US3846598A - Safety, electrical grounding outlet with safety switch - Google Patents

Safety, electrical grounding outlet with safety switch Download PDF

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US3846598A
US3846598A US00412485A US41248573A US3846598A US 3846598 A US3846598 A US 3846598A US 00412485 A US00412485 A US 00412485A US 41248573 A US41248573 A US 41248573A US 3846598 A US3846598 A US 3846598A
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circuit
actuator
ground prong
prong
circuit position
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M Mucsi
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01RELECTRICALLY-CONDUCTIVE CONNECTIONS; STRUCTURAL ASSOCIATIONS OF A PLURALITY OF MUTUALLY-INSULATED ELECTRICAL CONNECTING ELEMENTS; COUPLING DEVICES; CURRENT COLLECTORS
    • H01R13/00Details of coupling devices of the kinds covered by groups H01R12/70 or H01R24/00 - H01R33/00
    • H01R13/66Structural association with built-in electrical component
    • H01R13/70Structural association with built-in electrical component with built-in switch
    • H01R13/703Structural association with built-in electrical component with built-in switch operated by engagement or disengagement of coupling parts, e.g. dual-continuity coupling part
    • H01R13/7036Structural association with built-in electrical component with built-in switch operated by engagement or disengagement of coupling parts, e.g. dual-continuity coupling part the switch being in series with coupling part, e.g. dead coupling, explosion proof coupling
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01RELECTRICALLY-CONDUCTIVE CONNECTIONS; STRUCTURAL ASSOCIATIONS OF A PLURALITY OF MUTUALLY-INSULATED ELECTRICAL CONNECTING ELEMENTS; COUPLING DEVICES; CURRENT COLLECTORS
    • H01R24/00Two-part coupling devices, or either of their cooperating parts, characterised by their overall structure
    • H01R24/76Two-part coupling devices, or either of their cooperating parts, characterised by their overall structure with sockets, clips or analogous contacts and secured to apparatus or structure, e.g. to a wall

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  • ABSTRACT A safety, electrical grounding outlet is provided wherein each circuit terminal and its associated circuit prong contact forms an interrupted and non-bridging partial circuit and the outlet includes a switch system for closing or opening each such circuit in response to the insertion into or removal from the ground prong hole of the plug ground prong.
  • an object of this invention is to provide a safety, electrical grounding outlet which is simple in design, economical to manufacture and reliable in operation.
  • Another object of this invention is to provide an electrical grounding outlet of the character described wherein each circuit terminal and its associated circuit prong contact forms an unbridged partial circuit and the outlet includes a separate switchfor each such circuit together with a common switch actuator for closing or opening the circuits in response to the ground prong of a corresponding and mating plug being inserted into or removed from the outlets ground prong hole.
  • a safety, electrical grounding outlet which includes a plug receptacle having a ground prong hole and a plurality of circuit prong holes for receiving the ground prong and circuit prongs, respectively, of a corresponding and mating multiprong grounding plug.
  • Grounding means and a plurality of circuit prong contacts are secured to the receptacle.
  • the ground prong hole is in communication with the grounding
  • a separate switch is provided for each of the nonbridging partial circuits. The switches are mutually actuable to close or open thenon-bridging partial circuits and thereby establish or interrupt electrical communication between the circuit terminal and prong contact of each such circuit.
  • a non-conductive actuator is disposed within the receptacle for mutually actuating the separate switches.
  • the actuator is reciprocally displaceable between an opened circuit position and a closed circuit position.
  • the switches are actuated to close the non-bridging partial circuits when the actuator is displaced from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position; and the switches are actuated to open these circuits when the actuator is displaced from the closed circuit position to the open circuit position.
  • the actuator is displaceably associated with the ground prong hole when the actuator is in the opened circuit position whereby the insertion of the plug ground prong into the ground prong hole displaces the actuator from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position; and means are provided for displacing the actuator from the closed circuitposition to the opened circuit position in response to the removal of the plug ground prong from the ground prong hole.
  • the safety, electrical grounding outlet of this invention may be fixedly secured to a support structure or portably secured to one end of an electrical grounding cord and may be adapted to lockingly engage a corresponding and mating multiprong grounding plug.
  • FIG. I is a front view of a double, 3-hole electrical grounding outlet.
  • F 2 is a side elevation view, partly in section, of an outlet according to this invention and showing a mating plug connected thereto.
  • FIG. 3 is a schematic, partial longitudinal view of an outlet according to this invention showing the switches spaced from the interrupted conductor straps of the non-bridging partial circuits formed by the circuit terminais and their associated circuit prong contacts.
  • FIG. 4 is a view similar to FIG. 3 but shows the switches bridging the interrupted conductor straps of the non-bridging partial circuitsin response to the insertion into the ground prong hole of a ground prong f a m ti P
  • FIG. 5 shows an alternative embodiment for the switches wherein each switch is resiliently secured to one portion of the interrupted conductor strap for releasably bridging the other portion of the conductor strap.
  • the plug receptacle has a ground prong hole 10 and first and second circuit prong holes 12a, 12b for receiving the ground prong l4 and first and second circuit prongs 16a, 16b, respectively, of a corresponding and mating 3-prong grounding plug 18.
  • Grounding means and first and second circuit prong contacts 22a, 22b are secured to the receptacle.
  • the receptacle ground prong hole is in communication with the grounding means.
  • the first circuit prong hole is in communication with the first circuit prong contact and the second circuit prong hole is in communication with the second circuit prong contact.
  • the grounding means and the circuit prong contacts engage the ground prong and circuit prongs, respectively, of the 3-prong plug when the prongs thereof are matingly inserted into the receptacle holes.
  • First and second circuit terminals 24a, 2412 are secured to the receptacle with one of the terminals being the electrical input terminal and the other terminal being the output terminal.
  • the first and second terminals are provided with first and second terminal conductor straps 26a, 26b.
  • the first and second circuit prong contacts are provided with first and second contact straps 28a, 28b.
  • the first terminal strap and the first contact strap form a first interrupted and nonbridging partial circuit 30 between the first terminal and the first contact; and the second terminal strap and the second contact strap form a second interrupted and non-bridging partial circuit 32 between the second terminal and the second contact.
  • First and second mutually actuable, separate bar switches 34a, 34b are provided for closing or opening the first and second non-bridging partial circuits and thereby establish or interrupt electrical communication between the terminal and prong contact of each such circuit.
  • a non-conductive switch actuator 36 is disposed within the receptacle for mutually actuating the bar switches.
  • the bar switches are secured to the actuator.
  • each switch is a spring switch 37 which is resiliently secured to one portion of the interrupted conductor strap for releasably bridging the other portion of the conductor strap as shown in FIG. 5.
  • the actuator which is slidably disposed on a pair of guide rods 38, is reciprocally displaceable between an opened circuit position as shown in FIG. 3 and a closed circuit position as shown in FIG. 4. The switches are actuated to close the non-bridging partial circuits when the actuator is displaced from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position; and the switches are actuated to open these circuits when the actuator is displaced from the closed circuit position to the opened circuit position.
  • the actuator when it is in the opened circuit position, is displaceably associated with the ground prong hole of the receptacle.
  • the actuator is provided-with a hemispherical groove 40 which angularly confronts the ground prong hole such that the insertion of the plug ground prong into the ground prong hole displaces the actuator from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position.
  • This step closes the non-bridging partial circuits and allows current to flow from the input terminal to its associated circuit prong contact.
  • the movement of the actuator from the opened to the closed circuit position compresses an expansion spring 42 which is disposed within the receptacle in abutting relationship to the forward face 44 of the actuator.
  • An electrical grounding outlet comprising:
  • a plug receptacle having a ground prong hole and a plurality of circuit prong holes for receiving the ground prong and circuit prongs, respectively, of a corresponding and mating multiprong grounding P g;
  • grounding means and a plurality of separate circuit contacts secured to said receptacle, said ground prong hole being in communication with said grounding means and each of said circuit prong holes being in communication with one member of said plurality of separate circuit contacts, with the grounding means and the circuit contacts engaging a ground prong and circuit prongs, respectively, of the aforementioned plug when the prongs thereof are matingly inserted into the receptacle holes;
  • each of said circuit terminals being associated with one member of said plurality of separate circuit contacts to form a plurality of nonbridging partial circuits;
  • a non-conductive actuator disposed within said receptacle for actuating said separate switch means, said actuator being reciprocally displaceable between an opened circuit position and a closed circuit position, said separate switch means being actuated to close said non-bridging partial circuits when said actuator is displaced from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position, and said separate switch means beingactuated to open said non-bridging partial circuits when said actuator is displaced from the closed circuit position to the opened circuit position;
  • said actuator being adjacent said ground prong hole when said actuator is in the opened circuit position whereby the insertion of the plug ground prong into the ground prong hole displaces said actuator from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position;

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Abstract

A safety, electrical grounding outlet is provided wherein each circuit terminal and its associated circuit prong contact forms an interrupted and non-bridging partial circuit and the outlet includes a switch system for closing or opening each such circuit in response to the insertion into or removal from the ground prong hole of the plug ground prong.

Description

United States Patent [191 Mucsi [451 Nov. 5, 1974 SAFETY, ELECTRICAL GROUNDING OUTLET WITH SAFETY SWITCH [76] Inventor: Michael Mucsi, 2474 S. Centinela Ave., Los Angeles, Calif. 90064 22 Filed: Nov. 2, 1973 21 Appl. No.: 412,485
[52] U.S. Cl. ZOO/51.09, 200/243 [51] Int. Cl H01! 33/30 [58] Field of Search 200/51 R, 51.07, 51.09,
[56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,755,635 8/l973 McGill 200/5109 FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS 192,069 2/1964 Sweden ZOO/51.09
Primary Examiner-Robert K. Schaefer Assistant Examiner-Gerald P. Tolin Attorney, Agent, or FirmDonald Diamond [57] ABSTRACT A safety, electrical grounding outlet is provided wherein each circuit terminal and its associated circuit prong contact forms an interrupted and non-bridging partial circuit and the outlet includes a switch system for closing or opening each such circuit in response to the insertion into or removal from the ground prong hole of the plug ground prong.
8 Claims, 5 Drawing Figures SAFETY, ELECTRICAL GROUNDING OUTLET WITH SAFETY SWITCH BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION This invention relates to electrical outlets and, more particularly to electrical grounding outlets having nonshock safety features.
Ordinary electrically grounded outlets present a serious hazard, especially to children, since one of the openings thereof if in communication with the input or hot contact and the insertion of a pin, wire, nail or other metal object into such opening by a child can cause the child to receive an electrical shock of serious consequence.
PRIOR ART OBJECTS Accordingly, an object of this invention is to provide a safety, electrical grounding outlet which is simple in design, economical to manufacture and reliable in operation.
Another object of this invention is to provide an electrical grounding outlet of the character described wherein each circuit terminal and its associated circuit prong contact forms an unbridged partial circuit and the outlet includes a separate switchfor each such circuit together with a common switch actuator for closing or opening the circuits in response to the ground prong of a corresponding and mating plug being inserted into or removed from the outlets ground prong hole. i I
Other objects and advantages will appear from the detailed description of the preferred embodiment of this invention hereinafter set forth.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION In accordance with this invention, there is provided a safety, electrical grounding outlet which includes a plug receptacle having a ground prong hole and a plurality of circuit prong holes for receiving the ground prong and circuit prongs, respectively, of a corresponding and mating multiprong grounding plug.
Grounding means and a plurality of circuit prong contacts are secured to the receptacle. The ground prong hole is in communication with the grounding A separate switch is provided for each of the nonbridging partial circuits. The switches are mutually actuable to close or open thenon-bridging partial circuits and thereby establish or interrupt electrical communication between the circuit terminal and prong contact of each such circuit.
A non-conductive actuator is disposed within the receptacle for mutually actuating the separate switches. The actuator is reciprocally displaceable between an opened circuit position and a closed circuit position. The switches are actuated to close the non-bridging partial circuits when the actuator is displaced from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position; and the switches are actuated to open these circuits when the actuator is displaced from the closed circuit position to the open circuit position.
The actuator is displaceably associated with the ground prong hole when the actuator is in the opened circuit position whereby the insertion of the plug ground prong into the ground prong hole displaces the actuator from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position; and means are provided for displacing the actuator from the closed circuitposition to the opened circuit position in response to the removal of the plug ground prong from the ground prong hole.
The safety, electrical grounding outlet of this invention may be fixedly secured to a support structure or portably secured to one end of an electrical grounding cord and may be adapted to lockingly engage a corresponding and mating multiprong grounding plug.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. I is a front view of a double, 3-hole electrical grounding outlet.
F 2 is a side elevation view, partly in section, of an outlet according to this invention and showing a mating plug connected thereto.
FIG. 3 is a schematic, partial longitudinal view of an outlet according to this invention showing the switches spaced from the interrupted conductor straps of the non-bridging partial circuits formed by the circuit terminais and their associated circuit prong contacts.
FIG. 4 is a view similar to FIG. 3 but shows the switches bridging the interrupted conductor straps of the non-bridging partial circuitsin response to the insertion into the ground prong hole of a ground prong f a m ti P FIG. 5 shows an alternative embodiment for the switches wherein each switch is resiliently secured to one portion of the interrupted conductor strap for releasably bridging the other portion of the conductor strap.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION single receptacle unit. i I
The plug receptacle has a ground prong hole 10 and first and second circuit prong holes 12a, 12b for receiving the ground prong l4 and first and second circuit prongs 16a, 16b, respectively, of a corresponding and mating 3-prong grounding plug 18.
Grounding means and first and second circuit prong contacts 22a, 22b are secured to the receptacle. The receptacle ground prong hole is in communication with the grounding means. The first circuit prong hole is in communication with the first circuit prong contact and the second circuit prong hole is in communication with the second circuit prong contact. Thus, the grounding means and the circuit prong contacts engage the ground prong and circuit prongs, respectively, of the 3-prong plug when the prongs thereof are matingly inserted into the receptacle holes.
First and second circuit terminals 24a, 2412 are secured to the receptacle with one of the terminals being the electrical input terminal and the other terminal being the output terminal. The first and second terminals are provided with first and second terminal conductor straps 26a, 26b. The first and second circuit prong contacts are provided with first and second contact straps 28a, 28b. The first terminal strap and the first contact strap form a first interrupted and nonbridging partial circuit 30 between the first terminal and the first contact; and the second terminal strap and the second contact strap form a second interrupted and non-bridging partial circuit 32 between the second terminal and the second contact.
First and second mutually actuable, separate bar switches 34a, 34b are provided for closing or opening the first and second non-bridging partial circuits and thereby establish or interrupt electrical communication between the terminal and prong contact of each such circuit. I
A non-conductive switch actuator 36 is disposed within the receptacle for mutually actuating the bar switches. In a preferred embodiment, the bar switches are secured to the actuator. In an alternative embodiment, each switch is a spring switch 37 which is resiliently secured to one portion of the interrupted conductor strap for releasably bridging the other portion of the conductor strap as shown in FIG. 5. The actuator, which is slidably disposed on a pair of guide rods 38, is reciprocally displaceable between an opened circuit position as shown in FIG. 3 and a closed circuit position as shown in FIG. 4. The switches are actuated to close the non-bridging partial circuits when the actuator is displaced from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position; and the switches are actuated to open these circuits when the actuator is displaced from the closed circuit position to the opened circuit position.
The actuator, when it is in the opened circuit position, is displaceably associated with the ground prong hole of the receptacle. The actuator is provided-with a hemispherical groove 40 which angularly confronts the ground prong hole such that the insertion of the plug ground prong into the ground prong hole displaces the actuator from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position. This step, as hereinabove described, closes the non-bridging partial circuits and allows current to flow from the input terminal to its associated circuit prong contact. The movement of the actuator from the opened to the closed circuit position compresses an expansion spring 42 which is disposed within the receptacle in abutting relationship to the forward face 44 of the actuator.
Upon removal of the plug ground prong from the 6 of the non-bridging circuits whereby the flow of current from the input terminal to its associated circuit prong contact is precluded.
Therefore, when the plug is removed from the outlet, the insertion by a child of a metal object into one or both of the circuit prong holes will not cause the child to receive an electrical shock since none of the circuit prong contacts is connected to a source of electrical potential.
While in the foregoing description and accompanying drawing there has been shown and described the preferred embodiment of this invention, it will be understood, of course, that minor changes may be made in the details of construction as well as in the combination and arrangement of parts without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as claimed.
That which is claimed is:
1. An electrical grounding outlet, comprising:
a plug receptacle having a ground prong hole and a plurality of circuit prong holes for receiving the ground prong and circuit prongs, respectively, of a corresponding and mating multiprong grounding P g;
grounding means and a plurality of separate circuit contacts secured to said receptacle, said ground prong hole being in communication with said grounding means and each of said circuit prong holes being in communication with one member of said plurality of separate circuit contacts, with the grounding means and the circuit contacts engaging a ground prong and circuit prongs, respectively, of the aforementioned plug when the prongs thereof are matingly inserted into the receptacle holes;
a plurality ofseparate circuit terminals secured to said receptacle, each of said circuit terminals being associated with one member of said plurality of separate circuit contacts to form a plurality of nonbridging partial circuits;
separate switch means associated with each of said non-bridging partial circuits, said separate switch means being mutually actuable to close or open said non-bridging partial circuits and thereby establish or interrupt electrical communication between the circuit terminal and the circuit contact thereof;
a non-conductive actuator disposed within said receptacle for actuating said separate switch means, said actuator being reciprocally displaceable between an opened circuit position and a closed circuit position, said separate switch means being actuated to close said non-bridging partial circuits when said actuator is displaced from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position, and said separate switch means beingactuated to open said non-bridging partial circuits when said actuator is displaced from the closed circuit position to the opened circuit position;
said actuator being adjacent said ground prong hole when said actuator is in the opened circuit position whereby the insertion of the plug ground prong into the ground prong hole displaces said actuator from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position; and
means responsive to the removal of the ground prong from the ground prong hole for displacing the actuator from the closed circuit position to the opened circuit position.
5. An outlet according to claim 4 wherein the biasing device is a spring structure.
6. An outlet according to claim 1 wherein said outlet is fixedly secured to a support structure.
7. An outlet according to claim 1 wherein said outlet is portably secured to an electrical grounding cord.
8. An outlet according to claim 1 wherein said multiprong grounding plug lockingly engages said plug receptacle.

Claims (8)

1. An electrical grounding outlet, comprising: a plug receptacle having a ground prong hole and a plurality of circuit prong holes for receiving the ground prong and circuit prongs, respectively, of a corresponding and mating multiprong grounding plug; grounding means and a plurality of separate circuit contacts secured to said receptacle, said ground prong hole being in communication with said grounding means and each of said circuit prong holes being in communication with one member of said plurality of separate circuit contacts, with the grounding means and the circuit contacts engaging a ground prong and circuit prongs, respectively, of the aforEmentioned plug when the prongs thereof are matingly inserted into the receptacle holes; a plurality of separate circuit terminals secured to said receptacle, each of said circuit terminals being associated with one member of said plurality of separate circuit contacts to form a plurality of non-bridging partial circuits; separate switch means associated with each of said non-bridging partial circuits, said separate switch means being mutually actuable to close or open said non-bridging partial circuits and thereby establish or interrupt electrical communication between the circuit terminal and the circuit contact thereof; a non-conductive actuator disposed within said receptacle for actuating said separate switch means, said actuator being reciprocally displaceable between an opened circuit position and a closed circuit position, said separate switch means being actuated to close said non-bridging partial circuits when said actuator is displaced from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position, and said separate switch means being actuated to open said non-bridging partial circuits when said actuator is displaced from the closed circuit position to the opened circuit position; said actuator being adjacent said ground prong hole when said actuator is in the opened circuit position whereby the insertion of the plug ground prong into the ground prong hole displaces said actuator from the opened circuit position to the closed circuit position; and means responsive to the removal of the ground prong from the ground prong hole for displacing the actuator from the closed circuit position to the opened circuit position.
2. An outlet according to claim 1 wherein the separate switch means are conductive, electrical bridge members secured to the non-conductive actuator.
3. An outlet according to claim 1 wherein the separate switch means are conductive, electrical bridge members resiliently associated with the circuit terminal or the circuit contact of the non-bridging partial circuits.
4. An outlet according to claim 1 wherein the means for displacing the actuator from the closed to the opened circuit position is a biasing device.
5. An outlet according to claim 4 wherein the biasing device is a spring structure.
6. An outlet according to claim 1 wherein said outlet is fixedly secured to a support structure.
7. An outlet according to claim 1 wherein said outlet is portably secured to an electrical grounding cord.
8. An outlet according to claim 1 wherein said multiprong grounding plug lockingly engages said plug receptacle.
US00412485A 1973-11-02 1973-11-02 Safety, electrical grounding outlet with safety switch Expired - Lifetime US3846598A (en)

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Cited By (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3914565A (en) * 1974-08-26 1975-10-21 Karl O Niedermeyer Electrical plug with ground prong activated switch
US4075444A (en) * 1975-09-15 1978-02-21 Hollingsead-Pryor Enterprises, Inc. Electrical connector structure
US4093336A (en) * 1974-09-30 1978-06-06 Rose Manning I Safety circuit and socket construction
US4271337A (en) * 1979-09-17 1981-06-02 Harvey Hubbell Incorporated Safety receptacle
US4544219A (en) * 1984-06-01 1985-10-01 Harvey Hubbell Incorporated Shuttered electrical receptacle
EP0172281A1 (en) * 1982-09-21 1986-02-26 W.F. Jou Electric safety socket and fuse replacement device
US4853823A (en) * 1986-10-23 1989-08-01 Amp Incorporated Safety receptacle
US5967815A (en) * 1998-03-19 1999-10-19 Marc A. Schlessinger Variable orientation switching type electrical receptacle
USD429694S (en) 1998-09-11 2000-08-22 Marc A. Schlessinger Housing and bracket portions of an electrical receptacle
US6310306B1 (en) 2000-04-03 2001-10-30 John Norling Safety wall socket assembly
US20030148906A1 (en) * 2001-05-01 2003-08-07 The Procter & Gamble Company Stable liquid or gel bleaching composition containing diacyl peroxide particles
US20040140184A1 (en) * 2002-10-31 2004-07-22 Christopher Fox Security device for electrical cords
US7045723B1 (en) 2005-09-27 2006-05-16 Joti Projkovski Fail safe electrical receptacle
US20070257763A1 (en) * 2006-05-04 2007-11-08 Bsafe Electrix, Inc. Electrical receptacle with multiple heat sensors
US20080191831A1 (en) * 2007-02-09 2008-08-14 Matyas Raymond T Electrical power control outlet and system
US20100134932A1 (en) * 1998-08-24 2010-06-03 Leviton Manufacturing Company, Inc. Circuit interrupting device with reset lockout and reverse wiring protection and method of manufacture
US8587914B2 (en) 2008-07-07 2013-11-19 Leviton Manufacturing Co., Inc. Fault circuit interrupter device
US20140199863A1 (en) * 2011-12-24 2014-07-17 Shifeng Lin Power Supply Connection Structure Device
US20150236455A1 (en) * 2014-02-16 2015-08-20 Shenzhen Zhongke Electrical Technology Co., Ltd Power Supply Connection Structure Device
US11017969B1 (en) 2019-10-31 2021-05-25 Esl Power Systems, Inc. Self-deactivating tethered interconnection system for power outlet

Citations (1)

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US3755635A (en) * 1972-04-07 1973-08-28 Gill W Mc Isolated electrical outlet assembly

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3755635A (en) * 1972-04-07 1973-08-28 Gill W Mc Isolated electrical outlet assembly

Cited By (28)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3914565A (en) * 1974-08-26 1975-10-21 Karl O Niedermeyer Electrical plug with ground prong activated switch
US4093336A (en) * 1974-09-30 1978-06-06 Rose Manning I Safety circuit and socket construction
US4075444A (en) * 1975-09-15 1978-02-21 Hollingsead-Pryor Enterprises, Inc. Electrical connector structure
US4271337A (en) * 1979-09-17 1981-06-02 Harvey Hubbell Incorporated Safety receptacle
EP0172281A1 (en) * 1982-09-21 1986-02-26 W.F. Jou Electric safety socket and fuse replacement device
US4544219A (en) * 1984-06-01 1985-10-01 Harvey Hubbell Incorporated Shuttered electrical receptacle
US4853823A (en) * 1986-10-23 1989-08-01 Amp Incorporated Safety receptacle
US5967815A (en) * 1998-03-19 1999-10-19 Marc A. Schlessinger Variable orientation switching type electrical receptacle
US20100134932A1 (en) * 1998-08-24 2010-06-03 Leviton Manufacturing Company, Inc. Circuit interrupting device with reset lockout and reverse wiring protection and method of manufacture
US8054595B2 (en) 1998-08-24 2011-11-08 Leviton Manufacturing Co., Inc. Circuit interrupting device with reset lockout
US8130480B2 (en) 1998-08-24 2012-03-06 Leviton Manufactuing Co., Inc. Circuit interrupting device with reset lockout
USD429694S (en) 1998-09-11 2000-08-22 Marc A. Schlessinger Housing and bracket portions of an electrical receptacle
US6310306B1 (en) 2000-04-03 2001-10-30 John Norling Safety wall socket assembly
US20030148906A1 (en) * 2001-05-01 2003-08-07 The Procter & Gamble Company Stable liquid or gel bleaching composition containing diacyl peroxide particles
US6881910B2 (en) * 2002-10-31 2005-04-19 Christopher Fox Security device for electrical cords
US20040140184A1 (en) * 2002-10-31 2004-07-22 Christopher Fox Security device for electrical cords
US7045723B1 (en) 2005-09-27 2006-05-16 Joti Projkovski Fail safe electrical receptacle
US20070257763A1 (en) * 2006-05-04 2007-11-08 Bsafe Electrix, Inc. Electrical receptacle with multiple heat sensors
US7489227B2 (en) * 2006-05-04 2009-02-10 Bsafe Electrix, Inc. Electrical receptacle with multiple heat sensors
US7791864B2 (en) * 2007-02-09 2010-09-07 Interface Group - Nevada, Inc. Electrical power control outlet and system
US20080191831A1 (en) * 2007-02-09 2008-08-14 Matyas Raymond T Electrical power control outlet and system
US8587914B2 (en) 2008-07-07 2013-11-19 Leviton Manufacturing Co., Inc. Fault circuit interrupter device
US20140199863A1 (en) * 2011-12-24 2014-07-17 Shifeng Lin Power Supply Connection Structure Device
US9413113B2 (en) * 2011-12-24 2016-08-09 Shenzhen Zhongke Electrical Technology Co., Ltd. Power supply connection structure device
US20160308312A1 (en) * 2011-12-24 2016-10-20 Shenzhen Skt Electrical Technology Co., Ltd. Power Supply Connection Structure Device
US10056721B2 (en) * 2011-12-24 2018-08-21 Shenzhen Skt Electrical Technology Co., Ltd. Power supply connection structure device
US20150236455A1 (en) * 2014-02-16 2015-08-20 Shenzhen Zhongke Electrical Technology Co., Ltd Power Supply Connection Structure Device
US11017969B1 (en) 2019-10-31 2021-05-25 Esl Power Systems, Inc. Self-deactivating tethered interconnection system for power outlet

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