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| United States Patent | 4659909 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4659909.html |
| Inventor(s) | Knutson; Arthur E. (22325 4th Pl. West, Bothell, WA 98021) |
| Abstract | A smoke detector is mounted externally of but adjacent to an electric
kitchen range and supplies an electrical signal when smoke is detected.
Such signal actuates a relay to interrupt the supply of power to the
range. The relay can be interposed between the range plug and its wall
receptacle so that no modification to the internal range circuitry is
required, and can require a manual resetting operation before the supply
of power to the range is resumed. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4659909 |
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Kitchen range safety shutoff |
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| Publication Date |
April 21, 1987 |
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| Filing Date |
January 23, 1986 |
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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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Estimate the gross annual revenues of the relevant market
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| Market Share |
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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What percentage of gross sales should the inventor or assignee be paid?
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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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I claim:
1. A safety shutoff for a range installation including an electric range
having an electric heating element and means for normally conveying power
to the range, such power-conveying means including manually resettable
circuit breaker means for cutting off the supply of power through the
power-conveying means to the range when current exceeding a predetermined
current is detected, said shutoff comprising a smoke detector mounted
externally of the range and including means for supplying an electrical
signal when smoke is detected, and power cutoff means connected to and
actuated by said signal-supplying means for automatically interrupting the
supply of power through the power-conveying means to the range when smoke
is detected, said power cutoff means including means for automatically
grounding the power-conveying means upon receipt of said signal so as to
actuate the circuit breaker means and require manual resetting of the
circuit breaker means before the supply of power to the range can be
resumed.
2. The safety shutoff defined in claim 1, in which the range has a power
plug and the power-conveying means includes a wall receptacle adapted to
receive said plug, the power cutoff means including a relay interposed
between said plug and said receptacle.
3. A safety shutoff for a range installation including an electric range
having an electric heating element and means for normally conveying power
to said element, said shutoff comprising a smoke detector mounted
externally of the range and including means for supplying an electrical
signal when smoke is detected, relay means including an electromagnet
connected to and actuated by said signal-supplying means and a relay
switch actuated by said electromagnet, said relay switch being normally
closed to convey power therethrough to the range but automatically opened
by operation of said electromagnet when smoke is detected, said switch in
its open position conveying power to said electromagnet to maintain said
electromagnet actuated even after the smoke has cleared, and a reset
switch actuatable only manually to cutoff the supply of power to said
electromagnet for resuming the supply of power to the range after the
smoke has cleared.
4. The safety shutoff defined in claim 3, in which the range has a power
plug and the power-conveying means includes a wall receptacle adapted to
receive said plug, the relay being interposed between said plug and said
receptacle. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a device for automatically cutting off the
power to an electric kitchen range when a fire occurs or is imminent.
2. Prior Art
Phifer U.S. Pat. No. 3,912,904, issued Oct. 14, 1975, and Barnett U.S. Pat.
No. 4,431,907, issued Feb. 14, 1984, disclose electric kitchen ranges with
built-in temperature-responsive elements to protect the internal circuitry
from overheating, but are not concerned with the problem of fires caused
by inadvertence during operation of the range. Such fires can be worsened
by continued operation of the range heating elements such as if the range
has been left unattended or the fire itself prevents turning off the range
elements by use of the manual controls.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The principal object of the present invention is to provide a device which
will lessen the possibility of a fire caused by operation of an electric
kitchen range.
It also is an object to provide such a device which will lessen the
resulting damage should such a fire occur.
Another object is to provide such a device in a form usable with any known
electric kitchen range with no modification to the internal range
circuitry being required.
An additional object is to provide such a device of simple inexpensive
construction, utilizing known components and simple and quick to install.
The foregoing objects can be accomplished by a safety shutoff incorporated
in the power supply circuit for an electric kitchen range and
automatically actuated by smoke detected in the area of the range to cut
off the supply of power to the range. In the preferred embodiment, a smoke
detector mounted externally of the range actuates a relay which is
interposed between the range plug and its wall receptacle and, when the
smoke has cleared, the safety shutoff system must be reset manually before
the range can be operated again.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIGS. 1 and 2 are corresponding schematic circuit diagrams of alternative
kitchen range safety shutoffs in accordance with the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
As shown in the drawings, the present invention utilizes a conventional
smoke detector 1 mounted externally but in the general area of a
conventional electric range 2 which can have the usual burners 3 and one
or more ovens (not shown). Preferably the smoke detector is powered by a
standard house line 4 of 120 volt, 60 hertz, alternating current
electricity. The smoke detector has an internal smoke-actuated switch 5
which, when closed as a result of smoke being detected, actuates an alarm
such as a horn 6. In addition, preferably the smoke detector is of the
type having an auxiliary output line 7 conveying electricity when switch 5
is closed. Such an auxiliary output line is provided in some AC powered
smoke detectors for the purpose of interconnecting two or more detectors
so that the alarm of each detector is actuated when smoke is detected by
any one of them. An appropriate smoke detector for use in the present
invention is the Model SA1839 detector sold under the trademark "First
Alert" by Pittway Corporation of Aurora, Ill.
Power to the range 2 for operating its electric heating elements is by the
conventional house wiring, namely, power supply lines 8 and 9 having
current-responsive, normally resettable circuit breakers 10 and 11,
respectively. Supply lines 8 and 9 and a groundline 12 terminate at the
conventional wall receptacle 13 for the range plug 14. In accordance with
the present invention, however, a safety shutoff unit 15 (FIG. 1) or 15'
(FIG. 2) actuated by the smoke detector 1 is interposed between the power
source and the range. Such safety shutoff unit can be incorporated in the
home wiring but preferably has a plug 16 mating with the wall receptacle
13 and a receptacle 17 mating with the range plug 14 for convenient
installation of the unit at any desired time with no modification required
for the home or range wiring. The safety shutoff unit 15 also has an input
control line 18 connectable to the auxiliary output line 7 of the smoke
detector 1.
Preferably the safety shutoff unit 15 or 15' has an internal relay 19 with
two normally closed, ganged switches 20 for conveying power from supply
lines 8 and 9 through the safety shutoff unit to the range. When smoke is
detected by detector 1, however, switches 20 are automatically opened to
the broken line positions shown in the drawings by interconnection of the
smoke detector auxiliary output line 7 to the safety shutoff unit input
control line 18 for powering the electromagnet 21 which results in opening
the switches.
In the embodiment shown in FIG. 1, opening the relay switches 20 to the
broken line positions connects both of the power supply lines 8 and 9 to
the ground 12 which trips the circuit breakers 10 and 11. Consequently, as
soon as smoke is detected by the detector 1, power to the range is cut off
and cannot be resumed without manually resetting the circuit breakers,
even though the switches 20 of the shutoff unit 15 will close
automatically when the smoke has cleared. This prevents automatic
resumption of the supply of power to the range which could restart the
fire, such as if the range has been left unattended.
In the embodiment shown in FIG. 2, opening the relay switches 20 to the
broken line positions connects one of the power supply lines (line 8 as
shown in FIG. 2) to the electromagnet 21 through a manually actuated reset
switch 22. Switch 22 can be mounted externally of the range at any
convenient location. After the smoke has cleared, the relay switches
remain in their open positions until the reset switch is opened manually,
momentarily, whereupon the relay switches close to restore power to the
range.
Since no modification is made to the internal wiring of the range, the
safety shutoff in accordance with the present invention can be used with
any known electric range.
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Description  |
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