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| United States Patent | 4259705 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4259705.html |
| Inventor(s) | Stifter; Francis J. (171 S. Main St., Natick, MA 01760) |
| Abstract | The invention is an electronic isolation and surge suppression system
including a housing defining cord and socket openings and retaining a
surge suppressor connected to one end of an electrical cord, the other end
of which terminates with a plug adapted for connection to an AC power
source. Also retained by the housing are a plurality of multiple terminal
electrical socket means and an electrical circuit connecting the sockets
in a parallel combination that is in series with the suppressor. The
electrical circuit includes an electrical filter connected between each of
the socket means and the suppressor. Large voltage surges are eliminated
by the suppressor, while the individual filters provide electrical
isolation between electronic equipment connected to the individual sockets
and isolation from AC power line noise and transients. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4259705 |
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Combination surge suppressor filter |
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| Publication Date |
March 31, 1981 |
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| Filing Date |
March 27, 1979 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| *references marked with an asterisk below are user-added references |
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| Market Size |
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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| Market Size | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Market Share | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Reasonable Royalty | N/A | [No votes] |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. An electronic isolation and surge suppression system comprising:
a housing defining a connector opening and a plurality of socket openings;
an electrical connector extending through said connector opening and
comprising a plurality of electrical conductors, each having one end
located externally of said housing and an opposite end located internally
thereof; said externally located ends adapted for connection to a source
of AC power;
a voltage surge suppressor means disposed within said housing and connected
to said internal ends of said conductors;
a plurality of multiple terminal electrical socket means mounted in said
socket openings and adapted to receive electrical plugs; and
electrical circuit means connecting said socket means in a parallel
combination and connecting said parallel combination in series with said
suppressor means, said circuit means comprising a separate electrical
filter means connected between each of said socket means and said
suppressor means.
2. A system according to claim 1 wherein said suppressor means comprises
voltage clipper means connected between said conductors.
3. A system according to claim 2 wherein said circuit means comprises a
plurality of electrical lines connecting the multiple terminals of each of
said socket means to said electrical conductors, and said filter means
comprises an inductor in each of said lines.
4. A system according to claim 3 wherein said electrical conductors
comprise three electrical conductors, and said circuit means comprise
those lines connecting each of said socket means to said conductors.
5. A system according to claim 4 wherein all of said lines connecting one
of said socket means to said conductors are wound on a common toroidal
core to form said inductors.
6. A system according to claim 5 wherein each of said socket means
comprises a plurality of multiple terminal electrical sockets connected in
parallel.
7. A system according to claim 4 wherein said clipper means comprises a
clipper connected between each pair of said three conductors.
8. A system according to claim 7 wherein said clippers are varistors. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates generally to the protection of electrical equipment
and, more particularly, to a combination isolator and line surge
suppressor for electronic devices.
A well-known cause of damage to electrical equipment is the high voltage
line surge. Such line surges often produce voltages above the rated
capacity of electronic components and can either produce catastrophic
failure thereof or a gradual weakening that ultimately leads to failure.
In addition to component failure, line surges can introduce electrical
interference that degrades the performance of many devices including
scientific instruments, test apparatus, chemical process controllers and
data handlers, audio equipment, video recorders and television equipment.
Particularly affected by interference are computers and computer
peripheral equipment in which electrical noise can introduce inadvertent
bits that ruin programs. Although devices are available for adequately
suppressing line surges, such devices fail to eliminate effectively the
above-described performance degrading interference in electrical
equipment. Although conventional suppressors function to eliminate voltage
spikes above a given maximum level they fail to eliminate voltage
transients in the range between peak line voltage and that given maximum
level. Such voltage transients can produce the performance degrading
interference described above. Thus, presently available surge suppressors
do not satisfactorily eliminate the problem.
The object of this invention, therefore, is to provide a device that will
both protect and prevent faulty operation of various types of electronic
equipment.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention is an electronic isolation and surge suppression system
including a housing defining cord and socket openings and retaining a
surge suppressor connected to one end of an electrical cord, the other end
of which terminates with a plug adapted for connection to an AC power
source. Also retained by the housing are a plurality of multiple terminal
electrical socket means and an electrical circuit connecting the sockets
in a parallel combination that is in series with the suppressor. The
electrical circuit includes an electrical filter connected between each of
the socket means and the suppressor. Large voltage surges are eliminated
by the suppressor, while the individual filters provide electrical
isolation between electronic equipment connected to the individual
sockets. Thus, the invention provides a compact unit that substantially
eliminates high voltage transients that could either damage or degrade the
performance of electronic equipment.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the suppressor comprises a
varistor connected between each pair of lines in a three-wire system and
each filter comprises three inductor windings each connected in one line
of the three-wire system and all wound on a common toroidal core. The
suppressor provides both differential and common mode surge voltage
protection while the use of an inductor in the ground line as well as in
the hot and common lines effectively eliminates degrading intermediate
voltage transients in the equipment connected to the sockets.
One feature of the above invention comprises a filter with hot and common
line inductors bifilar wound on the common core so as to prevent core
saturation with high line current. Also, additional isolation is provided
by capacitors connected between each pair of lines in the three-wire
system.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
These and other objects and features of the present invention will become
more apparent upon a perusal of the following description taken in
conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein:
FIG. 1 is a schematic perspective view of one embodiment of the invention;
FIG. 2 is a schematic block circuit diagram of the embodiment shown in FIG.
1;
FIG. 3 is a schematic circuit diagram of the suppressor shown in FIG. 2;
FIG. 4 is a schematic circuit diagram of one of the filters shown in FIG.
2;
FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram illustrating an inductor device utilized in
the circuit of FIG. 4;
FIG. 6 is a schematic perspective view of another embodiment of the
invention; and
FIG. 7 is a schematic block circuit diagram of the embodiment shown in FIG.
6.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Referring now to FIG. 1, there is shown an electrical isolation and surge
suppression device 11 according to the invention. The device 11 includes a
housing 12 that defines a cable opening 13 and a plurality of socket
openings 14. Retained in each of the socket openings 14 is a
three-terminal socket 15-17 for receiving conventional three-terminal
electrical plugs. A cord 18 extends through the cord opening 13 and
retains three electrical conductors 21-23. Attached to the outer end of
the cord 18 and connected to the conductors 21-23 is a conventional
three-terminal electrical plug 25.
Referring now to FIG. 2, there is shown in block diagram form an electrical
circuit retained by the housing 12. A combination surge suppressor and
filter 26 is connected to the three conductors 21-23 of the electrical
cord 18. Also connected to the suppressor and filter combination 26 by a
circuit 27 is a combination of three filters 28-30 connected in parallel.
Each of the filters 28-30 is connected to a different one of the sockets
15-17. FIG. 3 shows in greater detail the combination suppressor and
filter 26 shown in FIG. 2. Included in the combination 26 is a varistor 32
connected between the hot line 21 and the common line 23, a varistor 33
connected between the hot line 21 and the ground line 22 and a varistor 34
connected between the common line 23 and the ground line 22. Also in the
combination 26 is a capacitor C1 connected between the hot line 21 and the
ground line 22 and a capacitor C2 connected between the ground line 22 and
the common line 23.
The filters 28-30 are of identical construction and a circuit diagram of
one 28 is shown in FIG. 4. An inductor L1 is connected in the hot line 21,
an inductor L2 is connected in the ground line 22 and an inductor L3 is
connected in the common line 23. Also a capacitor C3 is connected between
the hot line 21 and the common line 23. As illustrated in FIG. 5, the
inductors L1, L2 and L3 are formed by winding the lines 21-23 on a common
toroidal core 36. The inductors L1 and L3 are formed by a bifilar winding
of the hot and common lines 21 and 23 while the inductor L2 is formed by
separately winding the ground line 22.
During use of the device 11, the plug 25 is inserted into a suitable AC
power source and desired electronic equipment, for example a computer and
peripheral accessores therefor, are individually plugged into the sockets
15-17. The varistors 32-34 prevent damage to the connected equipment by
clipping line voltages above a given maximum, for example above 200 volts,
and thereby suppress power line surges, spikes or transients. Differential
surge voltage protection is provided by the varistor 32 while common mode
line surge voltage protection is provided by the varistors 33 and 34. In
addition, the filter portion of the combination 26 and the filters 28-30
function to isolate the connected equipment from performance degrading
intermediate voltage spikes in the range between peak AC line voltage and
the set point of the varistors 32-34. The permability of the toroid core
36 provides the inductors L1 and L3 with a high inductance that
establishes power line isolation and the high inductance L2 isolates
equipment ground and attenuates any interactive noise signal that appears
on the grounds of the equipment connected to the sockets 15-17. Use of
bifilar winding for the inductors L1 and L3 prevents saturation of the
core 36 with high line currents.
Additional protection is provided by the capacitors C1-3 that filter out AC
power line hash and noise that may be detrimental to the connected
equipment. The capacitors C1 and C2 provide common mode bypassing while
the capacitor C3 provides differential bypassing. Thus, the device 11
provides a simple, compact unit that can effectively protect multiple
pieces of electronic equipment from either damaging power line surges or
performance degrading noise and interference.
Referring now to FIG. 6, there is shown another embodiment 41 of the
invention. The embodiment 41 includes a housing 42 that defines a cord
opening 43 and a plurality of receptacle openings 44. Extending through
the cord opening 43 is an electrical cord 45 terminating with an
electrical plug 46 adapted for insertion into an AC power source. A
plurality of three-terminal electrical sockets 47-50 are retained by the
socket openings 44.
Schematically illustrated in FIG. 7 is an electrical circuit 51 retained by
the housing 42 of FIG. 6. Included in the circuit 51 is a surge suppressor
and filter combination 52 that is connected to the electrical cord 45 and
is identical to the circuit illustrated in FIG. 3. A circuit 53 connects a
pair of filters 54 and 55 in a parallel combination that is connected to
the surge suppressor and filter combination 52. Each of the filters 54 and
55 is identical to the filter 28 shown in FIG. 4. Connected to the filter
55 is a parallel combination of the sockets 47 and 48 while a parallel
combination of the sockets 49 and 50 is connected to the filter 54.
The combination 41 is used in a similar fashion to the embodiment 11 shown
in FIG. 1. Again, the unit 41 is energized by insertion of the plug 46
into a suitable AC power source. A plurality of electrical devices can
then be energized from the electrical sockets 47-50. The surge suppressor
and filter combination 52 provides line surge protection and common mode
bypassing in the same manner as the surge suppressor and filter
combination 26 of FIG. 2. In addition, the filters 54 and 55 provide
electrical isolation for the equipment connected to the sockets 47-50 in
the same manner as the filters 28-30 of FIG. 2. However, in embodiment 41
complete isolation is not provided between the particular devices
connected to the sockets 47 and 48 or between the devices connected to the
sockets 49 and 50. The embodiment 41 is used in those instances in which
complete filter isolation is not required between all individual units of
an electrical system.
Obviously, many modifications and variations of the present invention are
possible in light of the above teachings. For example only, cascaded
filters could be substituted for individual filters or the number of
parallel filters in a given unit can be increased as desired. Similarly,
the number of individual sockets connected to a given filter in the
embodiment 41 can be increased as desired. It is to be understood,
therefore, that the invention can be practiced otherwise than as
specifically described.
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Description  |
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