US3075070A - Photographic flash guns - Google Patents

Photographic flash guns Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3075070A
US3075070A US73847A US7384760A US3075070A US 3075070 A US3075070 A US 3075070A US 73847 A US73847 A US 73847A US 7384760 A US7384760 A US 7384760A US 3075070 A US3075070 A US 3075070A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
segment
flash
hub
socket
band
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
US73847A
Inventor
Robert J Lipsitz
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.)
KALIMAR Inc
Original Assignee
KALIMAR Inc
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
Priority claimed from US762631A external-priority patent/US2976511A/en
Application filed by KALIMAR Inc filed Critical KALIMAR Inc
Priority to US73847A priority Critical patent/US3075070A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3075070A publication Critical patent/US3075070A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03BAPPARATUS OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR TAKING PHOTOGRAPHS OR FOR PROJECTING OR VIEWING THEM; APPARATUS OR ARRANGEMENTS EMPLOYING ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ACCESSORIES THEREFOR
    • G03B15/00Special procedures for taking photographs; Apparatus therefor
    • G03B15/02Illuminating scene
    • G03B15/03Combinations of cameras with lighting apparatus; Flash units
    • G03B15/04Combinations of cameras with non-electronic flash apparatus; Non-electronic flash units

Landscapes

  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Stroboscope Apparatuses (AREA)

Description

Jan. 22, 1963 R. J LIPSITZ 3,075,070
PHOTOGRAPHIC FLASH cums Original Filed Sept. 22, 1958 a Sheets-Sheet 1 IN V EN TOR. ROBERT J. LIPSITZ m ATT Jan. 22, 1963 R. J. LIPSITZ 3,075,070
PHOTOGRAPHIC FLASH GUNS rlgmal F1l ld4 Sept. 22, 1958 I 72 3 Sheets-Sheet 3 v INVENTOR. ROBERT J. LIPSITZ ATT Y.
United States Patent 3,075,070 PHOTGGRAPHIC FLASH GUNS Robert J. Lipsitz, Ladue, Mo, assignor to Kalimar, Inc, St. Louis, Mo., a corporation of Missouri Original application Sept. 22, 1958, Ser. No. 762,631, now
Patent No. 2,976,511, dated Mar. 21, 1961. Divided and this application Dec. 5, 1960, Ser. No. 73,847
Claims. (Cl. 240-13) This invention relates in general to certain new and useful improvements in photographic flash guns and, more particularly, to photographic flash guns of the so-called B-C circuit type. This application is a division of my co-pending application Serial No. 762,631, filed September 22, 1958, now Patent No. 2,976,511, issued March 21, 1961.
In recent years, it has become a widespread practice among photographers to take various types of photographs, such as interior scenes, nighttime photographs, and the like, with a form of flashlight commonly referred to as a flash gun. Many years ago, of course, photographers used an open tray of magnesium powder or similar pyrotechnical material which was ignited at the desired moment and burned very rapidly with the production of an intense white light that illuminated the scene being photographed. Some twenty-five or thirty years ago, the
so-called flash bulb was developed in which magnesium J floss or other pyrotechnical metallic material was incorporated within a transparent glass envelope or bulb and associated with a filament which had the property of becoming incandescent when a relatively small electrical current was applied to it. Such flash guns usually consisted of a tubular handle-like housing or shell provided at one end with a circular reflector and socket for receiving the flash bulb. Suitably disposed within the handle-like housing was a plurality of conventional flashlight batteries arranged in series. The difliculty with this type of flash gun was that the amount of electricity withdrawn to tire the flash bulb proved to be excessive and the batteries very quickly wore out. Moreover, such flash guns were comparatively large and somewhat cumbersome.
Subsequently, a flash gun circuit was developed in utilizing small compact batteries and a capacitor arranged in series circuit with a resistor so that the capacitor could be charged up over a finite period of time by a very small amount of electrical current from the battery. The charge on the capacitor is then switched across the capacitor by a shutter operated switch or any other suitable means and the relatively high voltage charge on the capacitor is more than adequate to fire the flash bulb reliably and rapidly. Such capacitor-powered circuits have been referred to as B-C circuits and have made it possible to develop photographic flash guns which are extremely compact and in which the battery or power source is quite long-lasting.
However, both professional and amateur photographers have encountered one further problem in connection with the use of flash gun equipment. In taking flash pictures, varying ambient conditions are encountered which require different types of flash bulbs and, as a result, a number of different flash bulbs are available which have different degrees of intensity, different ignition speeds, and in which the emitted light may even have diflerent color characteristics. Moreover, such flash bulbs are available in different types of socket-sizes. In fact, many professional and amateur photographers use different flash guns in different socket-sizes so as to be able to employ whichever flash bulb may fit the particular photographic situation encountered. Obviously, the use of several different flash guns and the supply of bulbs to fit each adds materially to the quantity of equipment which the photographer must carry 7 ICC about and is, therefore, not only expensive but inconvenient.
It is, therefore, one of the primary objects of the pres ent invention to provide a photographic flash gun of the B-C type which is extremely compact in construction and design and is provided with a socket capable of receiving flash bulbs of different types and sizes.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a photographic flash gun of the type stated which is both economical and rugged in construction so as to be relatively free of breakage and malfunctioning.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a photographic flash gun which can be quickly and conveniently folded into very compact form so that it may be conveniently carried about from place to place.
With the above and other objects in view, my invention resides in the novel features of form, construction, arrangement, and combination of parts presently described and pointed out in the claims.
In the accompanying drawings:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a photographic flash gun constructed in accordance with the present invention with the reflector in folded or transport position;
FIG. 2 is a side elevational view of the photographic flash gun shown in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a rear elevational view of the photographic flash gun shown in FIG. 1;
FIG. 4 is a front elevational view of the photographic flash gun of the present invention with the reflector in opened up or operative position;
FIG. 5 is a vertical sectional view taken along line '5- -5 of FIG. 2;
FIG. 6 is a vertical sectional view taken along line 66 of FIG. 3;
FIG. 7 is a fragmentary sectional view taken along line 7-7 of FIG. 3;
FIG. 8 is a fragmentary sectional view taken along line 88 of FIG. 5 showing a flash bulb of the large-base type in operative position within the flash gun;
FIG. 9 is a fragmentary sectional view substantially similar to the view shown in FIG. 8 except thata flash bulb of the small-base type is shown in operative position;
FIG. 10 is a fragmentary sectional view taken along line 1010 of FIG. 9;
FIG. 11 is a fragmentary sectional view taken along line 11-11 of FIG. 10;
FIG. 12 is a fragmentary sectional view of the reflector forming a part of the present invention taken along line 1212 of FIG. 4; I
FIG. 13 is a fragmentary sectional view taken along line 13-13 of FIG. 12;
FIG. 14 is a fragmentary sectional view taken along line 14-14 of FIG. 13;
FIG. 15 is a schematic wiring diagram of the electrical circuit used in conjunction with the flash gun of the present invention; and
FIG. 16 is a fragmentary sectional view taken along line 1616 of FIG. 4.
Referring now in more detail and by reference characters to the drawings, which illustrate a preferreclembodiment of the present invention, A designates a photo graphic flash gun comprising a main shell or housing 1 preferably molded as an integral one-piece unit from a synthetic resin, such as Bakelite or polystyrene, and inupper compartment a and a lower compartment b. Interiorly within the corner between the top wall 3 and the side wall 5 .is an internally threaded boss 8 and similarly formed upon the interior'face of the side wall 6 approximately midway between the top wall 3 andthe partition wall 7 is a boss 9, th e bosses 8, 9, being drilled and tapped for purposes presently more fully appearing.
Provided for close fitting'disposition closurewise across the open rear face of the compartment a is a cover plate 10 formed preferably of the same material as the housing 1 and marginally conforming to the shape thereof. This cover plated!) is suitably apertured for receiving screws 11, 12, which respectively engage the bosses S, 9, and serve to hold the plate 10 securely in closure-forming position across the compartment a. The cover plate 10 is also provided with two suitablyspaced rectangular slots 13, 14, for receiving the prongs of an auxiliary connector of the conventional two-prong ed' or two-bladed type. Since this latter connector is entirely conventional and forms no part of the present invention, it is not shown or described in detail herein. Finally, the cover plate 10 is provided with two apertures 15, 16, 'for purposes presently. more fully appearing. The lower transverse margin of the cover plate 10 is internally chamfered, as at 17, to provide a groove for receiving the upper transverse tongue portion 18 of an auxiliary cover plate 19 which conforms in marginal contour to the lower portion of the shell or husing 1 and extends closurewise across the lower compartment b, being releasably held in place by a spring clip 20 mounted in, and extending. rearwardly from, the bottom wall 4.
' Formed integrally upon, and projecting forwardly from, the upper end of the front wall 2 is a cylindrical boss 21 which is diametrally reduced at its forward end in the provision of a hub 22 for rotatably supporting a plurality of marginally registering reflector segments s, each having an annular end eye 23 encirclingly disposed upon the hub 22, as best seen in FIGS. 8 and 9. The rearmost reflector segment s is held non-rotatably upon the hub 22 by means 'of a small pin 24 and the other reflector segments are slidably connected by slide links I, each of which is permanently secured by means of a loop 25 to a bight 26 struck out of the iforward edge of eachreflector segment s, substantially as shown in FIGS. 13 and 14. The other end of each link I is sli-dably disposed within the next succeeding loop, as at 27, and at such end is provided with a lateral projection 28 serving as a stop to prevent complete Withdrawal upon sliding movement. The, stacked group of reflector segments s are retained upon the hub 22 by means of an annular retaining collar 29 which is held in place by a pair of retention screws '30; When the flash gun is in closed or transport position, the reflector segn'ients are nested one within the other in marginal registration, as shown in FIG. 1, the forwardmost segments being provided with a downwardly extending integral car 31 which is resiliently held beneath a spring clip 32, as shown in FIG. 2. Just above the spring clip 32, the eat 31' is imprinted with an arrow 33'pointing ina clockwise position (reference being made to FIG. 1). Thus, when the flush gun A is readied for operation, the forwardmost reflector segment s is pushed in the direction of the arrow until the ear 31 is disengaged from the spring clip 32. This clockwise pushing movement is continued and the segments will successively unfold until the reflector assumes a substantially circular conformation and all of the links are fully extended with each of the segments s slightly overlapping. When the segments s are fully ex-. tended, however, they do not completely cover the area of the full circle and the user, thereupon, can continue the circular pulling action applied to the forwardmost reflector segment s until it is brought down into. overlapping relation with the rearwardmost reflector segment s, that is to say, the one which is held in non-rotative position upon the hub 22 by means of the pin 24. The latter reflector segment s is provided along its righthand' margin (reference being made to FIG. 4) with a reversely bent hook element 34 which can be snapped into engagement with similarly located apertures 35 formed in the forwardmost reflector segment s. In bringing the rearwardmost and forwardmost reflector segments s into engaged position as just described, all of the reflector segments will be slightly bowed to form a somewhat dished, forwardly presented light reflector which is disposed concentrically around the boss 21 and hub 22.
The boss 21 and its associated hub 22 are axially relieved to provide a socket-forming opening 36 which opens to the interior of the compartment a and similarly the collar 29 is relieved to provide a coaxial bulb-receiving aperture 37. On its interior face, the socket-forming opening 35 is provided with a plurality of axial slots 33, 39, 40, 41. As will be seen by reference to FIG. 10, the slot 38 is at the top of the socket-forming opening 36 and the slot 41 is diametrally opposite thereto at the bottom of the socket-forming opening 36. The slots 39, 40, are disposed at the bottom of the socket-forming opening 36 in symmetrically spaced relationship on opposite sides of the slot 41 and are provided with upwardly and rearwardly inclined slide faces 39', 40, respectively. Formed integrally upon the rear face of the front wall 2 in substantially concentric alignment with the opening 36 is a somewhat tubular socket-extension 42 which is integrally provided at its rear end with a flat end wall '43 located in relatively close juxtaposition with the interior face of the cover plate 10. Along its upper surface, the socketextension 42 is cut away in the provision of an access opening 44 and at the bottom, the socket-extension 42 is provided with slotted continuations of the slots 39,48, 41. Formed integrally with, and extending forwardly from, the rear wall 43 of the socket-extension 42 is coaxial tubular slide cylinder 45 which opens upon the rear face of the wall 43 and at its forward end is provided with a vertical wall 46 having a central aperture 47 for slidably accommodating a contact pin 48 fabricated from an elec trically conductive metal and integrally formed, at its rearward end, with a cylindrical head 49 which slidably engages the cylindrical interior wall of the slide cylinder 45. Rigidly mounted upon the transverse partition wall 7 and extending vertically upwardly therefrom is a contact blade 50 fabricated from a somewhat resilient electrically conductive metal and having a flattened head portion 51 which is located in rearwardly spaced coaxial alignment with the slide cylinder 45, being abuttingly supported on its rear face against the rear face of the cover plate 10. Disposed within the slide cylinder 40 and interposed between the forwardlyv presented face of the head portion 51 and the rearwardly presented face of the head 49 is a compression spring 52 which normally urges the contact pin 48 forwardly within the slide cylinder 45.
Shiftably. mounted within the socket-forming opening 36 is a cylindrical secondary socket 53 formed of suitable dielectric material and being provided with a depending tongue or key 54which is shiftably disposed within the slot 41. Thus, the secondary socket 5,3 will shift axially .to-and-fro, but will not rotate, within the socket-forming opening 36. At its rearward end, the secondary. socket 53 is provided with an annular shoulder 55 and a vertical back wall 56, the latter being provided with a central clearance aperture 57 which is slightly larger in diametral size than the outside diametral size of the slide cylinder 45 so as to slip freely thereover.
Disposed within the socket-extension 42 and interposed between the forwardly presented face of the rear wall 43 and the annular shoulder 55 is a compression spring 58 which normally urges the secondary socket 53 forwardly within the socket-forming opening 36. The secondary socket 53 is further provided with two radial slots 59, 60, which are respectively aligned with the slots 39, 4t). Slidably mounted within the slots 59, 60, are metallic contact blades 61, 62, respectively, which project downwardly into the slots 39,40, and at their lower ends are wants provided with forwardly extending arcuately curved slider feet 63, 64, respectively, the latter being adapted to slide along the inclined faces 39', 40', of the slots 39, 40. When the flash gun is not in use, the spring 58 will normally urge the secondary socket 53 forwardly within the socket-forming opening 36 until the forward margins of the slider feet 63, 64, come into stop-forming abutment against the vertical interior faces 1 of the slots 39, 40. It will be noted that, in this latter position, the slider feet 63, 64, will move radially outwardly along the inclined faces 39, 40, so that the contact blades 61, 62, will drop radially down within the slots 59, 60, for purposes pres ently more fully appearing.
Rigidly mounted upon, and extending cylindrically around the outer face of the secondary socket 53, is a metallic sleeve 65 which is in edgewise sliding electrical contact with the contact blades 61, 62, as shown in FIG. 10. Similarly mounted upon the upper side of the secondary socket 53 and upon the metallic sleeve 65 is a metallic element 66 having an upstanding prong 67 for optional engagement with a detent notch 68 formed in the forward end of a rock-arm 69 which is pivoted approximately at its mid-point upon a fulcrum-pin 70. At its rear end the rock-arm 69 is biased upwardly by a leaf-spring 71 which is rigidly mounted within the compartment a by means of a screw 7'2. On its upper face the rear end of the rock-arm 69 abuts against the downwardly presented headed end 73 of a dielectric push button 74 which is shiftably mounted in the top wall 3. The detent notch 68 is so located that it will retentively engage and form contact with one of of the radially projecting side wall pins 75 on the base 76 of a large-sized flash bulb 77. When the latter is inserted into the socket-forming opening 36, the flat end face of the base 76 is abuttingly engaged against the end face of the secondary socket 53 as shown in FIG. 8 and the force of the spring 58 holds the pin 75 within the detent notch 68. In this connection, it should be noted that the rock-arm 69 is turned up at its forward end to provide an angular flange 78 which will initially engage the pin 75 as the flash bulb 77 is pushed into place and will, in effect, earn the rock-arm 69 upwardly against the pin 75 to enter the detent notch 68. It should also be noted that the pin 48 is long enough to project axially through the secondary socket 53 and make electrical contact with the central contact-button 79 of the flash bulb 77 Mounted in the upper portion of compartment a and extending transversely thereacross against the interior face of the front wall 2 is a connection blade 80 formed of electrically conductive metal and being held in tight electrical contact beneath the flange 81 of the leaf-spring 71 by means of the screw 72 as shown in FIG. 7. At its opposite end the connection blade 80 is secured by a screw 82 and is bent flatwise down into a molded recess 83 formed on the interior face of the front wall 2 as shown in FIG. 6 for contactive engagement with the center-contact 84 of a very tiny high-resistance test lamp t,
the base of which is conductively held in a small leafspring member 85 which is, in turn, rigidly mounted, by
means of a large-headed screw 86, on a molded boss 87 formed upon the interior face of the front wall 2, the test lamp t being positioned in alignment with the aperture 15 of the closure plate so as to be visible therethrough. Also mounted within compartment a upon the interior face of the front wall 2 by means of a screw 83 is a resilient contactor blade 39 which is biased outwardly toward the closure plate 10 and bears against the headed end 90 of a dielectric push button 91 which is shiftably 'mounted in the aperture 16. As may be seen by reference to FIG. 6, when the push button 91 is pressed inwardly the upper end of the blade 89 will make contact with the 7 head of the screw 86 to close a circuit through the test 71 and extending around a shelf 92 molded as an integral 6 part of the housing 1, is an auxiliary contactor 93, having an inwardly turned spring blade 94 disposed in closely spaced relation to the upper face of the boss 9. Similarly formed as an integral extension of the contact blade 50 is a second auxiliary contactor 95 having an inwardly turned spring blade 96 disposed in close proximity to the underside of the boss 9. The spring blades 94, 96, are, furthermore, located directly behind the slots 13, 14, respectively, for contactively engaging the prongs of the conventional two-.pronged auxiliary connector previously referred to.
Also formed integrally on the leaf-spring 71 and ex tending around the transverse partition wall 7 is a springblade contactor 97 which contactively engages the upper terminal 98 of a condenser 99 disposed within compartment b. The condenser 99 also has a lower terminal 100 which contactively engages a contactor element 101 securely mounted on the interior face of the bottom wall 4. This contactor element 101 also contactively engages the lower terminal 102 of a battery 103 which is also disposed within compartment 12. The battery 103, in turn, extends upwardly to the top of compartment b, in side-by-side relation to the condenser 99 and, at its upper end, the battery 1% is provided with a terminal 104 which contactively engages a spring-blade contactor 105 mounted upon the partition wall 7 and electrically connected through a resistor 106 to the contact blade 50. Finally, a two-wire conductor 107 is inserted through the side Wall 5, one lead 108 being connected to the screw 82 and the other lead 109 being connected to the screw 88 and also, by a lead-continuation 110, to the contactor element 101. The electrical connections, thus physically described, constitute the electrical circuit schematically shown in FIG. 15. At its remote end, the conductor is provided with a camera-connection plug 111.
In use, the flash gun A normally can be carried from place to place by the user in the folded up or transport position shown in FIG. 1. When the user desires to set 'up the flash gun A for picture-taking purposes, the adjustrnent element 2 is mounted upon the camera-holding bracket or other device with which it is commonly associated. Inasmuch as the adjustment element e is entirely conventional and does not, in and of itself, constitute any part of the present invention, it has not been specifically described herein, and the holding receptacle of the sure of the shutter switch 112. The shutter switch 112 is also conventional element commonly built into presentday cameras and does not, in and of itself, constitute a part of the present invention, except in the general sense that upon actuation in the usual manner it will complete a circuit to the flash bulb as will be presently morej'fully "described. The shutter switch 112, therefore, is merely shown schematically in the wiring diagram, FIG. 15, but it is not mechanically described herein. i
If the user desires to use a large-sized flash bulb, such as the flash bulb 77 shown in FIG. 8, the base 76 of the bulb 77 is inserted through aperture 37 into the socket opening 36. The end face of the base 76 is thus brought into coaxial alignment with the secondary socket 53, and as the base 76 of the bulb 77 is pushed inwardly the base abuts against the forwardly presented end face of the auxiliary socket 73. Further inward movement of the base 76 will compress the spring 58 and finally one of the prongs 75 of the bulb base 76 will become engaged with the detent notch 68 as previously described and the end terminal 79 of the bulb 77 will engage the contact pin tact with the bulb base 76'.
48 pushing it somewhat against the base of the spring 52 and making electrical contact through the head end 51 of the contact plate 50. Before tripping the shutter andthereby making an exposure, the user may test the circuit, by manually. depressing the push button 91 and closing, the circuit through the test lamp t. If the condenser or capacitor 99 is fully charged and if the circuit through the flash bulb 77 is continuous, the test lamp t will light up. Since the only resistance of the test lamp 1 is relatively high, it will not draw enough current to ignite the filament of the flash bulb 77 and cause the latter-tov fire. Once it has been determined that the capacitor 99 is fully charged and that the circuit is continuous, the. user may actuate the shutter thereby closing the shutter switch 112 and discharging the condenser 99 directly through the flash bulb 77, thereby causing the flash bulb 77 to fire and produce the desired illumination necessary for photographic purposes.
Once the flash bulb 77 has been fired, the push button 74 may be depressed, thereby swinging the rock-arm 69 so as to lift the forward end thereof out of engagement with the pin 75 and releasing the flash bulb 77 which will then be. forcibly expelled from the flash gun A by the action of the springs 52, 58.
If the user desires to employ a small-sized flash bulb, such as flash bulb 77' shown in FIG. 9, such flash bulb maybe inserted through the aperture 37 and into the interior of the secondary socket 53, which is thereupon pushed inwardly against the bias of the spring 58 until the prong 67 is engagedwithin the detent notch 68, there- .by holding the secondary socket 53 in inwardly disposed position as shown. in FIG. 9. The inward shifting move ment of the secondary socket 53 will cause the slider feet 63, 64, of the contact blades 61, 62, to ride inwardly and upwardly along the inclined faces 39', 49, of the slots 39, 40, and as a result, the inward ends of the contact blade 61 will engage within a small annular groove g which is formed around the base 76' of the flash bulb 77, thereby holding the flash bulb 77" mechanically withinthe secondary socket 53 and also making electrical con- In this latter position, the central contact 79' of the bulb 77' will be contactively engaged with the pin 48, all as best seen in FIG. 11. The electrical circuit will, of course, be identical with that previously described in connection with the large-sized flash bulb 7 7.
It will, of course, be immediately apparent from the drawings that the flash gun A, as shown and described, will accommodate either the so-called midget flash bulbs and intermediate flash bulbs which are available in practically, all commonly used speeds and intensities and constitute the most commonly used types of flash bulb-s at the present time. However, it should be also noted that the flash gun A can be designed to accommodate two different types of flash bulbs other than the midget and intermediate bulbs now commonly in use.
It should be understood that changes and modifications in the form, construction, arrangement, and combination of the several parts of the photographic flash guns may be made and substituted for those herein shown and described without departing from the nature and principle of my invention.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim anddesire to secure by Letters Patent is:
1,. A portable photographic flash gun comprising a. housing having a socket-forming hub, a plurality of idea tically-shaped reflector segments rotatably mounted upon the hub and extending radially outwardly therefrom in overlying stacked relationship forwardly along the hub, interconnection means on each segment except the rearwardmost segment, said rearwardmost segment being secured non-rotatively to the housing, the interconnection means of each segment consisting of an arcuate laterally flexible spring steel band, a bight portion formed on the edge of each segment, each of said steel bands having a loop at one end which is secured to the bight on the back face of the segment with which it is associated, said band extending across said segment into overlying relation upon the next adjacent segment directly to the rear thereof, the portion of the band which overlies the segment directly to the rear thereof being slidably threaded through the bight of such segment, said band being integrally provided with a lateral projection having a shoulder for interlocking with such succeeding section when the segments are unfolded and thereby limiting the sliding movement thereof with respect to the segment with which it is slidably engaged, so that tangential force applied to the segments will cause them to rotate around the hub and fan out into a substantially continuous reflector.
2. A portable photographic flash gun comprising a housing having a socket-forming hub, a plurality of identically-shaped reflector segments rotatably mounted upon the hub and extending radially outwardly therefrom in overlying stacked relationship forwardly along the hub, interconnection means on each segment except the rearwardmost segment, said rearwardmost segment being secured non-rotatively to the housing, the interconnection means on each segment consisting of an arcuate laterally flexible spring steel band, a bight portion formed on the edge of each segment, each of said steel bands having a loop at one end which is secured to the bight on the back face of the segment with which it is associated, said band extending across said segment into overlying relation upon the next adjacent segment directly to the rear thereof, the portion of the band which overlies the segment directly to the rear thereof being slidably threaded through the bight of such segment, said band being integrally provided with a lateral projection having a shoulder for interlocking with such succeeding section when the segments are unfolded and thereby limiting the sliding movement thereof with respect to the segment with which it is slidably engaged, so that tangential force applied to the segments will cause them to rotate around the hub and fan out into a susbtantially continuous reflector, and cooperating catch-means on the forwardmost segment and rearwardmost segment, said catchmeans being optionally interengageable in a plurality of selected positions.
3. A portable photographic flash gun comprising a housing having a socket-forming hub, a plurality of identically-shaped reflector segments rotatably mounted upon the hub and extending radially outwardly therefrom in overlying stacked relationship forwardly along the hub, interconnection means on each segment except the rearwardmost segment, said rearwardmost segment being secured non-rotatively to the housing, the interconnection means of each segment consisting of an arcuate laterally flexible spring steel band, a bight portion formed on the edge of each segment, each of said steel bands having a loop at one end which is secured to the bight on the back face of the segment with which it is associated, said band extending across said segment into overlying rela tion upon the next adjacent segment directly to the rear thereof, the portion of the band which overlies the segment directly to the rear thereof being slidably threaded through the bight of such segment, said band being integrally provided with a lateral projection having a shoulder for interlocking with such succeeding section when the segments are unfolded and thereby limiting the sliding movement thereof with respect to the segment with which it is slidably engaged, so that tangential force applied to the segments will cause them to rotate around the hub and fan out into a substantially continuous reflector, cooperating catch-means on the forwardmost segment and rearwardmost segment, said catch-means being optionally interengageable in a plurality of selected positions, and resilient clip means mounted upon the housing for releasably holding the segments in overlying position.
4. A portable photographic flash gun comprising a housing having a socket-forming hub, a plurality of identically-shaped reflector segments rotatably mounted upon the hub and extending radially outwardly therefrom in overlying stacked relationship forwardly along the hub, interconnection means on each segment except the rearwardmost segment, said rearwardmost segment being secured non-rotatively to the housing, the interconnection means on each segment consisting of an arcuate laterally flexible spring steel band rigidly secured at one end to the back face of the segment with which it is associated and extending across said segment into overlying relation upon the next adjacent segment directly to the rear thereof, said overlying end being slidably threaded through apertures in such succeeding segment and being provided with an integral shoulder for interlocking with such succeeding section when the segments are unfolded and thereby limiting the sliding movement thereof with respect to the segment with which it is slidably engaged, so that tangential force applied to the segments will cause them to rotate around the hub and fan out into a substantially continuous reflector, said forwardmost segment having a plurality of apertures formed therein, and catchmeans on the rearwardmost segment, said catch-means being optionally interengageable with any of said plurality of apertures in the forwardmost segment to hold the rearwardrnost segment in any of a plurality of selected positions.
5. A portable photographic flash gun comprising a housing having a socket-forming hub, a plurality of identically-shaped reflector segments rotatably mounted upon the hub and extending radially outwardly therefrom in overlying stacked relationship forwardly along the hub, interconnection means on each segment except the rearwardmost segment, said rearwardmost segment being secured non-rotatively to the housing, the interconnection means on each segment consisting of an arcuate laterally flexible spring steel band rigidly secured at one end to the back face of the segment with which it is associated and extending across said segment into overlying relation upon the next adjacent segment directly to the rear thereof, said overlying end being slidably threaded through apertures in such succeeding segment and being provided with an integral shoulder for interlocking with such succeeding section when the segments are unfolded and thereby limiting the sliding movement thereof with respect to the segment with which it is slidably engaged, so that tangential force applied to the segments Will cause them to rotate around the hub and fan out into a substantially continuous reflector, said forwardmost segment having a plurmity of apertures formed therein, and catch-means on the rearwardmost segment, said catch-means being optionally interengageable with any of said plurality of apertures in the forwardmost segment to hold the rearwardrnost segment in any of a plurality of selected positions.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,813,102 Vogel July 7, 1931 1,817,424 Smiley Aug. 4, 1931 2,513,961 Ostrom July 4, 1950 2,586,583 Wagner Feb. 19, 1952 2,881,685 Wagner Apr. 14, 1959 FOREIGN PATENTS 1,053,911 France Oct. 7, 1953

Claims (1)

1. A PORTABLE PHOTOGRAPHIC FLASH GUN COMPRISING A HOUSING HAVING A SOCKET-FORMING HUB, A PLURALITY OF IDENTICALLY-SHAPED REFLECTOR SEGMENTS ROTATABLY MOUNTED UPON THE HUB AND EXTENDING RADIALLY OUTWARDLY THEREFROM IN OVERLYING STACKED RELATIONSHIP FORWARDLY ALONG THE HUB, INTERCONNECTION MEANS ON EACH SEGMENT EXCEPT THE REARWARDMOST SEGMENT, SAID REARWARDMOST SEGMENT BEING SECURED NON-ROTATIVELY TO THE HOUSING, THE INTERCONNECTION MEANS OF EACH SEGMENT CONSISTING OF AN ARCUATE LATERALLY FLEXIBLE SPRING STEEL BAND, A BIGHT PORTION FORMED ON THE EDGE OF EACH SEGMENT, EACH OF SAID STEEL BANDS HAVING A LOOP AT ONE END WHICH IS SECURED TO THE BIGHT ON THE BACK FACE OF THE SEGMENT WITH WHICH IT IS ASSOCIATED, SAID BAND EXTENDING ACROSS SAID SEGMENT INTO OVERLYING RELATION UPON THE NEXT ADJACENT SEGMENT DIRECTLY TO THE REAR THEREOF, THE PORTION OF THE BAND WHICH OVERLIES THE SEGMENT DIRECTLY TO THE REAR THEREOF BEING SLIDABLY THREADED THROUGH THE BIGHT OF SUCH SEGMENT, SAID BAND BEING INTEGRALLY PROVIDED WITH A LATERAL PROJECTION HAVING A SHOUL-
US73847A 1958-09-22 1960-12-05 Photographic flash guns Expired - Lifetime US3075070A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US73847A US3075070A (en) 1958-09-22 1960-12-05 Photographic flash guns

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US762631A US2976511A (en) 1958-09-22 1958-09-22 Photographic flash guns
US73847A US3075070A (en) 1958-09-22 1960-12-05 Photographic flash guns

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3075070A true US3075070A (en) 1963-01-22

Family

ID=26754958

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US73847A Expired - Lifetime US3075070A (en) 1958-09-22 1960-12-05 Photographic flash guns

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3075070A (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3207890A (en) * 1961-07-20 1965-09-21 Fischer Artur Flash-lamp assembly for cameras
US3375484A (en) * 1965-10-23 1968-03-26 Sylvania Electric Prod Photoflash adapter
US3430546A (en) * 1966-10-31 1969-03-04 Dean A Holt Multi-flash,flashcube adapter attachment for cameras
US3649069A (en) * 1970-06-03 1972-03-14 Andrew H Zip Glare shield for automobiles
US4855884A (en) * 1987-12-02 1989-08-08 Morpheus Lights, Inc. Variable beamwidth stage light

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1813102A (en) * 1931-01-24 1931-07-07 Vogel William Foldable and adjustable reflector
US1817424A (en) * 1931-08-04 Newspaper clamp
US2513961A (en) * 1948-11-06 1950-07-04 Cameron W Ostrom Foldable reflector
US2586583A (en) * 1949-09-16 1952-02-19 Leitz Ernst Gmbh Foldable reflector
FR1053911A (en) * 1951-07-28 1954-02-05 Precival Reflector
US2881685A (en) * 1953-03-12 1959-04-14 Leitz Ernst Gmbh Flashlight attachments for cameras

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1817424A (en) * 1931-08-04 Newspaper clamp
US1813102A (en) * 1931-01-24 1931-07-07 Vogel William Foldable and adjustable reflector
US2513961A (en) * 1948-11-06 1950-07-04 Cameron W Ostrom Foldable reflector
US2586583A (en) * 1949-09-16 1952-02-19 Leitz Ernst Gmbh Foldable reflector
FR1053911A (en) * 1951-07-28 1954-02-05 Precival Reflector
US2881685A (en) * 1953-03-12 1959-04-14 Leitz Ernst Gmbh Flashlight attachments for cameras

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3207890A (en) * 1961-07-20 1965-09-21 Fischer Artur Flash-lamp assembly for cameras
US3375484A (en) * 1965-10-23 1968-03-26 Sylvania Electric Prod Photoflash adapter
US3430546A (en) * 1966-10-31 1969-03-04 Dean A Holt Multi-flash,flashcube adapter attachment for cameras
US3649069A (en) * 1970-06-03 1972-03-14 Andrew H Zip Glare shield for automobiles
US4855884A (en) * 1987-12-02 1989-08-08 Morpheus Lights, Inc. Variable beamwidth stage light

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2976511A (en) Photographic flash guns
US3075070A (en) Photographic flash guns
US2740339A (en) Photo-flash unit
US2839667A (en) Photographer's multi flash lamp
US3353465A (en) Miniature flash attachment and photoflash lamp socket receiving portion
US3319548A (en) Multilamp flash photography
US4163178A (en) Flash light discharge device
US2196604A (en) Camera
US2976398A (en) Photographic flash holder
US3113495A (en) Photographic apparatus
US2145917A (en) Combined camera and flash lamp
US3364829A (en) Rechargeable stroboscopic flash attachment
US2721929A (en) Photoflash equipment
US2811907A (en) Photo-flash attachment for cameras
US3710704A (en) Illuminating arrangement with flash lamps for use with photographic apparatus
US2625863A (en) Testing device for flash cameras
US2868958A (en) Photographic flash apparatus
US2443163A (en) Flash holder
US2584858A (en) Photoflash ignition apparatus and method
US3463069A (en) Photographic camera for daylight and flash operation
US2844081A (en) Electrical flashlight device with condenser ignition
US2969721A (en) Photoflash unit
US3508478A (en) Photographic flashlamp unit
US3995286A (en) Electronic strobe with optionally-operable controls
US2020741A (en) Photo flash light device