US717203A - Induction-coil or like instrument. - Google Patents

Induction-coil or like instrument. Download PDF

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Publication number
US717203A
US717203A US9062202A US1902090622A US717203A US 717203 A US717203 A US 717203A US 9062202 A US9062202 A US 9062202A US 1902090622 A US1902090622 A US 1902090622A US 717203 A US717203 A US 717203A
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United States
Prior art keywords
interrupter
plate
coil
screw
contact
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Expired - Lifetime
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US9062202A
Inventor
Otto H Huebel
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MANHATTAN ELECTRICAL SUPPLY Co
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MANHATTAN ELECTRICAL SUPPLY CO
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Priority to US9062202A priority Critical patent/US717203A/en
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01FMAGNETS; INDUCTANCES; TRANSFORMERS; SELECTION OF MATERIALS FOR THEIR MAGNETIC PROPERTIES
    • H01F27/00Details of transformers or inductances, in general
    • H01F27/40Structural association with built-in electric component, e.g. fuse

Description

"0.711203. Patented Dec. 30, 1902.
o. n. HUEBEL.
INDUCTION COIL 0B LIKE INSTRUMENT.
( Application filed Jan. 21, 1902.
(No Model.)
Tn: mums PETERS co, mom-Lama. wasnmown. n. c.
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
OTTO H. HUEBEL, OF BROOKLYN, NEW YORK, ASSIGNOR TO MANHATTAN ELECTRICAL SUPPLY COMPANY, A CORPORATION OF NEN JERSEY.
INDUCTION-COIL OR LIKE INSTRUMENT.
SPECIFICATION formingpart Of Letters Patent N0. 717,203, dated December 30, 1902.
Application filed January 21, 1902. Serial No. 90,622. (No model.)
ro panying drawings, forming part of this specification.
My invention relates to induction-coils and other electrical instruments having one or more helices and a magnetic core which actur ate a Vibrating armature or contact-breaking device arranged to cooperate with a contactpoint to make and break the circuit through one or more of the helices; and the object of my invention is the provision of an improved device for supporting the vibrating contactbreaking element and the contact-point with which it cooperates.
In the drawings, Figure 1 is a perspective view of an induction-coil embodying my in- 2 5 vention in a preferred form. Fig. 2 is a partial plan view. Fig. 3 is an end view. Fig. 4 is a sectional detail on the line 4, 4, Fig. 3, on a larger scale, and Fig. 5 an elevation,
partly in section, on the line 5 5, Fig. 4.
Similar reference characters are employed to designate corresponding parts in all the views.
Without intending to thereby limit my invention in matters of form and arrangement or its use in the specific form or character of instrument illustrated I will describe my invention as applied to an induction-coil.
The coil 1 is rigidly supported upon and secured to the base 2 at one end by the bracket 3, which is fastened by screws to the ring 4: on one end of the coil in the usual Way and which is provided with feet 5, through which ing-post 13, which receives one of the battery wires.
The plate 8 is extended at 14 beyond the side of the coil, and to such extended portion the fixed end of the vibrating contact breaker or interrupter 15 is rigidly secured. The interrupter 15 is completely insulated from the plate 8, and for the purpose of securing such insulation and also for the pur- 6o pose of holding the interrupter rigidly in alinement the extended portion 14: of the plate is provided with a square or angular opening, Fig. 5, in which is fitted a block 16 of insulating material, having also a central squared or angular opening. A non-conducting washer 17 is placed on each side of the extended portion of the plate 8 over the block 16 to hold the block in place and to prevent the interrupter from contacting with the plate. The parts just described are all secured in place by the squared or angular conducting-rivet 18, which fits theopening in the insulatingblock16 and in the end of the interrupter.
The interrupter is electrically connected with one terminal of the primary coil by the conductor 19, one end of which is clamped under the end of the rivet 18 and the other end of which contacts with the terminal of said coil. The opposite terminal of the coil8o is connected in the usual manner, through the switch 22, with the binding-post 23, which receives the other battery-Wire.
Carried by and rigidly secured to the plate 8 is the contact-screw support 25, which is formed with a double or front and back bearing 26 and 27 for the adjustable contact-screw 28, which is provided with a platinized contact-point 29. As shown in the drawings and as preferably constructed, the support 25 and 9c the bearings 26 and 27 are integral with the plate 8, being formed therefrom by stamping and then bending into shape, the front bearing 26 being first bent outwardly at right angles to the plate 8 and then toward the exten- 5 sion 14 in a plane parallel with the plate. The back bearing 27 is formed by bending it outwardly at right angles and then into a plane parallel with the front bearing, so that they project over the interrupter and overlap me each other. The bearings are tapped to receive the screw 28 and may have a slight spring action or may be bent so that the threaded apertures through which the screw passes will be slightly out of alinement, so as to bind the threads of the contact-screw and prevent it from being rotated and thrown out of adjustment by the vibrations produced by the interrupter.
By supporting the bearings upon or forming them integrally with the plate, which carries the interrupter and is secured to the coil, the relative positions of these parts are always the same, which is a great advantage, not only in the assembling of the instrument, since no adjustment is then required beyond the mere turning of the adjusting-screw, but also in the subsequent operation of the instrument, since the rapid vibration of the interrupter will not loosen or disarrange the parts, as frequently happens when the contact-screw is mounted in an independent post secured directly to the base.
When formed integrally, as shown in the drawings, the parts may be made by simple automatic machinery, in which case exact duplication of the various parts can be obtained with the utmost economy of manufacture and a comparatively large saving in the cost of assemblinga very decided advantage in view of the extremely low margin of profit realized by manufacturers of this class of apparatus.
It is to be understood that I do not intend to limit my invention to a device in which the support for the interrupter is in the form herein illustrated, and I employ the term plate in referring to it simply for convenience of description without intending it as a limitation.
Having thus described my invention, What I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
1. In an electrical instrument the combination with a magnetizing-helix and operating-circuit, of a plate, a contact-point supported thereby in electrical connection with said helix, a vibratory conductive interrupter secured to said plate and insulated therefrom, and an electrical connection between said interrupter and said helix.
2. In an electrical instrument the combination with a magnetizing-helix and its operating-circuit, of a resilient vibratory interrupter, a contact-point in electrical connection with said helix, a plate by which said contact-point is carried and to which one end of the interrupter is rigidly secured to maintain the interrupter in operative position and an electrical connection between the fixed end of the interrupter and said helix.
3. The combination with a vibratory interrupter, a screw-carried contact-point, a plate to which the interrupter is secured and by which it is supported in operative position and a double bearing for the contact-screw carried by said plate.
4:. In an electrical instrument the combination with a magnetizing-helix and operattrical connection between the interrupter and said helix.
5. The combination of a vibratory interrupter, a screw-carried contact-point, a plate to which the interrupter is secured and by which it is supported in operative position, and a double bearing for the contact-screw consisting of portions of said plate bent into parallel planes and overlapping.
6. In an electrical instrument, the combination of a helix, a core magnetized thereby, a vibratory interrupter actuated thereby, a plate secured to the helix at one end and provided with an extension to which the interrupter is secured, a screwcarried contactpoint and a bearing for the screw carried by said plate.
7. In combination,an induction-coil,a plate secured to one end thereof, a vibratory interrupter carried by said plate, a screw carrying a contact-point, and a bearing for said screw carried by said plate.
8. In combination, an induction-coil,a plate secured to one end thereof, a vibratory interrupter carried by said plate, a screw carrying a contact-point, and a bearing for said screw formed integrally with said plate.
9. In combination,an induction-coil, a plate secured to one end thereof, a vibratory interrupter secured to said plate, a screw carrying a contact -point, a bearing for said screw formed integrally with said plate and bent to project over the interrupter, and a second bearing for said screw formed integral with theplate and bent to overlap the first-mentioned bearing, substantially as shown and described.
10. In combination,an ind uction-coi1,a base, a plate secured to one end of the coil and to the base, an interrupter carried by said plate, a contact screw and point, and a double bearing for said screw comprising a portion of said plate bent to project over the interrupter and a portion of said plate bent to overlap the first portion,substantially as shown and described.
11. The combination of a plate, a contactpoint supported thereby, a vibratory interrupter and means for securing the fixed end of the interrupter rigidly to said plate and insulating it therefrom.
12. The combination in an induction-coil of a plate, a contact-point supported thereby, a vibratory interrupter, a conductor connected with the coil, and means for securing and insulating the interrupter, comprising an an gular aperture in the plate, an insulating-block fitted in the aperture, an angular aperture in the end of the interrupter and in said block, and a connecting-piece which connects the interrupter with said conductor and is fitted to the angular aperture in the insulating-block and the interrupter.
18. In'an electrical device comprising a vimagnetizing-helix and operating-circuit, of a bratory element such as the interrupter of an vibratory conductive interrupter actuated by induction-coil the combination with said visaid helix, a support to which one endof said bratory element and its support, of an anguinterrupter is rigidly connected, means forin- 15 5 lar insulating-block fitted to said support and sulating the interrupter from said support provided with an angular aperture, which and a conductor connecting the interrupter registers with a similar aperture in the vibra- With the helix.
tory element, and an angular connecting-piece OTTO H. HUEBEL. fitted to said apertures, substantially as shown Witnesses: 1 o and described. SAMUEL G. METOALF,
14. In an electrical apparatus comprising a l ABEL I. SMITH, Jr.
US9062202A 1902-01-21 1902-01-21 Induction-coil or like instrument. Expired - Lifetime US717203A (en)

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US9062202A US717203A (en) 1902-01-21 1902-01-21 Induction-coil or like instrument.

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