Patents by Inventor Ole K. Nilssen

Ole K. Nilssen 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: 5343124
    Abstract: A power supply is integrally combined with a power plug, and the combination is adapted to be plugged into an ordinary household electrical outlet and operable to provide a power-line-isolated output of 120 Volt RMS at a frequency of about 30 kHz. The Volt-Ampere product available from this power supply is limited to be no more than 100 Volt-Ampere. Due to the high frequency, the electric shock hazard associated with this 120 Volt/30 kHz power supply is not higher than it is for a power supply having a voltage of only 30 Volt RMS at 60 Hz. The power supply, which also has receptacle means operable to receive and hold an ordinary electric power plug, is adapted to be interposed between an ordinary household electrical outlet and the power plug of an ordinary table lamp.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 17, 1993
    Date of Patent: August 30, 1994
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5341067
    Abstract: An electronic ballast is connected with the AC power line voltage of an ordinary electric utility power line and powers a fluorescent lamp with a substantially sinusoidal current of frequency substantially higher than that or the AC power line voltage. Within the electronic ballast is a half-bridge inverter, whose output voltage exhibits a substantially trapezoidal waveshape. The inverter is powered from a substantially constant DC voltage whose absolute magnitude if substantially higher than the absolute peak magnitude of the AC power line voltage.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 27, 1993
    Date of Patent: August 23, 1994
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5309032
    Abstract: A plug-in timer has a set of input terminals and a set of output terminals as well as a contactor operable to make and/or break electrical connection between these sets of terminals in accordance with a pre-setable 24 hour program. The timer is powered from a small built-in battery, and comprises its own quartz clock and programming-and-control means. The contactor is actuated by a miniature DC motor through a gear and cam arrangement. The operation of the DC motor is controlled by the programming-and-control means, which provides power from the battery to the motor in accordance with a pre-set program; which pre-set program may be modified at any time by way of a keyboard and a numeric display means. The contactor operates by way of hard metal contacts and very little power dissipation occurs within the timer. The timer can be plugged into a special wall switch receptacle and then operates to programmably control the flow of power to the load controlled by this wall switch.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 22, 1990
    Date of Patent: May 3, 1994
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5270618
    Abstract: A magnetic-electronic fluorescent lamp ballast is so arranged that the fluorescent lamp is powered simultaneously by two different currents; which two currents are supplied to the lamp by two separate parallel-connected current sources. One current is of 60 Hz frequency and is supplied directly from an ordinary 120 Volt/60 Hz power line by way of an ordinary magnetic reactor. The other current is of 30 kHz frequency and is derived from the power line by way of a frequency converter and is then supplied to the fluorescent lamp by way of a 30 kHz resonant circuit and a high-pass filter. The frequency converter is powered from the power line by way of a capacitive reactor, with the net result being that the power factor of the total power drawn from the power line is very high. The overall ballast is simple and provides for a relatively high efficacy.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 18, 1990
    Date of Patent: December 14, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5262700
    Abstract: A special fluorescent lamp is provided with its own built-in cathode heating means and is operable to be properly ballasted by way of a light-weight two-wire power cord coming from a special power plug that comprises a built-in high-frequency ballasting means. This special power plug is suitable for being plugged into, held by, and powered by any ordinary household electric power receptacle. The combination of the special fluorescent lamp and the special power plug constitutes a product similar to the so-called bright-stick marketed by General Electric.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 30, 1991
    Date of Patent: November 16, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5256939
    Abstract: A magnetic-type ballast powers an F40/T12 four foot fluorescent lamp from a regular 120 Volt/60 Hz power line by way of a main inductor. A power factor correction capacitor is connected in series with an auxiliary inductor of relatively small inductance value, thereby forming a series-combination; which series-combination is connected across the power line. A 30 Volt/60 Hz voltage is established across this auxiliary inductor. The phasing of this 30 Volt/60 Hz voltage is opposite that of the 120 Volt/60 Hz power line voltage. Thus, by adding the 30 Volt/.alpha.Hz voltage to the 120 Volt/60 Hz voltage, a 150 Volt/60 Hz voltage is obtained; which 150 Volt/60 Hz voltage is of magnitude adequate to properly power the F40/T12 four foot fluorescent lamp, although it is not of magnitude adequate to provide proper lamp ignition in a rapid-start mode.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 18, 1992
    Date of Patent: October 26, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5239233
    Abstract: At the lumen output levels of most ordinary household incandescent lamps, incandescent filaments designed for and operated at about 24 Volt RMS provide substantially higher luminous efficacy than filaments designed for and operated at 120 Volt RMS. A table lamp comprises means for converting 120 Volt/60 Hz to 120 Volt/30 kHz. The 120 Volt/60 Hz is obtained from an ordinary electrical receptacle; the 120 Volt/30 kHz is provided to the lamp socket. With 120 Volt/30 kHz on the lamp socket, any ordinary 120 Volt incandescent lamp can be used therein; as can also any special incandescent lamp having a 24 Volt filament in combination with a built-in 30 kHz voltage transformer operative to convert the 120 Volt/30 kHz socket voltage into 24 Volt/30 kHz voltage for the filament.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 8, 1990
    Date of Patent: August 24, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5233270
    Abstract: A compact screw-in fluorescent lamp is mounted on an ordinary Edison-type screw-base. An inverter-type ballast is integrally included with the base, thereby making the fluorescent lamp capable of being screwed into an ordinary lamp socket and to be powered therefrom by ordinary power line voltage. The fluorescent lamp is folded and has a narrowed section of glass. The inverter-type ballast, which includes a half-bridge self-oscillating inverter, is powered via a voltage doubler and powers the fluorescent lamp via an tuned L-C circuit. Light output can be adjusted by way of an adjustment means functional to adjust the inverter frequency, thereby correspondingly to adjust the magnitude of the lamp current.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 1, 1992
    Date of Patent: August 3, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5216332
    Abstract: A magnetic-electronic ballast consists of a symmetrical series-combination of two ordinary magnetic ballast reactors and an electronically controllable connection and cathode heating means; which connection/heating means has terminals by which to connect with two series-connected fluorescent lamps. The connection/heating means acts: i) to provide cathode heating prior to lamp ignition, ii) to constitute an open circuit as long as the lamps are properly operating, iii) to constitute a short circuit if ever any of the lamp cathode terminals were to be disconnected (or, if one of the cathodes were to become open-circuited), and iv) to cycle between a short circuit and an open circuit in case the lamps have become inoperable for reasons other than an open-circuited cathode.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 15, 1991
    Date of Patent: June 1, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5214353
    Abstract: Connected in circuit between a regular two-cell battery and the light bulb in an otherwise ordinary flashlight is an auxiliary voltage source, such as a third battery cell of relatively small size. The bulb is normally powered directly from the regular two-cell battery. However, if a boost in light output is desired for a brief period of time, the auxiliary voltage source is connected in series with the two-cell battery. Switching is accomplished by way of a slide switch that has an OFF-position, an ON-position, and a spring-loaded BOOST-position. In the BOOST-position, the auxiliary voltage source is coupled in series with the two-cell battery, thereby boosting the RMS magnitude of the voltage applied to the light bulb by a factor of as much as 1.5; which, in turn, boosts the light output by a factor of about 4.0. To prevent substantial shortening of the overall life of the light bulb, since the life of the light bulb would be shortened by a substantial factor if being supplied with 1.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 10, 1992
    Date of Patent: May 25, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5214355
    Abstract: A half-bridge inverter is powered from a constant-magnitude DC supply voltage and provides at the inverter's output a first AC output voltage that is describable as a modified squarewave voltage. This first AC voltage is applied across a series-combination of a tank inductor and a tank capacitor, the junction between which is clamped to the DC supply voltage. As a result, a second AC voltage gets established across the tank capacitor; which second AC voltage is also describable as a modified squarewave voltage. However, the phasing of the second AC voltage is delayed by roughly 90.degree. degrees with respect to the first AC voltage; which results in the voltage across the tank inductor being of approximately sinusoidal waveform.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 13, 1991
    Date of Patent: May 25, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5214356
    Abstract: An electronic ballast is connected with the power line voltage of an ordinary electric utility power line and has an inverter functional to provide a high-frequency output voltage to a current-limiting circuit connected with a fluorescent lamp. The inverter includes a transistor whose collector-emitter is of trapezoidal waveform. Collector current flows through the transistor only during periods when the absolute magnitude of the transistor's collector-emitter voltage is very low compared with the maximum absolute magnitude of the collector-emitter voltage.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 21, 1992
    Date of Patent: May 25, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5210788
    Abstract: In a combined telephone and electric power distribution system, both telephone signals and electric power are distributed by way of a common distribution system wherein signal conducting means (such as optical fibers) and electric power conducting means are routed alongside each other to/from various utilization points, such as to/from a computer, a special lighting fixture, a power receptacle and/or a special telephone instrument; which special telephone instrument has feature whereby the mere lifting of the receiver causes either a pre-programmed prefix or a pre-programmed telephone number to be dialed automatically. At some of these utilization points, telephone signal receptacles are provided alongside electric power receptacles. At other points, the signal conducting means is terminated in a radio transceiver and wireless signal radiation/receiving means.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 27, 1992
    Date of Patent: May 11, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5191262
    Abstract: A half-bridge inverter is powered from a constant DC voltage and provides an AC output voltage that is--in contrast with the usual squarewave voltage--describable as being a sinusoidal waveform with the tops clipped off at some fixed magnitude; or, described differently, a waveform composed of truncated sinusoidal waves; or, described still differently, a waveform having trapezoidally shaped half-cycles. This AC voltage is applied across the primary winding of a so-called reactance transformer, whose loosely coupled secondary winding is connected across a gas discharge lamp. The internal inductive reactance of the secondary winding constitutes a lamp ballasting means by way of limiting the magnitude of the resulting lamp current to a pre-established desired level.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 13, 1992
    Date of Patent: March 2, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5189342
    Abstract: Power to a self-oscillating inverter ballast is supplied from a DC voltage source through an inductor means having two separate windings on a common magnetic core--with one winding being positioned in each leg of the power supply. The inverter is loaded by way of a parallel-tuned L-C circuit connected across the inverter's output, thereby providing a sinusoidal voltage thereat. A fluorescent lamp is connected by way of a current-limiting capacitor with the inverter's output.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 25, 1992
    Date of Patent: February 23, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5185560
    Abstract: A half-bridge inverter is powered from a constant-magnitude DC supply voltage and provides at the inverter's output a first AC output voltage that is describable as a modified squarewave voltage. This first AC voltage is applied across a series-combination of an inductor and a capacitor, the junction between which is clamped to the DC supply voltage. As a result, a second AC voltage gets established across the capacitor; which second AC voltae is also describable as being a modified squarewave voltage. However, the phasing of the second AC voltage is delayed by approximately 90 degrees with respect to the first AC voltage; which results in the voltage across the inductor being of approximately sinuosidal waveform. A fluorescent lamp is connected in series with a ballast capacitor; and the lamp-capacitor series combination is connected across the inductor, thereby reslting in a nearly sinusoidal current being provided to the fluorescent lamp.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 4, 1991
    Date of Patent: February 9, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5180950
    Abstract: In a power-factor-corrected electronic ballast, an AC/DC converter comprises a half-bridge electronic self-oscillating inverter powered from non-filtered full-wave-rectified 120 Volt/60 HZ power line voltage, and its resulting amplitude-modulated 30 kHz output voltage is applied to a series-resonant L-C circuit. The 30 kHz voltage developing across the tank capacitor of this L-C circuit is rectified and applied as direct current to an energy-storing capacitor, from which a DC supply voltage is provided to a frequency-converting ballast which, in turn, provides a substantially non-modulated high-frequency AC output voltage used for powering a gas discharge lamp via a current-limiting inductor. Trigger pulses are provided to trigger the inverter into self-oscillation at the beginning of each pulse of DC voltage provided by the unfiltered rectified power line voltage. As soon as the magnitude of the DC voltage across the energy-storing capacitor exceeds a first level, the trigger pulses cease to be provided.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 29, 1991
    Date of Patent: January 19, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5180952
    Abstract: To permit the more cost-effective use of low voltage lamps (especially 12 Volt Halogen lamps) in track lighting systems, the power track is supplied from the power line by way of a frequency-converting power supply providing onto the track conductors a voltage of normal power line voltage magnitude (120 Volt RMS) but of an exceptionally high frequency (30 kHz). As a result, the individual step-down voltage transformer required to provide the proper low voltage for operating each of the low voltage lamps becomes very light, small and inexpensive. Yet, in contrast with situations where the whole track may be provided with low voltage from a single step-down voltage transformer, there will be no unusual limitations in respect to track length and/or the number of low voltage lamps that can be used with a given track. Moreover, there will be no problem with using regular high voltage incandescent lamps intermixed with low voltage lamps.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 7, 1992
    Date of Patent: January 19, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5179326
    Abstract: A high-frequency electronic ballast for fluorescent lamps has a first inverter for controllably providing heating power to the lamp cathodes and a second inverter for controllably providing main lamp operating power. The two inverters are separately and independently controllable, thereby: i) to permit adjustment of lamp current so as to provide full or reduced light output in accordance with requirements, ii) to permit cathode heating power to be removed under conditions of providing full light output, thereby to maximize efficiency, and iii) to permit cathode heating power to be restored under conditions of reduced light output, thereby to prevent premature lamp failure.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 9, 1990
    Date of Patent: January 12, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen
  • Patent number: 5177409
    Abstract: In an electronic ballast for fluorescent lamps, means are provided by which the lamps are powered at their normal level whenever power line voltage is initially connected to the ballast. However, if the power line voltage is disconnected and then re-connected within about two seconds, the lamps will be powered at a lower-than-normal level; which lower-than-normal level will remain in effect until the power line voltage is once again disconnected and not re-connected until more than about two seconds have passed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 13, 1992
    Date of Patent: January 5, 1993
    Inventor: Ole K. Nilssen