosed by the helically coiled tube I, as shown in Fig. 2 of the drawing.
The lead 6, with its tie loop I6, serves additionally as an external triggering or starting electrode upon which a high voltage is impressed to ionize the gas in the tube I and thereby cause a discharge to take place between the cathode 2 and anode 3 which may be connected across a condenser so as to emit a flash of light of high intensity for photographic purposes. A suitable circuit of that type is illustrated, for example, in Patent 2,277,697 to H. E. Grier.
According to the present invention, the lead of tube I at l8 where it is tied to the helix I by another loop or tie wire I9. The one U-shaped 1 Claim. (Cl. 313-198) lead 6 thereby serves both the functions of a support and also an external triggering electrode on two sides of the helix I to increase the capacitative effect for starting purposes. At the same time, this construction leaves unobstructed access t the interior of the helix I for insertion of an incandescent modelling lamp 23 (Fig. 2) through an opening 20 in the base I0, without reducing clearances to the point where flashover might occur. One way of supporting the said modelling lamp in the helix is disclosed in application Serial No. 503,068, filed September 20, 1943, by this applicant and P. B. Davis, now U. S. Patent No. 2,469,607, issued May 10, 1949.
In another arrangement, the unit shown in the drawing is mounted on a base or support member by inserting its prongs I, 8, 9 into contact members on said base which carries a socket supporting the modelling lamp in position to be enclosed within the helix I.
The supporting framework is additionally supported from the enclosing glass jacket or envelope 2I by four spring strip braces 22 which are welded to the upper ends of the leads 4, 5 and Ii and the end portion I8 of lead 6, the said upper ends of the leads being located at the corners of a square to form a firm support. The braces 22 on supports 4 and 5 also serve to maintain those supports against the helix I which is thereby snugly cradled between the spuds I4, I4 and I5, I5 extending from the said supports. The use of spuds I4, I4 and I5, I5 on leads 4 and 5 has the advantage over the tie wires like I6 and I9 in that such tie wires, if used on leads 4 and 5, are apt to lead to electrolysis and failure of the bulb of the enclosed modelling lamp 23 when it touches the tie wire I6 01 I9 and a similar tie wire on lead 4 or 5.
In Fig. 2 I have illustrated one way in which the modelling lamp 23 may be supported within the helical tube I. The lamp 23 is carried by a socket 24 which is supported on wires 25, 26 carried by a plug 27 which, in turn, is carried by a flexible disc 28. The disc 28 is provided with holes corresponding in number and spacing to the prongs I, 8 and 9 and by means of which it is slipped over the said prongs.
What I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States is:
In a lamp unit, the combination of a helically coiled light-transmitting gaseous conduction tube having electrodes in the ends thereof, a light-transmitting tubular jacket surrounding said tube and open at one end, a base member attached to the said one end of the jacket and provided with an opening in alignment with the axis of the coiled tubev for insertion therethrough of a modelling lamp, a plurality of rigid conductive support wires secured to said base and extending longitudinally of and spaced around the outside of said coiled tube within said jacket, one of said support wires constituting a triggering electrode for said tube and being bent to an inverted U-shape extending across the top of the coiled tube and down its opposite side and having both legs of the U clamped to said tube by tie wires secured at their ends to said legs and looped around the turns of said tube, and two others of said support wires constituting current lead-in conductors electrically connected to respective ends of said tube and being provided with spuds extending laterally inward therefrom across the top and bottom turns of the coiled tube but terminating short of thespace 5 enclosed by said tube, and resilient brace members secured tothe upper ends of said lead-in support wires and bearing against the inner wall of said jacket to maintain said wires against said tube with said tube cradled between said spuds and with the space within said coiled tube unobstructed by said spuds, said support wires being so dimensioned as not substantially to obstruct the outward passage of light.
EDWARD B. NOEL.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS
US716936A 1946-12-18 1946-12-18 Lamp unit and support structure therefor Expired - Lifetime US2650321A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US716936A US2650321A (en) 1946-12-18 1946-12-18 Lamp unit and support structure therefor

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US716936A US2650321A (en) 1946-12-18 1946-12-18 Lamp unit and support structure therefor

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2650321A true US2650321A (en) 1953-08-25

Family

ID=24880052

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US716936A Expired - Lifetime US2650321A (en) 1946-12-18 1946-12-18 Lamp unit and support structure therefor

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2650321A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2794141A (en) * 1952-06-23 1957-05-28 Philips Corp Discharge lamp
US20100314999A1 (en) * 2009-06-16 2010-12-16 Wellypower Optronics Corporation Lamp device

Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2085530A (en) * 1932-06-23 1937-06-29 Gen Electric Electric arc lamp
US2112855A (en) * 1934-06-30 1938-04-05 Westinghouse Electric & Mfg Co Electrode for discharge lamps
US2116720A (en) * 1935-05-14 1938-05-10 Gen Electric Electric discharge device
US2152997A (en) * 1937-05-21 1939-04-04 Gen Electric Vapor Lamp Co Gaseous electric discharge lamp
US2164307A (en) * 1937-10-26 1939-07-04 Friederich H A Brandt Discharge device
US2277697A (en) * 1939-01-31 1942-03-31 Grier Herbert Earle Electric system and apparatus
US2277698A (en) * 1941-05-13 1942-03-31 Herbert E Grier Flash-photography apparatus
US2341541A (en) * 1939-01-31 1944-02-15 Grier Herbert Earle Flash-producing apparatus
USRE22611E (en) * 1945-03-06 Condenser-discharge electric
US2399222A (en) * 1941-11-08 1946-04-30 Germeshausen Kenneth Joseph Flash-photography apparatus
US2469607A (en) * 1943-09-20 1949-05-10 Gen Electric Electric lamp unit

Patent Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
USRE22611E (en) * 1945-03-06 Condenser-discharge electric
US2085530A (en) * 1932-06-23 1937-06-29 Gen Electric Electric arc lamp
US2112855A (en) * 1934-06-30 1938-04-05 Westinghouse Electric & Mfg Co Electrode for discharge lamps
US2116720A (en) * 1935-05-14 1938-05-10 Gen Electric Electric discharge device
US2152997A (en) * 1937-05-21 1939-04-04 Gen Electric Vapor Lamp Co Gaseous electric discharge lamp
US2164307A (en) * 1937-10-26 1939-07-04 Friederich H A Brandt Discharge device
US2277697A (en) * 1939-01-31 1942-03-31 Grier Herbert Earle Electric system and apparatus
US2341541A (en) * 1939-01-31 1944-02-15 Grier Herbert Earle Flash-producing apparatus
US2277698A (en) * 1941-05-13 1942-03-31 Herbert E Grier Flash-photography apparatus
US2399222A (en) * 1941-11-08 1946-04-30 Germeshausen Kenneth Joseph Flash-photography apparatus
US2469607A (en) * 1943-09-20 1949-05-10 Gen Electric Electric lamp unit

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2794141A (en) * 1952-06-23 1957-05-28 Philips Corp Discharge lamp
US20100314999A1 (en) * 2009-06-16 2010-12-16 Wellypower Optronics Corporation Lamp device

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3250934A (en) Electric discharge device having heat conserving shields and sleeve
US2624023A (en) Lamp unit
US4355261A (en) Discharge lamp with integral starter
US2056635A (en) Gaseous electric discharge device
US2918592A (en) Arc tube mount
US4007397A (en) Arc discharge lamp with starter electrode voltage doubling
US3982154A (en) Arc discharge lamp construction for starter electrode voltage doubling
US2650321A (en) Lamp unit and support structure therefor
US2505993A (en) Fluorescent electric lamp
US3094640A (en) Harness for supporting high pressure arc discharge tube within outer envelope, and lamp formed thereby
US2054846A (en) Modulating lamp assembly and circuit therefor
HU181088B (en) High pressure discharge lamp
JPS61109254A (en) Low wattage metal halide discharge lamp
US2877375A (en) Incandescent lamp mount structure
US2682008A (en) Seal stem for electric discharge devices
US3577029A (en) High-pressure electric discharge device containing mercury, halogen, scandium and samarium
US3265922A (en) Electric lamp
US2739261A (en) Tubular gas discharge lamp
US3519872A (en) Thermionic electrode with an auxiliary starting coil for a discharge lamp
US2076286A (en) Electric gaseous discharge device
US2096236A (en) Electrical discharge device
US1935702A (en) Gaseous electric discharge lamp device
US2254845A (en) Mount for quartz lamps
US2087754A (en) Electric discharge lamp
US2913615A (en) Cathode