US2924736A - Electric lamp and method of manufacture - Google Patents

Electric lamp and method of manufacture Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2924736A
US2924736A US594224A US59422456A US2924736A US 2924736 A US2924736 A US 2924736A US 594224 A US594224 A US 594224A US 59422456 A US59422456 A US 59422456A US 2924736 A US2924736 A US 2924736A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
lamp
filament
exhaust tube
bulb
conductors
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
US594224A
Inventor
William E Kotsch
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 US594224A priority Critical patent/US2924736A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2924736A publication Critical patent/US2924736A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01KELECTRIC INCANDESCENT LAMPS
    • H01K3/00Apparatus or processes adapted to the manufacture, installing, removal, or maintenance of incandescent lamps or parts thereof
    • H01K3/20Sealing-in wires directly into the envelope

Definitions

  • This invention relates to electric lamps and similar devices, and to a method of manufacture thereof. More particularly, the invention relates to electric lamps of the type having an external stem press through which the lead-in conductors of the lamp are sealed.
  • a baseless type miniature incandescent lamp comprising a small glass bulb provided with an external stem press through which are sealed a pair of pin-type lead-in conductors having rigid outer pin ends which project outwardly from the stem press to serve as the contact terminals for the lamp. lnteriorly of the bulb the lead-in conductors are connected to a filament to support it in place within the bulb and provide the electrical connection thereto.
  • the bulb is exhausted through an exhaust passageway extending through the stem press which passageway, after evacuation and, if desired, gas filling of the bulb, is closed off at its outer end by an exhaust tip to thereby hermetically seal the bulb.
  • Such supplementary support members are generally constituted of short wire lengths which are anchored at one end within the lamp bulb and are provided at their other end with a loop 7 or hook within which the filament is engaged so as to be additionally supported thereby.
  • Another object of my invention is to provide an electric lamp of the external stem press type having supplementary filament support means of simple and inexpensive construction and easy to manufacture.
  • Still another object of my invention is to provide a novel method of manufacturing an electric lamp of the external stem press type and having a supplementary support for the filamentof the lamp.
  • an electric lamp of the external stem press type is provided with one or more supplementary filament supports which are embedded in or anchored on the stem press of the lamp.
  • the supplementary filament support member is first fused into one end of the exhaust tube of the lamp, and the support member then engaged with the filament of the lamp mount to support it in place prior to the fusion and sealing of the said exhaust tube end and the lamp mount into the neck of the lamp envelope and the ensuing pressing of the softened glass of the envelope neck to form the external stem press of the lamp.
  • Fig. l is an axial section of an electric incandescent lamp comprising my invention, taken in the plane of the stem press thereof.
  • Fig. 2 is an axial section of the lamp at right angles to the section shown in Fig. 1, i.e., taken normal to the plane of the stem press.
  • Fig. 3 is a sectional view taken on the line 3-3 of Fig. 2.
  • Figs. 4-8 are views illustrating the successive steps in the manufacture of an electric incandescent lamp according to the method of my invention.
  • Figs. 9-12 are views illustrating the successive steps in the manufacture of an electric lamp according to a modified method comprising my invention.
  • the invention is there illustrated as applied to an electric incandescent lamp of the external stem press type such as disclosed and claimed in co-pending U.S. patent application Serial No. 549,424, Ma-lm et al., filedNovember 28, 1955, and assigned to the assignee of the present invention.
  • Such lamps comprise a sealed glass bulb or envelope 1 provided with a short neck portion 2 terminating in a pinched seal or press portion 3 protruding outwardly from the bulb and through which a plurality (two in the particular case shown) of lead-in conductors 4 are sealed so as to extend parallel to each other in side-by-side relation in the plane of the stern press 3.
  • the lead-in conductors 4 are of the multi-section pin type such as are commonly employed in miniature radio tubes and comprising, in the particular case illustrated, rigid metal outer pin portions 5 and inner lead portions 6 which are hermetically sealed in the stern press 3, the two sections 5 and 6 of each conductor being butt-welded together in endto-end relation.
  • the outer pin portions 5 may be made, for example, of nickel wire having a diameter for instance of ,4, inch.
  • the inner lead portions 6 may be made of conventional Dumet wire commonly employed in the lamp making art for sealing into glass. If desired, however, the conductor 4, instead of being formed of two parts as shown, may be of the conventional threepart type comprising the outer pin portions 5, inner lead portions 6 of copper or nickel, and press lead portions of Dumet.
  • the stem press portion 3 of the lamp envelope 1 is provided with an exhaust passageway 8 which extends through the stem press at a point between the two conductors 4 and is closed or sealed off at its outer end.
  • the exhaust passageway 8 is constituted by the bore 9 of a glass exhaust tube 10'which is sealed in the stem press 3 and the bore of which is maintained open during the press-forming operation in the manner disclosed and claimed in the aforesaid Malm et al. application Serial No.
  • the coating material 11 must be one which is chemically inert with respect to the lamp filament 7 at the incandescent operating temperature thereof, and it must have a melting point above that of the glass of which the stern press is constituted, e.g., a melting point above 650 C. in the case of the socalled soft type glasses which are customarily employed for the exhaust tube and the bulb of electric lamps and which have a melting point of around 650 C.
  • the coating material 11 should also be one which is both physically and chemically stable at temperatures up to at least the temperature (for example, at least 700 C.) which the glass exhaust tube 10 will attain during the tipping-off thereof, otherwise contamination of lamps will occur from the gases or other contaminating impurities introduced in the lamp envelope by unstable coating materials. 7
  • the filament 7 is additionally supported, at one or more points along its length, by one or more supplementary filament support members 12, only one such supplementary filament support member being shown in the particular case illustrated.
  • the supplementary filament support member 12 is preferably in the form of a length of wire formed of any suitable material, such as molybdenum for instance, and anchored at one end inside the bulb and provided at its other end with a hook or loop 13 within which the filament is engaged so as to be supported thereby.
  • the supplementary filament support member 12 is embedded at one end within the glass of the stem press 3, as shown in Fig. 2, to thereby anchor the support member in place within the bulb.
  • the conductors 4 are also inserted and supported, with their pin end lowermost, within upwardly-opening conductor-receiving apertures or pockets 16 in the supporting jig 15 so as to be held in a vertical position extending alongside the protruding upper end of the exhaust tube 10, in the manner shown in Fig. 5.
  • a filament 7 is then connected at its ends to the ends of the inner lead portions 6 of the conductors 4.
  • the formation of the external stem press 3 as described above completes the fabrication of the lamp bulb assembly except for the evacuation and, if desired, gas filling of the lamp bulb 1 which is then carried out in the customary manner through the exhaust tube 10 and the exhaust passageway 8 through the stern press, following which the exhaust tube is then sealed or tipped-01f in the usual manner, as indicated at 22 in Figs. 1 and 2, to thereby hermetically seal the lamp bulb 1 and complete the'manufacture of the lamp according to the invention.
  • the exhaust tube 10 is then placed in the support jig and the lamp then completed in the same manner as described previously except that the exhaust tube 10 is located at a somewhat higher elevation than before (as shown in Fig. 11) sufficient to insure the location of the exhaust aperture 24 in the finished lamp at a point above the stem press 3 thereof as shown in Fig. 12 so as to enable the subsequent evacuation and, if desired, gas filling of the bulb 1 through the exhaust tube 10.
  • An electric incandescent lamp comprising a sealed glass envelope having an outwardly protruding external stem press'consisting of the fused mass of glass of a neck portion of said envelope and a glass exhaust tube extending thereinto, said stem press having an exhaust passageway extending therethrough and closed at its outer end, outwardly of said stem press, by a tipped-off residue of said exhaust tube,lead-in conductors sealed through said stem press and extending into said envelope, a filament in said envelope connected to said lead-in conductors, and a supplementary filament support member in said envelope having one end embedded and anchored in the fused glass mass of said stem press and supporting said filament at a point intermediate its connections to said lead-in conductors, the said support member terminating wholly within said stem press and being supported solely thereby.

Description

w. E. KoTscH ELECTRIC LAMP AND METHOD OF" MANUFACTURE Feb. 9, 1 960 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed June 27, 1956 lnven tor Feb. 9, 1960 w. KOTSCH ELECTRIC LAMP AND METHOD OF MANUFACTURE 2 Sheets- Sheet 2 Filed June 27, 1956 Comp/2555 50 Invervtor: WiLLiam E. Kysch b 8 His AI OT e9.
United States Patent ELECTRIC LAMP AND METHOD or MANUFACTURE William E. Kotsch, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, assignor to General Electric Company, a corporation of New York Application June 27, 1956, Serial No. 594,224
1 Claim. (Cl. 313-279) This invention relates to electric lamps and similar devices, and to a method of manufacture thereof. More particularly, the invention relates to electric lamps of the type having an external stem press through which the lead-in conductors of the lamp are sealed.
' There has recently appeared on the market a baseless type miniature incandescent lamp comprising a small glass bulb provided with an external stem press through which are sealed a pair of pin-type lead-in conductors having rigid outer pin ends which project outwardly from the stem press to serve as the contact terminals for the lamp. lnteriorly of the bulb the lead-in conductors are connected to a filament to support it in place within the bulb and provide the electrical connection thereto. The bulb is exhausted through an exhaust passageway extending through the stem press which passageway, after evacuation and, if desired, gas filling of the bulb, is closed off at its outer end by an exhaust tip to thereby hermetically seal the bulb.
For certain applications, as in the case of miniature lamps operating at voltages (egg. of the order of 12 volts and higher) which require the use of filaments of relatively long length, it is necessary to provide one or more additional supports for the filament in order to properly support the filament in place so as to prevent the sagging and shorting out of the filament and consequent premature failure thereof. Such supplementary support members are generally constituted of short wire lengths which are anchored at one end within the lamp bulb and are provided at their other end with a loop 7 or hook within which the filament is engaged so as to be additionally supported thereby.
While it is possible to anchor such supplementary filament support members on glass beads or insulative bridge members suitably fastened to or mounted on the lead-in conductors of the lamp, such constructions are nevertheless objectionable not only because of the additional manufacturing operations required and resultant added manufacturing costs, but also because of the possibility of cracking of the glass bead during the pressing of the stem press and because of the comparatively large size of bead required by reason of the relatively wide spacing of the lead-in conductors in such pin-type lamps,
such a large size bead preventing or interfering with the insertion of the lamp mount through the small neck of the bulb customarily employed for such pin-type lamps.
It is an object of my invention, therefore, to provide an electric lamp of the type having an external stern press and supplementary support means for the filament thereof and in which the above mentioned objections are obviated.
Another object of my invention is to provide an electric lamp of the external stem press type having supplementary filament support means of simple and inexpensive construction and easy to manufacture.
Still another object of my invention is to provide a novel method of manufacturing an electric lamp of the external stem press type and having a supplementary support for the filamentof the lamp.
Briefly stated, in accordance with one aspect of the invention, an electric lamp of the external stem press type is provided with one or more supplementary filament supports which are embedded in or anchored on the stem press of the lamp. According to another aspect of the invention, the supplementary filament support member is first fused into one end of the exhaust tube of the lamp, and the support member then engaged with the filament of the lamp mount to support it in place prior to the fusion and sealing of the said exhaust tube end and the lamp mount into the neck of the lamp envelope and the ensuing pressing of the softened glass of the envelope neck to form the external stem press of the lamp.
Further objects and advantages of the invention will appear from the following detailed description of a species thereof and from the accompanying drawings.
In the drawing,
Fig. l is an axial section of an electric incandescent lamp comprising my invention, taken in the plane of the stem press thereof.
Fig. 2 is an axial section of the lamp at right angles to the section shown in Fig. 1, i.e., taken normal to the plane of the stem press.
Fig. 3 is a sectional view taken on the line 3-3 of Fig. 2.
Figs. 4-8 are views illustrating the successive steps in the manufacture of an electric incandescent lamp according to the method of my invention, and
Figs. 9-12 are views illustrating the successive steps in the manufacture of an electric lamp according to a modified method comprising my invention.
Referring to the drawing, the invention is there illustrated as applied to an electric incandescent lamp of the external stem press type such as disclosed and claimed in co-pending U.S. patent application Serial No. 549,424, Ma-lm et al., filedNovember 28, 1955, and assigned to the assignee of the present invention. Such lamps comprise a sealed glass bulb or envelope 1 provided with a short neck portion 2 terminating in a pinched seal or press portion 3 protruding outwardly from the bulb and through which a plurality (two in the particular case shown) of lead-in conductors 4 are sealed so as to extend parallel to each other in side-by-side relation in the plane of the stern press 3. The lead-in conductors 4 are of the multi-section pin type such as are commonly employed in miniature radio tubes and comprising, in the particular case illustrated, rigid metal outer pin portions 5 and inner lead portions 6 which are hermetically sealed in the stern press 3, the two sections 5 and 6 of each conductor being butt-welded together in endto-end relation. The outer pin portions 5 may be made, for example, of nickel wire having a diameter for instance of ,4, inch. The inner lead portions 6 may be made of conventional Dumet wire commonly employed in the lamp making art for sealing into glass. If desired, however, the conductor 4, instead of being formed of two parts as shown, may be of the conventional threepart type comprising the outer pin portions 5, inner lead portions 6 of copper or nickel, and press lead portions of Dumet. The metal outer pins 5 serve as terminal contacts forthe lamp and for such purpose are embedded at their inner ends in the glass of the stem press- 3 in order to firmly anchor or support the pins in place from the stern press. Interiorly of the envelope 1, the inner leads 6 are connected to the opposite ends of an electrical energy translation element such as a filament 7 comprised, for example, of a wire of tungsten or other suitable refractory metal in coiled or coiled-coil or any other suitable form.
-The envelope. 1v is evacuated and, if dpsired, filled,
with a suitable gas, such as argon, nitrogen or krypton, or mixtures thereof, to a suitable pressure. For such purpose, the stem press portion 3 of the lamp envelope 1 is provided with an exhaust passageway 8 which extends through the stem press at a point between the two conductors 4 and is closed or sealed off at its outer end. The exhaust passageway 8 is constituted by the bore 9 of a glass exhaust tube 10'which is sealed in the stem press 3 and the bore of which is maintained open during the press-forming operation in the manner disclosed and claimed in the aforesaid Malm et al. application Serial No. 549,424, i.e.,' by providing the end portion of the exhaust tube which is fusion-sealed into the stem press 3 with a firmly adherent coating 11 of a suitable inorganic material, such as powdered magnesium oxide or Zirconium oxide, for example, or any of the other coating materials mentioned in the above Malm et al. application, which materials have the property of maintaing the bore of the exhaust tube open during the heating and interfusion of the exhaust tube and the surrounding neck 2 of the lamp bulb 1 and the pressing of the stem press 3; As disclosed in the said co-pending Malm et al. application, the coating material 11 must be one which is chemically inert with respect to the lamp filament 7 at the incandescent operating temperature thereof, and it must have a melting point above that of the glass of which the stern press is constituted, e.g., a melting point above 650 C. in the case of the socalled soft type glasses which are customarily employed for the exhaust tube and the bulb of electric lamps and which have a melting point of around 650 C. In addition, the coating material 11 should also be one which is both physically and chemically stable at temperatures up to at least the temperature (for example, at least 700 C.) which the glass exhaust tube 10 will attain during the tipping-off thereof, otherwise contamination of lamps will occur from the gases or other contaminating impurities introduced in the lamp envelope by unstable coating materials. 7
As shown in Fig. ,1, the filament 7 is additionally supported, at one or more points along its length, by one or more supplementary filament support members 12, only one such supplementary filament support member being shown in the particular case illustrated. The supplementary filament support member 12 is preferably in the form of a length of wire formed of any suitable material, such as molybdenum for instance, and anchored at one end inside the bulb and provided at its other end with a hook or loop 13 within which the filament is engaged so as to be supported thereby. In accordance with the invention, the supplementary filament support member 12 is embedded at one end within the glass of the stem press 3, as shown in Fig. 2, to thereby anchor the support member in place within the bulb.
Referring to Figs. 4-8, illustrating the successive steps in manufacturing an electric incandescent lamp in .the manner according to the invention, a supplementary filament support member or wire 12 is first fused to one end of an exhaust tube 19, which has been previously provided with an internal coating 11, to form an exhaust tube and support wire assembly as shown in Fig. 4. The said assembly of the exhaust tube 10 and support member 12 is then inserted, and supported in a vertical position with its support-carrying end uppermost, in the bore 14 of a supporting jig or head 15 of a lamp mounting machine, with the coated upper end of the exhaust tube protruding above the upper face of the supporting jig. The conductors 4 are also inserted and supported, with their pin end lowermost, within upwardly-opening conductor-receiving apertures or pockets 16 in the supporting jig 15 so as to be held in a vertical position extending alongside the protruding upper end of the exhaust tube 10, in the manner shown in Fig. 5. After placing the assembled exhaust tube and supplementary filament support 12, and the two lead-in conductors 4 in the supporting jig or head 15, a filament 7 is then connected at its ends to the ends of the inner lead portions 6 of the conductors 4. Following the said mounting or attachment of the filament 7 to the lead-in conductors 4, the supplementary filament support member 12 is then formed with a filament-engaging hook portion 13 at its upper end and the said hook portion 13 engaged around the filament, at a point thereof intermediate its connections to the lead-in conductors 4, to thereby additionally support the filament in place. The formation of the hook portion 13 and the engagement and closing thereof around the filament 7 may be performed by conventional type mechanism commonly in use for such purpose in the lampmaking art, such as shown for example in Iden Patent 2,199,852 and co-pending US. application Serial No. 254,052, now Patent No. 2,760,529, Pakish et al., filed October 31, 1951, and assigned to the assignee of the present invention. The engagement of the hook portion 13 of the support member 12 with the filament 7 thus completes the assembly of the lamp mount 17 which is composed of the conductors 4, filament 7 and support member 12.
With the exhaust tube 10 and lamp mount 17 thus positioned in place in the supporting jig or head 15, a glass lamp envelope or bulb 1 is then placed neck end down over the lamp mount and the protruding upper end of the exhaust tube and supported in place on a bulb holder or seat 18 with the neck portion 2 of the bulb surrounding or encircling the protruding upper end of the exhaust tube and the two lead-in conductors 4, in the manner shown in Fig. 7. Gas fires 19 from gas burners 20 are then directed against the neck portion 2 of the bulb 1 to soften the glass forming the said neck portion and collapse it around the lead-in conductors and against the protruding upper end of the exhausttube so as to also soften, by conduction of heat thereto, the glass of the said protruding end of the exhaust tube and interfuse therewith. When the proper degree of heating and softening'of the bulb neck 2 and the protruding upper end of the exhaust tube 10 is attained, a pair of pressforming jaws 21 are then actuated to close against the softened bulb neck about the conductors 4 and against the protruding upper end of the exhaust tube 4, in the manner shown in Fig. 8, to thereby form the stem press 3 of the lamp. During the stem press forming operation, the internal coating 11 in the upper protruding end of the exhaust tube 10 acts to maintain the bore 9 of the exhaust tube open so as to thereafter serve as a passageway 8 for subsequently evacuating the lamp bulb 1.
The formation of the external stem press 3 as described above completes the fabrication of the lamp bulb assembly except for the evacuation and, if desired, gas filling of the lamp bulb 1 which is then carried out in the customary manner through the exhaust tube 10 and the exhaust passageway 8 through the stern press, following which the exhaust tube is then sealed or tipped-01f in the usual manner, as indicated at 22 in Figs. 1 and 2, to thereby hermetically seal the lamp bulb 1 and complete the'manufacture of the lamp according to the invention.
Instead of forming the hook 13 on the supplementary filament support member 12 after the fusion of the latter to the end of the exhaust tube 10 and after the positioning of the lead-in conductors 4 in the supporting jig 15 and the positioning and attachment of the filament 7 in place on the lead-in conductors 4, the said hook 13 may be formed on the support member 12 before the fusion thereof to the end of the exhaust tube 10. In such case, the filament 7 may be engaged within the hook 13 of the support member 12 either at the time the filament is mounted in place on the ends of the lead-in conductors 4, or at the time an assembled pair of conductors 4 and filament '7 is placed in the jig 15.
in he alternative method disclosed in Figs. 8-12, the end of the exhaust tube '10 which is provided with the internal coating 11 first heated and softened, and then upset to form a glass bead 23 in which the supplementary filament support member 12 is thereafter embedded to support it in place on the said end of the exhaust tube, as shown in Fig. 9. A side exhaust opening 24 is then formed in the wall of the exhaust tube 10, at a point immediately below the glass head 23, by directing a gas fire 25 (Fig. against a localized region of the exhaust tube wall and introducing compressed air into the open end of the exhaust tube, after the glass becomes softened, to blow out the said opening 24 in the exhaust tube wall. The assembled exhaust tube 10 and support member 12 shown in Fig. 10 is then placed in the support jig and the lamp then completed in the same manner as described previously except that the exhaust tube 10 is located at a somewhat higher elevation than before (as shown in Fig. 11) sufficient to insure the location of the exhaust aperture 24 in the finished lamp at a point above the stem press 3 thereof as shown in Fig. 12 so as to enable the subsequent evacuation and, if desired, gas filling of the bulb 1 through the exhaust tube 10.
From the foregoing, it will be evident that I have provided a simple and inexpensive way of manufacturing an electric incandescent lamp of the external stem press type having a supplementary support for the filament thereof, which method not only aEords a simplified lamp mount construction but also avoids the objection of a separate insulative bridge member or an objectionably large size glass bead for supporting the supplementary filament support member in place within the bulb.
Although a preferred embodiment of my invention has been disclosed, it will be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the specific construction and arrangement of parts shown, but that they may be widely modified within the spirit and scope of my invention as defined by the appended claim.
What I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States is:
An electric incandescent lamp comprising a sealed glass envelope having an outwardly protruding external stem press'consisting of the fused mass of glass of a neck portion of said envelope and a glass exhaust tube extending thereinto, said stem press having an exhaust passageway extending therethrough and closed at its outer end, outwardly of said stem press, by a tipped-off residue of said exhaust tube,lead-in conductors sealed through said stem press and extending into said envelope, a filament in said envelope connected to said lead-in conductors, and a supplementary filament support member in said envelope having one end embedded and anchored in the fused glass mass of said stem press and supporting said filament at a point intermediate its connections to said lead-in conductors, the said support member terminating wholly within said stem press and being supported solely thereby.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 263,011 Bernstein Aug. 22, 1882 686,218 Forst Nov. 5, 1901 805,282 Germani Nov. 21, 1905 1,247,068 Benbow Nov. 20, 1917 1,569,216 Dake Jan. 12, 1926 1,722,176 Cartun July 23, 1929 1,745,181 Mischler Jan. 28, 1930 1,871,366 Gustin Aug. 9, 1932 2,300,997 Van Horn Nov. 3, 1942 2,351,530 McGowan June 13, 1944 2,447,158 Cartun Aug. 17, 1948 2,496,303 Morse et a1 Feb. 27, 1950
US594224A 1956-06-27 1956-06-27 Electric lamp and method of manufacture Expired - Lifetime US2924736A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US594224A US2924736A (en) 1956-06-27 1956-06-27 Electric lamp and method of manufacture

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US594224A US2924736A (en) 1956-06-27 1956-06-27 Electric lamp and method of manufacture

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2924736A true US2924736A (en) 1960-02-09

Family

ID=24378045

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US594224A Expired - Lifetime US2924736A (en) 1956-06-27 1956-06-27 Electric lamp and method of manufacture

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2924736A (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1236068B (en) * 1961-11-03 1967-03-09 Patra Patent Treuhand Process for the production of small electric light bulbs
US3345526A (en) * 1963-04-04 1967-10-03 Ass Elect Ind Electric incandescent lamps
US20060279210A1 (en) * 2005-06-10 2006-12-14 Ching-Chu Chen Tungsten-filament bulb

Citations (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US263011A (en) * 1882-08-22 Electric lamp
US686218A (en) * 1901-03-29 1901-11-05 Robert J Davis Incandescent electric lamp.
US805282A (en) * 1904-10-13 1905-11-21 Gustavo Germani Incandescent lamp.
US1247068A (en) * 1913-10-04 1917-11-20 Gen Electric Filament.
US1569216A (en) * 1923-02-23 1926-01-12 Charles W Dake Electric light
US1722176A (en) * 1926-05-12 1929-07-23 Gen Electric Incandescent lamp
US1745181A (en) * 1928-09-18 1930-01-28 Gen Electric Arrangement for mounting filaments
US1871366A (en) * 1928-06-05 1932-08-09 Westinghouse Lamp Co Electrical vacuum device
US2300997A (en) * 1941-04-30 1942-11-03 Gen Electric Electric incandescent lamp
US2351530A (en) * 1935-12-21 1944-06-13 Westinghouse Electric & Mfg Co Method of sealing-in and molding lamp bulbs
US2447158A (en) * 1943-08-31 1948-08-17 Gen Electric Sealing-in method for lamps and similar devices
US2496303A (en) * 1944-07-15 1950-02-07 Westinghouse Electric Corp Tipping-off operation and product

Patent Citations (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US263011A (en) * 1882-08-22 Electric lamp
US686218A (en) * 1901-03-29 1901-11-05 Robert J Davis Incandescent electric lamp.
US805282A (en) * 1904-10-13 1905-11-21 Gustavo Germani Incandescent lamp.
US1247068A (en) * 1913-10-04 1917-11-20 Gen Electric Filament.
US1569216A (en) * 1923-02-23 1926-01-12 Charles W Dake Electric light
US1722176A (en) * 1926-05-12 1929-07-23 Gen Electric Incandescent lamp
US1871366A (en) * 1928-06-05 1932-08-09 Westinghouse Lamp Co Electrical vacuum device
US1745181A (en) * 1928-09-18 1930-01-28 Gen Electric Arrangement for mounting filaments
US2351530A (en) * 1935-12-21 1944-06-13 Westinghouse Electric & Mfg Co Method of sealing-in and molding lamp bulbs
US2300997A (en) * 1941-04-30 1942-11-03 Gen Electric Electric incandescent lamp
US2447158A (en) * 1943-08-31 1948-08-17 Gen Electric Sealing-in method for lamps and similar devices
US2496303A (en) * 1944-07-15 1950-02-07 Westinghouse Electric Corp Tipping-off operation and product

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1236068B (en) * 1961-11-03 1967-03-09 Patra Patent Treuhand Process for the production of small electric light bulbs
US3345526A (en) * 1963-04-04 1967-10-03 Ass Elect Ind Electric incandescent lamps
US20060279210A1 (en) * 2005-06-10 2006-12-14 Ching-Chu Chen Tungsten-filament bulb

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3798491A (en) Rounded end halogen lamp with spiral exhaust tube and method of manufacutre
US4756701A (en) Method of making a tungsten-halogen lamps having an enhanced temperature gradient
US3194625A (en) Electric lamp with unitary inner envelope and stem assembly and manufacture thereof
US3265923A (en) Baseless double-ended electric incandescent lamp
US2317031A (en) Electric lamp and method of manufacture
US3364378A (en) Electric incandescent lamp unit built-in fuse
US2159794A (en) Electric lamp and similar devices
US2682009A (en) Seal and method of fabrication
US3211511A (en) Electric lamp manufacture
US3080497A (en) Bent end incandescent lamp
US4469983A (en) Electric lamp with an envelope seal designed as pinch seal, and a device and method for its manufacture
US3441774A (en) Halogen-cycle incandescent lamp with planar filament
US2924736A (en) Electric lamp and method of manufacture
US3270237A (en) Electric lamp with single ended pinch seal
US2845557A (en) Arc tube mounting
US6639364B1 (en) Halogen incandescent capsule having filament leg clamped in press seal
US2904716A (en) Electric incandescent lamp and method of manufacture
GB1578768A (en) Lamp leads
US3295016A (en) Manufacture of electric incandescent lamps
US2945327A (en) Method of manufacturing electric lamps or similar devices
US2334631A (en) Base structure for electrical devices
US3475641A (en) Electric incandescent lamp and mount structure with leading-in wires having inturned offset inner ends
US2465084A (en) Incandescent lamp and method of manufacture
US2497545A (en) Electric lamp or similar device and method of manufacture
US2116384A (en) Electric lamp or similar device