US2817916A - Oscillatory display device having bimetallic actuator - Google Patents

Oscillatory display device having bimetallic actuator Download PDF

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US2817916A
US2817916A US369774A US36977453A US2817916A US 2817916 A US2817916 A US 2817916A US 369774 A US369774 A US 369774A US 36977453 A US36977453 A US 36977453A US 2817916 A US2817916 A US 2817916A
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strip
oscillatory
actuator
display device
bimetallic
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US369774A
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Allen Mary Lou
Richard F Brinckerhoff
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Betts & Betts Corp
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Betts & Betts Corp
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09FDISPLAYING; ADVERTISING; SIGNS; LABELS OR NAME-PLATES; SEALS
    • G09F11/00Indicating arrangements for variable information in which the complete information is permanently attached to a movable support which brings it to the display position
    • G09F11/23Indicating arrangements for variable information in which the complete information is permanently attached to a movable support which brings it to the display position the advertising or display material forming part of rotating members, e.g. in the form of perforations, prints, or transparencies on a drum or disc

Definitions

  • This invention relates to electrically actuated oscillatory. display devices and more particularly to one in which motion of an actuator is induced by the alternate heating and natural cooling of a bi-metallic element.
  • One object of the invention is to produce a motion unit which will have a relatively long period and which does not require reducing gears and the like to reduce the speed of a faster. moving motor.
  • Another object is to provide a motion unit in which the average power consumption is low.
  • Still another object is to provide a motion unit in which the speed of motion is more or less the same during forward and return motion so that a portion of the display has. a motion more or less symmetrical about a given line, or plan.
  • I provide an upwardly projecting resilient strip having a splice of bi-metallic material in the lower portion.
  • Fig. 1 is a front elevation of the display
  • Fig. 2 is a rear perspective of the display
  • Fig. 3 is vertical sectional view of the actuator, the section being taken substantially along the line 3-3 of Fig. 4 looking in the direction of the arrows of said line;
  • Fig. 4 is fragmental side elevation of the actuator
  • Figs. 5, 6, 7 and 8 are views showing operational positions of parts of the actuator.
  • the display device 10 includes a base 11 and a panel front 12 an actuator 14 secured thereon and a movable display piece 15 mounted on the actuator.
  • the actuator which is the heart of the invention, comprises a tubular upright housing or chimney 16 and a U member 18 secured to the bottom portion of housing, the yoke 17 of the member extending below the housing. Clips 19 and 20 secured on the housing and yoke as by welding are provided for securing the actuator to the base and panel front.
  • An upwardly projecting bracket 21 is secured to the yoke and within the housing, the clip 20 and bracket 21 being secured to the yoke as by welding at 22 and 24.
  • the principal moving part of the actuator is a spliced oscillatory strip 25, mostly of stiff resilient material, such as steel, and having a lower end portion 26 mounted fast on the bracket and an upper portion 28 projecting upwardly well above the housing, the extreme upper end 29 having a mounting piece 30 secured thereon for mounting the display piece 15 on the upper end 29.
  • the strip is adapted to oscillate, by bending, in a plane parallel to that of the panel front.
  • the upper rim edges 30, 31 of the housing may act as stops to limit partially the motion of the strip, though their action is not critical.
  • Motion of the strip 25 is induced by alternate heating and cooling of a bimetallic strip or element 32 consisting of metals having different coefficients of thermal expansion interposed between the upper end 34 of the lower portion 26 and the lower end 35 of the upper portion 28 for causing the oscillatory strip 25 to buckle in the region of the element with changes of. temperature. Heating is accomplished by selectively applying current to a resistance wire 36 wound on the bimetallic strip.
  • Offset fixed and movable mounting members 38 and 39 of insulating material are mounted fast on, and project rearwardly from, the bracket 21 and upper end 34 of the steel lower portion 26 for carrying appurtenances for the control of the current.
  • the control is carried out by the use of a contact point member 40 on the movable mounting member 39 connected as by conductor 41 to one end of the resistance wire, and a resilient leaf spring 42 having a lower end 44 secured fast to the member 38, the upper end 45 bearing a contact point 46 engageable with the contact member 40.
  • the oscillatory strip 25 is slightly biased off the vertical, at room temperature, toward the contact 46.
  • the weight of the movable display piece 15 causes the strip 25 to become greatly bent over to one side as in Figs. 1, 2 and 5 with the leaf spring 42 yielding as in Fig. 5.
  • the right (Figs. 5-8) half of the strip is preferentially elongated causing the strip to buckle gradually as shown exaggerated in Fig. 6 and urge the display member 15 toward the left, eventually past the vertical.
  • the strip 25 as a whole begins to bend about the lower portion 26 and the contacts separate as in Fig. 7 and the bimetallic strip begins to cool.
  • the weight of the movable display piece 15 causes the strip 25 as a whole to bend so as to assume a position substantially symmetrical to that shown in Fig. 1.
  • the system reverts to the position of Fig. 8 and, because sufficient heating does not occur instantly, the weight of member 15 causes further bending in the steel portions of the strip and the movable piece returns to the Fig. 5 position.
  • the steel upper and lower portions of the strip 25 be of about /2 inch clock spring steel about six inches and two inches in length and if the bimetallic element, such as used for thermostats, be about two inches in length and wound with bare resistance wire upon a light asbestos covering for the element and v. current is used with a heavy cardboard moving part 15 the period is about two to three seconds. Covered wire cools more slowly and causes a long period and necessitates, if symmetrical rates of motion are desired, a longer heating period.
  • an actuator comprising a mount; an upwardly projecting strip having resilient portions and having its lower end portion secured to said mount; a bimetallic element consisting of metals having different coefficients of thermal expansion interposed between said resilient portions and secured fast thereto; a resistance heater secured substantially fast with respect to the element and adjacent thereto for heating same whereby the heater will move with the element and will continue heating the element at the same rate as the latter moves as long as constant current is supplied to the heater; and switch means for supplying current to the heater.
  • an actuator comprising a mount
  • a normally upwardly projecting spliced oscillatory strip mostly of stifi resilient material, and having a lower end portion of stifi resilient material mounted fast with respect to the mount and an upper portion of said material projecting upwardly; the extreme upper end of the strip being adapted for mounting a movable display piece on the upper end; the strip being adapted to oscillate from side to side by bending; a bimetallic element consisting of metals having different coeflicients of thermal expansion interposed between the upper end of the lower portion and the lower end of the upper portion for causing the oscillatory strip to buckle with changes of temperature; a resistance wire wound on the bimetallic strip element; and a switch having a part fixed with respect to the strip and movable therewith and another part fixed with respect to the mount for supplying current to the wire during the cycle when the strip is substantially on one side of the vertical.
  • a display device comprising a mount; an oscillatory strip having a lower end portion of still resilient material mounted fast with respect to the mount and an upper portion of said material projecting upwardly; a movable display member fast on the upper end of the strip, the strip being adapted to oscillate from side to side by bending; a bimetallic element consisting of metals having different coeflicients of thermal expansion interposed between the upper end of the lower portion and the lower end of the upper portion for causing the oscillatory strip to buckle with changes of temperature; a resistance wire wound on the bimetallic strip element; and means for selectively supplying current to the wire.
  • an actuator comprising a mount; a spliced oscillatory strip having a lower end portion of stifi. resilient material mounted fast with respect to the mount and. an upper portion of said material projecting upwardly; the extreme upper end being adapted for mounting a movable display piece on the upper end; the strip being adapted to oscillate by bending; a bimetallic element consisting of metals having different coeffi end of the lower portion and the lower end of the upper portion for causing the oscillatory strip to buckle with changes of temperature; a resistance wire wound on the bimetallic strip element; and a switch for controlling a flow of current through said wire having a contact on and movable with the strip.
  • an actuator comprising a tubular upright housing; a spliced oscillatory strip having a lower end portion of stilt resilient material mounted fast with respect to the housing and an upper portion of said material projecting upwardly well above the housing; the extreme upper end of the strip being adapted for mounting a movable display piece on the upper end; the strip being adapted to oscillate by bending; a bimetallic element consisting of metals having different coefiicients of thermal expansion interposed between the upper end of the lower portion and the lower end of the upper portion for causing the oscillatory strip to buckle with changes of temperature; a resistance wire wound on the bimetallic strip element; a contact point member mounted to move with lower portion, and a resilient leaf spring bendable with the lower portion and having a lower end secured fast with respect to the housing and the upper end bearing a contact point engageable with the contact member to supply current to the wire.

Description

Dec. 31, 1957 J. S. YABROW OSCILLATORY DISPLAY DEVICE HAVING BIMETALLIC ACTUATOR 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed July 23, 1953 V INVENTOR. JOSEPH 5. five/20w H in:
ATI'OkA/EK Dec. 31, 1957 J. s. YARROW OSCILLATORY DISPLAY DEVICE HAVING BIMETALLIC ACTUATOR Filed July 23, 1953 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 JOSEPH s. melzon United States Patent OSCILLATORY DISPLAY DEVICE HAVING BIMETALLIC ACTUATOR Josephs. Yarrow, Litchfield County, Conn.; Mary Lou Allen, Staten Island, N. Y., and Richard F. Brinckerhotr', Exeter, N. H., executors of the willof said Joseph S. Yarrow, deceased, assignors to Betts &, Betts Corporation, Woodbury, Conn.,.a corporation ofNew York Application July 23, 1953, Serial No. 369,774
Claims. (Cl. 40-139) This invention relates to electrically actuated oscillatory. display devices and more particularly to one in which motion of an actuator is induced by the alternate heating and natural cooling of a bi-metallic element.
One object of the invention is to produce a motion unit which will have a relatively long period and which does not require reducing gears and the like to reduce the speed of a faster. moving motor.
Another object is to provide a motion unit in which the average power consumption is low.
Still another object is to provide a motion unit in which the speed of motion is more or less the same during forward and return motion so that a portion of the display has. a motion more or less symmetrical about a given line, or plan.
For the attainment of these and other objects which will become apparent as the description proceeds, I provide an upwardly projecting resilient strip having a splice of bi-metallic material in the lower portion.
In the accompanying drawing, showing, by way of example, one of many possible embodiments of the invention,
Fig. 1 is a front elevation of the display;
Fig. 2 is a rear perspective of the display;
Fig. 3 is vertical sectional view of the actuator, the section being taken substantially along the line 3-3 of Fig. 4 looking in the direction of the arrows of said line;
Fig. 4 is fragmental side elevation of the actuator, and
Figs. 5, 6, 7 and 8 are views showing operational positions of parts of the actuator.
The display device 10 includes a base 11 and a panel front 12 an actuator 14 secured thereon and a movable display piece 15 mounted on the actuator. The actuator, which is the heart of the invention, comprises a tubular upright housing or chimney 16 and a U member 18 secured to the bottom portion of housing, the yoke 17 of the member extending below the housing. Clips 19 and 20 secured on the housing and yoke as by welding are provided for securing the actuator to the base and panel front.
An upwardly projecting bracket 21 is secured to the yoke and within the housing, the clip 20 and bracket 21 being secured to the yoke as by welding at 22 and 24. The principal moving part of the actuator is a spliced oscillatory strip 25, mostly of stiff resilient material, such as steel, and having a lower end portion 26 mounted fast on the bracket and an upper portion 28 projecting upwardly well above the housing, the extreme upper end 29 having a mounting piece 30 secured thereon for mounting the display piece 15 on the upper end 29. The strip is adapted to oscillate, by bending, in a plane parallel to that of the panel front. The upper rim edges 30, 31 of the housing may act as stops to limit partially the motion of the strip, though their action is not critical.
Motion of the strip 25 is induced by alternate heating and cooling of a bimetallic strip or element 32 consisting of metals having different coefficients of thermal expansion interposed between the upper end 34 of the lower portion 26 and the lower end 35 of the upper portion 28 for causing the oscillatory strip 25 to buckle in the region of the element with changes of. temperature. Heating is accomplished by selectively applying current to a resistance wire 36 wound on the bimetallic strip.
Offset fixed and movable mounting members 38 and 39 of insulating material are mounted fast on, and project rearwardly from, the bracket 21 and upper end 34 of the steel lower portion 26 for carrying appurtenances for the control of the current. The control is carried out by the use of a contact point member 40 on the movable mounting member 39 connected as by conductor 41 to one end of the resistance wire, and a resilient leaf spring 42 having a lower end 44 secured fast to the member 38, the upper end 45 bearing a contact point 46 engageable with the contact member 40.
As shown in Fig. 3 with no moving body 15 attached, the oscillatory strip 25 is slightly biased off the vertical, at room temperature, toward the contact 46.
It will be noted that under no load, such as the body 15, the contact member 40 does not quite touch the point 46.
In operation the weight of the movable display piece 15 causes the strip 25 to become greatly bent over to one side as in Figs. 1, 2 and 5 with the leaf spring 42 yielding as in Fig. 5. Current flows from source S (Fig. 4) through conductor 48 to the wire 36 and back through conductor 41, contacts 40-46 and leaf 42. As the bimetallic strip is heated by the current, the right (Figs. 5-8) half of the strip is preferentially elongated causing the strip to buckle gradually as shown exaggerated in Fig. 6 and urge the display member 15 toward the left, eventually past the vertical. In doing so, the strip 25 as a whole begins to bend about the lower portion 26 and the contacts separate as in Fig. 7 and the bimetallic strip begins to cool. However the weight of the movable display piece 15 causes the strip 25 as a whole to bend so as to assume a position substantially symmetrical to that shown in Fig. 1.
As the element 32 cools, the system reverts to the position of Fig. 8 and, because sufficient heating does not occur instantly, the weight of member 15 causes further bending in the steel portions of the strip and the movable piece returns to the Fig. 5 position.
While a number of factors will influence the period of oscillation, I have found that if the steel upper and lower portions of the strip 25 be of about /2 inch clock spring steel about six inches and two inches in length and if the bimetallic element, such as used for thermostats, be about two inches in length and wound with bare resistance wire upon a light asbestos covering for the element and v. current is used with a heavy cardboard moving part 15 the period is about two to three seconds. Covered wire cools more slowly and causes a long period and necessitates, if symmetrical rates of motion are desired, a longer heating period.
The invention claimed is:
1. In a display device, an actuator comprising a mount; an upwardly projecting strip having resilient portions and having its lower end portion secured to said mount; a bimetallic element consisting of metals having different coefficients of thermal expansion interposed between said resilient portions and secured fast thereto; a resistance heater secured substantially fast with respect to the element and adjacent thereto for heating same whereby the heater will move with the element and will continue heating the element at the same rate as the latter moves as long as constant current is supplied to the heater; and switch means for supplying current to the heater.
2. In a display device an actuator comprising a mount;
a normally upwardly projecting spliced oscillatory strip mostly of stifi resilient material, and having a lower end portion of stifi resilient material mounted fast with respect to the mount and an upper portion of said material projecting upwardly; the extreme upper end of the strip being adapted for mounting a movable display piece on the upper end; the strip being adapted to oscillate from side to side by bending; a bimetallic element consisting of metals having different coeflicients of thermal expansion interposed between the upper end of the lower portion and the lower end of the upper portion for causing the oscillatory strip to buckle with changes of temperature; a resistance wire wound on the bimetallic strip element; and a switch having a part fixed with respect to the strip and movable therewith and another part fixed with respect to the mount for supplying current to the wire during the cycle when the strip is substantially on one side of the vertical.
3. in a display device comprising a mount; an oscillatory strip having a lower end portion of still resilient material mounted fast with respect to the mount and an upper portion of said material projecting upwardly; a movable display member fast on the upper end of the strip, the strip being adapted to oscillate from side to side by bending; a bimetallic element consisting of metals having different coeflicients of thermal expansion interposed between the upper end of the lower portion and the lower end of the upper portion for causing the oscillatory strip to buckle with changes of temperature; a resistance wire wound on the bimetallic strip element; and means for selectively supplying current to the wire.
4. In a display device an actuator comprising a mount; a spliced oscillatory strip having a lower end portion of stifi. resilient material mounted fast with respect to the mount and. an upper portion of said material projecting upwardly; the extreme upper end being adapted for mounting a movable display piece on the upper end; the strip being adapted to oscillate by bending; a bimetallic element consisting of metals having different coeffi end of the lower portion and the lower end of the upper portion for causing the oscillatory strip to buckle with changes of temperature; a resistance wire wound on the bimetallic strip element; and a switch for controlling a flow of current through said wire having a contact on and movable with the strip.
5. In a display device, an actuator comprising a tubular upright housing; a spliced oscillatory strip having a lower end portion of stilt resilient material mounted fast with respect to the housing and an upper portion of said material projecting upwardly well above the housing; the extreme upper end of the strip being adapted for mounting a movable display piece on the upper end; the strip being adapted to oscillate by bending; a bimetallic element consisting of metals having different coefiicients of thermal expansion interposed between the upper end of the lower portion and the lower end of the upper portion for causing the oscillatory strip to buckle with changes of temperature; a resistance wire wound on the bimetallic strip element; a contact point member mounted to move with lower portion, and a resilient leaf spring bendable with the lower portion and having a lower end secured fast with respect to the housing and the upper end bearing a contact point engageable with the contact member to supply current to the wire.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 778,307 Coultaus Dec. 27, 1904 1,576,649 Gregory Mar. 16, 1926 1,804,709 Shoenberg May 12, 1931 2,066,145 Fink et a1 Dec. 29, 1936 2,099,277 Peterson Nov. 16, 1937 2,285,913 Derrah June 9, 1942 2,555,882 Guajardo June 5, 1951 2,687,005 Ingersoll Aug. 24, 1954
US369774A 1953-07-23 1953-07-23 Oscillatory display device having bimetallic actuator Expired - Lifetime US2817916A (en)

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Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3013381A (en) * 1958-02-06 1961-12-19 George A Parsons Heat actuated device
US3888030A (en) * 1974-01-21 1975-06-10 Gordon E Bradt Kinetic sculpture
WO1992020247A1 (en) * 1991-05-14 1992-11-26 Power Fardy Stephen N Self-contained display device for headwear
US6282823B1 (en) * 1999-12-03 2001-09-04 Leo Brown Driver courtesy device
US20080301985A1 (en) * 2007-06-05 2008-12-11 Chien-Hsun Tsao Rocking head picture display device
US20090183402A1 (en) * 2007-06-05 2009-07-23 Chien-Hsun Tsao Rocking head picture display device
US20100180813A1 (en) * 2009-01-21 2010-07-22 Jennifer Elsia Munson Little reminder
US8490306B2 (en) * 2010-11-05 2013-07-23 American Greetings Corporation Motion greeting cards
US10679525B1 (en) * 2019-03-16 2020-06-09 Jerry Neal Sommerville Solar-powered attention sign

Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US778307A (en) * 1904-05-26 1904-12-27 Henry C Coultaus Sign or advertising device.
US1576649A (en) * 1925-02-26 1926-03-16 Eli E Gregory Motor for animated advertising signs
US1804709A (en) * 1928-01-23 1931-05-12 Milton H Shoenberg Thermomotive device
US2066145A (en) * 1933-06-13 1936-12-29 John H Fink Changeable color electric lamp
US2099277A (en) * 1937-05-03 1937-11-16 Donald L Peterson Animated display
US2285913A (en) * 1940-01-17 1942-06-09 Robert V Derrah Modulating control device
US2555882A (en) * 1948-09-24 1951-06-05 Ciro B Guajardo Thermoelectric motor
US2687005A (en) * 1950-12-13 1954-08-24 Meyercord Co Heat-actuated device for imparting oscillating motion

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US778307A (en) * 1904-05-26 1904-12-27 Henry C Coultaus Sign or advertising device.
US1576649A (en) * 1925-02-26 1926-03-16 Eli E Gregory Motor for animated advertising signs
US1804709A (en) * 1928-01-23 1931-05-12 Milton H Shoenberg Thermomotive device
US2066145A (en) * 1933-06-13 1936-12-29 John H Fink Changeable color electric lamp
US2099277A (en) * 1937-05-03 1937-11-16 Donald L Peterson Animated display
US2285913A (en) * 1940-01-17 1942-06-09 Robert V Derrah Modulating control device
US2555882A (en) * 1948-09-24 1951-06-05 Ciro B Guajardo Thermoelectric motor
US2687005A (en) * 1950-12-13 1954-08-24 Meyercord Co Heat-actuated device for imparting oscillating motion

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3013381A (en) * 1958-02-06 1961-12-19 George A Parsons Heat actuated device
US3888030A (en) * 1974-01-21 1975-06-10 Gordon E Bradt Kinetic sculpture
WO1992020247A1 (en) * 1991-05-14 1992-11-26 Power Fardy Stephen N Self-contained display device for headwear
US6282823B1 (en) * 1999-12-03 2001-09-04 Leo Brown Driver courtesy device
US20080301985A1 (en) * 2007-06-05 2008-12-11 Chien-Hsun Tsao Rocking head picture display device
US20090183402A1 (en) * 2007-06-05 2009-07-23 Chien-Hsun Tsao Rocking head picture display device
US7971376B2 (en) * 2007-06-05 2011-07-05 Chien-Hsun Tsao Rocking head picture display device
US20100180813A1 (en) * 2009-01-21 2010-07-22 Jennifer Elsia Munson Little reminder
US8161900B2 (en) * 2009-01-21 2012-04-24 Jennifer Elsia Munson Little reminder
US8490306B2 (en) * 2010-11-05 2013-07-23 American Greetings Corporation Motion greeting cards
US10679525B1 (en) * 2019-03-16 2020-06-09 Jerry Neal Sommerville Solar-powered attention sign

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