US2902664A - Power resistor assembly - Google Patents

Power resistor assembly Download PDF

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US2902664A
US2902664A US746394A US74639458A US2902664A US 2902664 A US2902664 A US 2902664A US 746394 A US746394 A US 746394A US 74639458 A US74639458 A US 74639458A US 2902664 A US2902664 A US 2902664A
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Prior art keywords
resistor
assembly
power resistor
brushes
units
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US746394A
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Robert P Depuy
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General Electric Co
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General Electric Co
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01CRESISTORS
    • H01C10/00Adjustable resistors
    • H01C10/30Adjustable resistors the contact sliding along resistive element
    • H01C10/38Adjustable resistors the contact sliding along resistive element the contact moving along a straight path

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improvements in adjustable power resistor assemblies and has for its object the provision of a better, more reliable shorting member therefor.
  • the shorting bars have usually comprised spring members which bear against the resistors, a typical arrangement being shown in U.S. Patent No. 803,453. Since the usual applicataion of such power resistor assemblies requires them to carry very large currents, it has been found that there is a tendency when spring elements are used for the large currents to destroy the spring elements thereby making the assemblies unreliable and necessitating frequent maintenance to insure continuous operation.
  • This invention overcomes the difliculties of such prior arrangements by the use of solid contacting elements which are adapted to slide along portions of the spaced resistors, with a rigid conducting element arranged across the resistors to engage the contacting elements and make electrical contact therewith, and a spring member with novel gripping portions which engages both the conducting member and the contacting elements to clamp them together and hold them in place in the assembly.
  • the contacting elements and the conducting member carry the current which flows through the resistors and the spring member serves primarily as a clamping device which at the same time maintains proper contact pressure, with current flow through the spring member held to a
  • Figure 1 is a perspective view of a typical power resistor assembly which embodies the present invention.
  • Figure 2 is a partial sectional view further illustrating the invention.
  • Figure 3 is an exploded perspective view showing the various details of the novel shorting bar.
  • the power resistor assembly is seen to comprise a pair of spaced parallel wound resistor units 4 and 5 suitably mounted at their ends between a front support 6 and a back support 7.
  • the resistor units are shown as elongated cylindrical sticks which may have cylindrical porcelain cores 8, 9 around which is helically wound the resistor wires 11 and 12.
  • the cores may have their extremities threaded at each end as shown at 13, 14 in Figure 1 with the threaded portions extending through suitable apertures in the supports so that the nuts 15, 16 may be installed to secure the units properly in place.
  • the manner of aflixing the resistor unit to the back support 7 may be identical with the arrangements used at the front support.
  • the shorting bar assembly 19 which is mounted on an insulated nut 21 which in turn is carried by a rotatably mounted screw member 22.
  • the screw member 22 has its head 23 extending through the front support 6 where it is slotted so that a screw-driver or other suitable means can be applied to turn the screw and thus cause the nut 21 to travel back and forth be tween the front and back supports.
  • a suitable control knob can be fixed to the screw head, if desired, for further convenience in adjustment of the position of the shorting bar assembly 19.
  • the shorting bar assembly includes a pair of contacting elements in the form of carbon blocks or brushes 24, 25 which rest respectively on the resistor units 4, 5 and are adapted to slide along portions thereof.
  • a copper conducting member 26 in the form of an inverted trough which has its outer ends adapted to both confine and make electrical contact with the carbon brushes. Since the trough member 26 is substantially U-shaped in configuration, its brush engaging ends are in the form of yokes which easily slip over the brushes and make electrical contact therewith.
  • the trough member 26 has a portion of its base removed intermediate its ends to form the elongated slot 27 in which is fitted in nesting relation a coextensive spring member 28 which has its outer extremities in the form of gripping portions which are adapted to engage the ends of the trough member and the carbon brushes to clamp them together and hold them in place within the resistor assembly.
  • These gripping portions are in the form of substantially U-shaped yokes 29, 31 which are at right angles to the yokes formed by the ends of the trough member 26 such that they overlie the conducting member and form therewith a receptacle which contains the contacting brushes.
  • the spring member 28 is securely aflixed to the insulated nut by means of the screws 32 and the arrangement is such that a biasing force is developed by the spring member which urges the ends of trough member 26 against the carbon brushes and at the same time urges the carbon brushes against the resistor units 4, 5 to maintain proper electrical contact throughout the shorting bar assembly.
  • the heavy current which may flow through the resistor units 4, 5 will be shorted through the assembly 19 and its path therethrough will be via the carbon brushes 24, 25 and the interconnecting conducting trough member 26. Very little of the current will flow through the spring member and therefore any tendency for the current to damage the spring member is minimized.
  • the carbon brushes and the conducting trough member will pass the currents without any damage and should there be any wear of the brushes the ends of the spring member can easily be lifted to permit ready replacement of the brushes. Alternatively the spring member can easily be removed by removal of the screws 32 to permit replacement of worn brushes.
  • a power resistor assembly in combination: a pair of spaced parallel wound resistor units; a pair of con- 'tacting elements, each adapted to slide along a portion of one of the resistor units and make electrical contact therewith; an electrically conducting member in the form of an inverted trough extending across said resistor units to bridge the space therebetween, opposite ends of said conducting member forming first yokes engaging said p 7 4 maintain electrical contact therewith; and means for moving said conducting member along the parallel axis of said resistor units whereby the resistor units may be shorted at any of a plurality of points along said axes.
  • resistor units comprise elongated helically wound cylindrical members and said contacting elements are in the form 'of carbon blocks.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Microelectronics & Electronic Packaging (AREA)
  • Adjustable Resistors (AREA)

Description

Sept. 1, 1959 R. E PuY 2,902,664
POWER RESISTOR ASSEMBLY Filed July 3, 1958 POWER RESISTOR ASSEMBLY Robert P. DePuy, Lynchburg, Va., assignor to General Electric Company, a corporation of New York Application July 3, 1958, Serial No. 746,394 4 Claims. (Cl. 338-176) This invention relates to improvements in adjustable power resistor assemblies and has for its object the provision of a better, more reliable shorting member therefor.
Heretofore, in power resistor assemblies of the type which include at least a pair of spaced parallel wound resistor units and a shorting member which contacts both pf the resistor units and is mounted to move along the parallelaxis of the units to vary the combined resistance of the assembly, the shorting bars have usually comprised spring members which bear against the resistors, a typical arrangement being shown in U.S. Patent No. 803,453. Since the usual applicataion of such power resistor assemblies requires them to carry very large currents, it has been found that there is a tendency when spring elements are used for the large currents to destroy the spring elements thereby making the assemblies unreliable and necessitating frequent maintenance to insure continuous operation.
This invention overcomes the difliculties of such prior arrangements by the use of solid contacting elements which are adapted to slide along portions of the spaced resistors, with a rigid conducting element arranged across the resistors to engage the contacting elements and make electrical contact therewith, and a spring member with novel gripping portions which engages both the conducting member and the contacting elements to clamp them together and hold them in place in the assembly. In this manner the contacting elements and the conducting member carry the current which flows through the resistors and the spring member serves primarily as a clamping device which at the same time maintains proper contact pressure, with current flow through the spring member held to a The invention together with its objects and advantages will be more fully understood upon reference to the detailed description set forth below particularly when taken in conjunction with the single sheet of drawing in which:
Figure 1 is a perspective view of a typical power resistor assembly which embodies the present invention; and
Figure 2 is a partial sectional view further illustrating the invention; and
Figure 3 is an exploded perspective view showing the various details of the novel shorting bar.
Referring first to Figure l the power resistor assembly is seen to comprise a pair of spaced parallel wound resistor units 4 and 5 suitably mounted at their ends between a front support 6 and a back support 7. The resistor units are shown as elongated cylindrical sticks which may have cylindrical porcelain cores 8, 9 around which is helically wound the resistor wires 11 and 12. The cores may have their extremities threaded at each end as shown at 13, 14 in Figure 1 with the threaded portions extending through suitable apertures in the supports so that the nuts 15, 16 may be installed to secure the units properly in place. The manner of aflixing the resistor unit to the back support 7 may be identical with the arrangements used at the front support.
United States. Patent 0 2,902,664 Patented Sept. 1, 1959 The front ends of the resistor wires 11 and 12 are brought out through the front support in the form of terminals 17, 18 to which suitable leads may be aflixed for connection of the resistor assembly into an electrical circuit. The back ends of the resistor wires may be joined together, if desired, so that the two resistor units are effectively shorted at their rear extremities.
In order to provide a traveling shorting bar which can move along the'axes of the resistors to vary the combined resistance of the unit, as desired, for any regulating purpose, there is provided the shorting bar assembly 19 which is mounted on an insulated nut 21 which in turn is carried by a rotatably mounted screw member 22. The screw member 22 has its head 23 extending through the front support 6 where it is slotted so that a screw-driver or other suitable means can be applied to turn the screw and thus cause the nut 21 to travel back and forth be tween the front and back supports. A suitable control knob can be fixed to the screw head, if desired, for further convenience in adjustment of the position of the shorting bar assembly 19.
The shorting bar assembly includes a pair of contacting elements in the form of carbon blocks or brushes 24, 25 which rest respectively on the resistor units 4, 5 and are adapted to slide along portions thereof. Cooperating with the contacting elements 24, 25 is a copper conducting member 26 in the form of an inverted trough which has its outer ends adapted to both confine and make electrical contact with the carbon brushes. Since the trough member 26 is substantially U-shaped in configuration, its brush engaging ends are in the form of yokes which easily slip over the brushes and make electrical contact therewith.
The trough member 26 has a portion of its base removed intermediate its ends to form the elongated slot 27 in which is fitted in nesting relation a coextensive spring member 28 which has its outer extremities in the form of gripping portions which are adapted to engage the ends of the trough member and the carbon brushes to clamp them together and hold them in place within the resistor assembly. These gripping portions are in the form of substantially U-shaped yokes 29, 31 which are at right angles to the yokes formed by the ends of the trough member 26 such that they overlie the conducting member and form therewith a receptacle which contains the contacting brushes.
The spring member 28 is securely aflixed to the insulated nut by means of the screws 32 and the arrangement is such that a biasing force is developed by the spring member which urges the ends of trough member 26 against the carbon brushes and at the same time urges the carbon brushes against the resistor units 4, 5 to maintain proper electrical contact throughout the shorting bar assembly.
With the above arrangement, the heavy current which may flow through the resistor units 4, 5 will be shorted through the assembly 19 and its path therethrough will be via the carbon brushes 24, 25 and the interconnecting conducting trough member 26. Very little of the current will flow through the spring member and therefore any tendency for the current to damage the spring member is minimized. The carbon brushes and the conducting trough member will pass the currents without any damage and should there be any wear of the brushes the ends of the spring member can easily be lifted to permit ready replacement of the brushes. Alternatively the spring member can easily be removed by removal of the screws 32 to permit replacement of worn brushes.
From the above it is thus seen that manipulation of the screw 22 will cause the brushes 24, 25 to slide along the resistor units to thereby produce the desired change in resistance for regulating purposes.
Therefore, while a particular embodiment of the sub-- ject invention has been shown and described herein, it is in the nature of description rather than limitation, and it will occur to those skilled in the art that various changes,
modifications, and combinations may be made Within the province of the appended claims, and Without departing either in spirit or scope from this invention in its broader aspects.
What I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States is:
1. In a power resistor assembly, in combination: a pair of spaced parallel wound resistor units; a pair of con- 'tacting elements, each adapted to slide along a portion of one of the resistor units and make electrical contact therewith; an electrically conducting member in the form of an inverted trough extending across said resistor units to bridge the space therebetween, opposite ends of said conducting member forming first yokes engaging said p 7 4 maintain electrical contact therewith; and means for moving said conducting member along the parallel axis of said resistor units whereby the resistor units may be shorted at any of a plurality of points along said axes.
2. The combination defined by claim 1 wherein said trough has a portion of its base removed intermediate its ends to form a slot therein, and said spring member has its portion intermediate said gripping portions nested within said slot. I
3. The combination defined by claim 2 wherein the means to move said conducting member include a rotatably mounted screw extending between said resistor units parallel thereto and an insulated nut carried by said screw, said nesting portion of said spring member being securely aflixed to said nut.
4. The combination defined by claim 3 wherein said resistor units comprise elongated helically wound cylindrical members and said contacting elements are in the form 'of carbon blocks.
References Cited in the file of this patent I UNITED STATES PATENTS
US746394A 1958-07-03 1958-07-03 Power resistor assembly Expired - Lifetime US2902664A (en)

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3194547A (en) * 1961-04-28 1965-07-13 Avner David Alan Hydro-pneumatic vehicle suspension unit
DE1297492B (en) * 1962-10-17 1969-06-12 Girling Ltd Self-pumping hydropneumatic strut with internal level control for vehicles
WO1992000594A1 (en) * 1990-06-27 1992-01-09 Marquardt Gmbh Rheostatic switching arrangement

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1692962A (en) * 1925-11-02 1928-11-27 North East Electric Co Motor controller
US1853798A (en) * 1932-04-12 Ciecuit control apparatus for
US2040278A (en) * 1935-04-29 1936-05-12 David T Siegel Rheostat

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1853798A (en) * 1932-04-12 Ciecuit control apparatus for
US1692962A (en) * 1925-11-02 1928-11-27 North East Electric Co Motor controller
US2040278A (en) * 1935-04-29 1936-05-12 David T Siegel Rheostat

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3194547A (en) * 1961-04-28 1965-07-13 Avner David Alan Hydro-pneumatic vehicle suspension unit
DE1297492B (en) * 1962-10-17 1969-06-12 Girling Ltd Self-pumping hydropneumatic strut with internal level control for vehicles
WO1992000594A1 (en) * 1990-06-27 1992-01-09 Marquardt Gmbh Rheostatic switching arrangement
US5453728A (en) * 1990-06-27 1995-09-26 Marquardt Gmbh Rheostatic device in a switching arrangement for electric tools

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