With Plural Interfitting Or Interlocking Sections Patents (Class 337/201)
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Patent number: 4563666Abstract: A miniature fuse suitable for printed circuit applications and a manufacturing method therefor features preferably a generally rectangular elongated insulating body having a fuse element preferably diagonally disposed in a fuse cavity therein and terminals preferably insert molded therein and extending preferably from the opposite ends thereof. The cavity preferably opens onto opposite longitudinal sides of the body, but provision may be made to optionally close-off one of the cavity openings by a cover plate. The body is sealed by a sleeve which is preferably a semi-rigid expandable member but which could be a piece of expandable shrink tubing. Lay-in grooves preferably extend from the opposite ends of the cavity to conductive fuse attachment surfaces which are initially preferably bendable tabs located beyond the outer surface of the body to allow the fuse element to be conveniently attached or captured thereby during fuse assembly.Type: GrantFiled: June 4, 1984Date of Patent: January 7, 1986Assignee: Littelfuse, Inc.Inventor: John Borzoni
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Patent number: 4559514Abstract: A chip type fuse comprises a fuse base and a cover therefor both made of a heat resistant and electrically insulating material. The fuse includes a pair of electrically conductive terminals, having portions exposed outside of the fuse base and having ends disposed within the fuse. A fusible element is stretched between the ends of the conductive terminals inside the fuse. The fuse base has leg portions extending below the bottom of the base and is adapted to be soldered to a printed circuit board.Type: GrantFiled: November 29, 1983Date of Patent: December 17, 1985Assignee: S.O.C. CorporationInventor: Hiroo Arikawa
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Patent number: 4536046Abstract: Assembly systems for compact N-pole fusible pull out switches of different ratings use the same two part insulator bases and the same insulator pull out heads in all switches. In one system, for switches of a given current rating but two different voltage ratings, there are two types of fixed contacts in the base but the contacts are the same for both voltage ratings; the fuseholder/stab contact members in the head are all the same for both switch ratings, and all mounting hardware and incidental hardware is the same for all switches. The voltage ratings are differentiated from each other only by different base terminals and by different insulator barriers over the base contacts.Type: GrantFiled: March 29, 1984Date of Patent: August 20, 1985Assignee: Boltswitch, Inc.Inventor: John W. Erickson
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Patent number: 4536054Abstract: The fuse holder contains a socket and a head member loosely seated in the socket by a quick release closure, and can be removed along the lengthwise axis of the fuse holder. Seated in the socket at its closed end is a base contact containing a connection tab and a lateral contact having a connection tab. At the head member, the closed end of which is located at the open end of the socket, there is provided a substantially U-shaped, asymmetric connection conductor fixedly clawing into the head member by retaining flaps provided at a web portion of the connection conductor. The unequal legs of the connection conductor extend from the web portion at an inclination inwardly at a predetermined location towards the lengthwise axis of the fuse holder to an internal contact location for a first cap member of the fuse insert. A second cap member thereof is pressed by an axial compression spring against the base contact.Type: GrantFiled: October 19, 1983Date of Patent: August 20, 1985Assignee: Schurter AGInventors: Peter Wallner, Peter Hollenstein
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Patent number: 4511875Abstract: An electric micro-fuse comprises a hollow body and a lid therefor. The interior of the fuse body is divided into five sections consisting of two raised plateaus and three recessed sections, wherein the central recess is connected to each end recess through a channel. A fusible element is diagonally stretched between the channels and a lead wire is inserted through each end of the fuse body into the end recesses and are soldered to the respective end of the fusible element. After soldering, the fuse body is covered by the lid and sealed hermetically by a suitable adhesive.Type: GrantFiled: March 17, 1983Date of Patent: April 16, 1985Assignee: S.O.C. CorporationInventor: Hiroo Arikawa
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Patent number: 4504815Abstract: A fuseholder of the bayonet-type for retaining tubular fuses is provided with a cap insert having a radial projection adjacent its open end, and a radially-projecting tab means adjacent its open end. The projection and tab cooperate with a body contact having a tip portion and a notch, the tab latching in the notch, and the radial projection bearing against the tip portion, so that electrical continuity is not lost if the cap portion of the fuseholder is accidentally depressed. A symmetrical spring means having a central portion and identical reduced-diameter end portions may be used in such a fuseholder, and simplifies the assembly of the fuseholder by eliminating the necessity for a predetermined endwise alignment of the spring at assembly.Type: GrantFiled: December 2, 1982Date of Patent: March 12, 1985Assignee: Allied CorporationInventor: Frank A. Harwath
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Patent number: 4434415Abstract: A reusable control module mountable to a power-cartridge-operated interrupting module which includes a normally closed switch in shunt with a fuse. The control module houses a control circuit which ignites the power cartridge to open the switch. The control module includes two conductive shells threaded together to enclose the circuit, thereby providing a Faraday cage for the circuit and shielding the circuit from the environment. A current transformer is mounted in an exterior pocket in one of the shells over a mounting terminal thereon which extends out of the pocket to act as a single-turn primary for the transformer. The output of the transformer is connected to an input of the circuit. Circuit boards of the circuit are mounted within the shells, in part by a plastic plug, one end of which passes through one of the shells coaxially with a mounting neck. The other end of the plug has slots which engage and hold one edge of the boards. The plug contains a conductor connected to the output of the circuit.Type: GrantFiled: November 5, 1982Date of Patent: February 28, 1984Assignee: S&C Electric CompanyInventors: John M. Jarosz, William R. Panas
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Patent number: 4404536Abstract: A fuse comprises a flat carrier panel (2) which carries a fusible conductor (8) interconnecting two electrical contactors (7). A cover (11) is fitted onto the carrier panel (2) by means of integral legs (14) which snap around opposed edge portions (4') of the carrier panel to enclose the fusible conductor (8) within an insulating housing. The contactors (7) extend out of the housing to provide external connections for the fuse.Type: GrantFiled: September 3, 1980Date of Patent: September 13, 1983Assignee: Wickmann-Werke AGInventor: Wolfgang Still
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Patent number: 4391485Abstract: An in-line fuse holder capable of handling currents as high as 30 amps, adapted to accept miniature, relatively flat, plug-in fuses which have a pair of flat terminals and a fuse link visibly retained within a relatively flat plastic case. The in-line fuse holder has a relatively rigid casing in which a pair of generally U shaped contact clip assemblies are mounted for receiving the flat terminals of the plug-in fuse. The contact clips are of two piece construction with an inner clip of highly conductive material and an outer clip of highly resilient material. The outer clip fits over the inner clip to force the inner clip into low resistance contact with the fuse terminals.Type: GrantFiled: January 9, 1981Date of Patent: July 5, 1983Assignee: McGraw-Edison CompanyInventor: Angelo Urani
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Patent number: 4349803Abstract: A pressure- and weather-resistant fuse tube having fiberglass reinforcement which cannot interfere with arc-extinguishment and which does not require an insert or liner of arc-extinguishing material. The fuse tube is molded from a thermosetting material which includes an effective amount of an arc-extinguishing material. The fuse tube includes an inner bore-defining portion and an outer weather-resistant portion which are simultaneously molded along an interface at which is located a layer of porous fiberglass cloth, or filament. The fiberglass is sufficiently porous to permit the material of both portions to pass through and thoroughly impregnate it, thereby locking both portions to each other and to the fiberglass which is located well away from the bore thereof.Type: GrantFiled: May 4, 1981Date of Patent: September 14, 1982Assignee: S&C Electric CompanyInventor: Thomas J. Tobin
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Patent number: 4326185Abstract: An electric fuse having a cartridge formed of a pair of semi-cylindrical casings, i.e., a body casing and a cover casing. The cover casing has a circumferential flat edge surface and a central ridge protruding above the flat surface, and the body casing has a circumferential flat edge surface and a central channel recessed therein for receiving the ridge section of the cover casing so as to form a passageway between the ridge section of the cover casing and the channel when the two casings are coupled to form the fuse cartridge. A fusible element is stretched diagonally between the ends of the body casing, passing through a pair of grooves in the edge surfaces at the end of the body casing, extending through the passageway and out through a pair of grooves disposed at the ends of the body casing, approximately in the middle thereof. The ends of the fusible element are soldered and capped or they may be soldered to the respective ends of a lead wire without end caps.Type: GrantFiled: April 27, 1981Date of Patent: April 20, 1982Assignee: San-O Industrial Company, Ltd.Inventor: Hiroo Arikawa
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Patent number: 4156224Abstract: An electric fuse is closed by a pair of ferrules or caps which engage the lateral surfaces of the casing and have end surfaces provided with a relatively large, circular, concentric bore. The fuse further includes a pair of rods generally hexagonal in cross-section, each having an end portion circular in cross-section, substantially equal in diameter to the diameter of said bore in each of said pair of caps and inserted into said bore.Type: GrantFiled: December 29, 1977Date of Patent: May 22, 1979Assignee: Gould Inc.Inventor: Edward J. Knapp, Jr.
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Patent number: 4153893Abstract: An improved end fitting for a high-voltage fuse is disclosed. The fuse is of the general type having a movable striker pin which resides in a first position as long as a fusible element of the fuse remains intact. Should the fusible element cease to be intact, through fusing thereof or mishandling of the fuse, the striker pin moves to a second position to partially exit beyond an end of the fuse when a sharp end of the striker pin pierces a seal at the fuse end. The improved end fitting is removably mountable to the fuse and includes a body having a bore therethrough. The first end of the body surrounds and encloses the seal. A rod, mounted for movement in the bore at the end of the body, resides in a first normal location when the striker pin is in the first normal position, and in a second location when the striker pin is in the second position.Type: GrantFiled: September 27, 1977Date of Patent: May 8, 1979Assignee: S&C Electric CompanyInventor: Roy T. Swanson
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Patent number: 4081778Abstract: A dry well fuseholder for use with electrical apparatus containing a dielectric liquid. The holder has an outer, liquid-tight, tubular shell and a number of components inside the shell abutting coaxially in the following order: an annular fitting adapted for supporting the fuseholder on the apparatus; an insulating tube; an annular fuse terminal; another insulating tube; and an annular fuse terminal closed at one end. Glass fibers bonded together with epoxy resin are wound over the peripheral surface of the fitting-tube assembly to produce the shell. Seals are located between the fittings and shell near the joints of fittings and tubes. These seals are composed of a material which swells on contact with the dielectric liquid.Type: GrantFiled: April 26, 1976Date of Patent: March 28, 1978Assignee: Canadian General Electric Company, Ltd.Inventors: Stanley F. Sack, Morris Mattuck
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Patent number: 4081779Abstract: An electrical device, in particular a fuse, circuit breaker or the like, comprises a housing having extending therefrom a projection, together with two conductive pins for connecting the device to an external circuit. A receptacle for accommodating the device has a wall provided with a seat and also with two holes through which the device pins pass when the device is inserted in the receptacle. A fitting is releasably accommodated in the seat and is able to accommodate the entrance therein of the projection to enable the device to be fully inserted. If an attempt is made to insert in the receptacle a different device provided with a projection that cannot enter the recess in the seat, the device cannot be fully inserted. However, the receptacle can be conditioned to accept the different device by inserting in the seat a different fitting having a different recess which will accommodate entrance of the projection of the different fitting.Type: GrantFiled: August 18, 1976Date of Patent: March 28, 1978Assignee: Bassani Ticino S.p.A.Inventor: Pierluigie Ranzanigo
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Patent number: 4075755Abstract: A method of attaching one tubular member such as a hollow metallic conducting tube to another tubular member such as a hollow insulator tube of a high voltage fuse comprises the steps of inserting the metallic tube into the insulator tube to a desired location and then expanding the metallic tube radially outwardly at a position where engagement is desired until the metallic tube engages and at least partially fills an annular groove on the interior of the insulator tube. To further provide a moisture tight seal at the point of engagement, an elastomeric compound such as a room-temperature-vulcanizing silicone rubber may be placed in the groove to assure a moisture tight seal when the metallic tube is expanded. The exterior of the insulator tube is slightly deformed due to expansion of the metallic tube, and the quality of the connection between the tubes may be determined by the amount of this slight deformation. Also disclosed is a novel fuse produced by this method.Type: GrantFiled: November 11, 1976Date of Patent: February 28, 1978Assignee: S&C Electric CompanyInventors: Joseph Bernatt, Alfred Steegmueller
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Patent number: 4060785Abstract: An enclosing structure for an electric fuse having a fusible element disposed within a tubular casing of insulating material and interconnected at its ends with terminals mounted on the casing ends comprises an elongated tubular enclosure formed of insulating and semiconducting material and disposed about the fuse with its inner surface in heat transferring surface contacting relation therewith and a rigid metallic heat absorbing sleeve imbedded in the elongated enclosure to absorb heat therefrom and to impart a degree of mechanical strength thereto. Semiconducting sleeves which form parts of the tubular enclosure include an outer sheath which is grounded and inner sleeve elements arranged so as to isolate the fuse and the contacts of the fuse enclosing structure thereby to inhibit corona discharge from the conducting parts.Type: GrantFiled: September 13, 1976Date of Patent: November 29, 1977Assignee: Kearney-National Inc.Inventors: Kenneth Earl Hanke, Ned Rees
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Patent number: 4013989Abstract: A fusible electric contactor having a plurality of cavities and a movable member having a path of movement into the cavities. A fuse assembly is removably inserted within the cavities to occupy a volume within the confines of the height, width, and length of the contactor.Type: GrantFiled: March 25, 1975Date of Patent: March 22, 1977Assignee: Westinghouse Electric CorporationInventor: William F. Born
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Patent number: 4002398Abstract: A terminal block mounting structure has a mounting bridge pivotally connected to a base bracket. Another mounting bridge is pivotally connected to an intermediate swivel member which is pivotally connected to the base bracket. The mounting bridges, each supporting a set of terminal blocks, are normally disposed in vertical alignment, yet the pivotal connections allow movement of the terminal blocks from the normal vertical plane.Type: GrantFiled: March 17, 1975Date of Patent: January 11, 1977Assignee: Allen-Bradley CompanyInventors: Alfred H. Hanisch, Edward C. Fensholt