Patents by Inventor Mark R. Opperthauser

Mark R. Opperthauser has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 6074263
    Abstract: Methods of manufacturing ballasts and starter assemblies used in gas discharge lamps are disclosed. One embodiment of a starter assembly includes a one-piece plastic enclosure for a glow bulb which is used as a starter for a fluorescent lamp. The enclosure has a latching hinged lid, a partition wall to isolate the glow bulb leads, and integral strain relief. The glow bulb enclosure is preferably mounted inside a ballast assembly and the glow bulb leads are preferably ultrasonically welded to the ballast power supply wires. Methods of reducing manufacturing expenses by physically separating the glow bulb from other ballast components are also disclosed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 8, 1998
    Date of Patent: June 13, 2000
    Assignee: MagneTek, Inc.
    Inventors: Stuart E. Sanders, John L. Cox, David S. Stratton, Theodore Miller, Jr., Mark R. Opperthauser
  • Patent number: 5852344
    Abstract: An one-piece plastic protective enclosure is provided for a glow bulb used as a starter for a fluorescent lamp. The enclosure has a latching hinged lid, a partition wall to isolate the glow bulb leads, and integral strain relief. The glow bulb enclosure is mounted inside a ballast assembly and the glow bulb leads are ultrasonically welded to the ballast power supply wires.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 26, 1996
    Date of Patent: December 22, 1998
    Assignee: MagneTek, Inc.
    Inventors: Stuart E. Sanders, John L. Cox, David S. Stratton, Theodore Miller, Jr., Mark R. Opperthauser
  • Patent number: 5788527
    Abstract: One half-connector terminates leads in the ballast, carrying electricity to and from the ballast coils. Another half-connector terminates leads outside the ballast, connected e. g. to carry power to lamp sockets. A hook extended from a first of the half-connectors engages a catch formed in a second. A retaining surface, preferably associated with the second half-connector, keeps the hook engaged with the catch. Preferably the space between the retaining surface and the catch is smaller than the unstressed dimension of the hook barb--but during the act of engagement the barb deforms to pass between the catch and surface; then the barb springs back into shape and is held behind the catch. In this process also preferably the retaining surface cooperates with the first half-connector to support the shaft or beam of the hook at both ends--as in a classical double-ended beam spring structure, contrasted with a cantilevered spring in a conventional hook and catch.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 30, 1997
    Date of Patent: August 4, 1998
    Assignee: MagneTek, Inc.
    Inventors: Stuart E. Sanders, Raymond H. Van Wagener, Fred P Bauer, Mark R. Opperthauser
  • Patent number: 5488268
    Abstract: One half-connector terminates a set of leads in the ballast, for carrying electrical power to and from the ballast coils. Another half-connector terminates another set of leads outside the ballast, connected e.g. to carry power to lamp sockets. Male contacts, preferably formed very inexpensively as bared ends of one set of leads, are held in a first of the half-connectors; female contacts, connected to the other set of leads, are held in a second of the two half-connectors. Through-holes in the second half-connector each hold one female contact; each hole has a necked-down section, forward from the contact, and some device (preferably an ultrasonically displaced slug) to retain the contact. In one aspect of the invention, each hole also has a bore whose transverse preformed dimension is biggest immediately rearward from the necked-down forward section.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 8, 1994
    Date of Patent: January 30, 1996
    Assignee: Magnetek, Inc.
    Inventors: Fred P. Bauer, Stuart E. Sanders, Raymond H. Van Wagener, Mark R. Opperthauser