US2783410A - Lightning arresters - Google Patents

Lightning arresters Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2783410A
US2783410A US308474A US30847452A US2783410A US 2783410 A US2783410 A US 2783410A US 308474 A US308474 A US 308474A US 30847452 A US30847452 A US 30847452A US 2783410 A US2783410 A US 2783410A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
discs
housing
silicone
spark gap
disc
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US308474A
Inventor
George H Manke
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
McGraw Electric Co
Original Assignee
McGraw Electric Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by McGraw Electric Co filed Critical McGraw Electric Co
Priority to US308474A priority Critical patent/US2783410A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2783410A publication Critical patent/US2783410A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01TSPARK GAPS; OVERVOLTAGE ARRESTERS USING SPARK GAPS; SPARKING PLUGS; CORONA DEVICES; GENERATING IONS TO BE INTRODUCED INTO NON-ENCLOSED GASES
    • H01T4/00Overvoltage arresters using spark gaps
    • H01T4/16Overvoltage arresters using spark gaps having a plurality of gaps arranged in series

Definitions

  • Fig. l is a sectional view of a spark gap enclosing a series of silicone coated conducting discs and formed conducting discs.
  • Fig. 2 is a sectional view of a similar spark gap with valve material included.
  • Fig. 3 is a sectional view of a formed disc.
  • Fig. 4 is a fragmentary view of a variation of a formed disc.
  • Fig. is a fragmentary view of another variation of a formed disc.
  • a spark gap 1 consisting of a housing 2 with a cap 3 in threaded relation at the upper end of the housing 2 and a similar enclosure 4 in threaded rela tion at the lower end of the housing 2.
  • a bore 5 extends through the interior of the housing and held in this bore by a spring means 6 is a series of formed discs 7 alternating with silicone coated conductor discs 8.
  • the formed discs 7 are shaped so that their edges will not touch the edge of the silicone coated discs.
  • discs 7 are dish-shaped with a flange portion around the outer edge and when two discs are placed facing each other the flange portions are in contact. This removes the edge from the vicinity of the silicone coated discs so that the raw edges of the punched silicone coated discs will not make contact with adjacent discs. This forces the current to flow through a path punctured in the silicone coating.
  • Fig. 4 I show a manner of shaping the discs so that only one is necessary between the silicone coated discs.
  • the discs 9 are formed in their mid portion to contact adjacent silicone coated discs 10 on both sides while the edges extend approximately midway between the adjacent discs
  • Fig. 5 I coat modified dish-shaped discs 11 with a silicone coating 12 and place them in pairs facing each other. By forming the outer edge with an outward and inward curve, the contact point 13 is removed from the edge so that in case a raw metal edge protrudes through the silicone coat it will not make an electrical contact point between adjacent discs.
  • This spark gap can be used with or without valve material.
  • the valve material freely conducts the surge current to ground and also offers high resistance to the power current which tends to follow the surge.
  • This valve material is a chemically stable refractory crystalline material which combines marked valve action with high discharge capacity and permanence of characteristic. It is characterized by low impedance when subjected to very high potentials and high impedance when subjected to relatively low potentials, properties which render it very useful for lightning arrester service. The question of whether or not to use valve material and the quantity to use is determined by the extent of the follow current that is apt to occur.
  • Fig. 2 I show my new spark gap with valve material. It consists of a circular glass housing 14 with a fiat bottom 15 that has an opening 16 through its center area. The top of the glass housing 14 is open and a flange 17 surrounds this upper open edge. Within the housing 14 is a series of discs, two facing cup-shaped metal discs 18 alternating with silicone coated metal discs 19. The cupshaped discs 18 have raised and flanged edges forming a rim, said rims facing each other in close proximity while the dished portions of each pair of discs are spaced apart. It can be seen that this manner of facing the rims of each pair of discs provides edge clearance for the raw surfaces of the silicone coated discs 19, and provides a contact space in the mid portion of the discs.
  • the upper opening of the housing is enclosed by a copper cap 24 spun over the flange 17 of the housing 14. Between this copper cap 24 and the top cup-shaped disc 18 within the housing is a spring 25 that serves to press the cup-shaped metal discs and the silicone coated discs in close proximity.
  • a conductor line 26 connects the copper cap 24 with the line.
  • a lightning arrester including a housing and closure means at both ends of the housing, a spark gap Within said housing and comprising a plurality of alternately stacked discs, saidv stacked discs each having .a depressed central portion and a; radially disposed flange in'contact relation to the flange of an adjacent alternate disc, substantially fiat discs. having a silicone varnish coating-interposed between and in contact relation to said depressed portions, and a spring interposedv between said closure means and. said discs biasing said discs toward each other.
  • a lightning arrester including a housing and closure means at both ends of the housing, a spark gap within said. housing and comprising a plurality of alternately stacked discs, each disc having silicone varnish coating and a depressed central portion in contact with the central portion of an adjacent disc through the medium of said silicone varnish and. an arcuately flanged portion in contact with the flanged portion of an adjacent disc through the medium of said silicone varnish, and biasing means urging said discs toward each other.
  • a lightning arrester including a housing and closure means at both ends of the housing, a spark gap within said housing and comprising a plurality of stacked discs, certain of said discs having opposed depressions, other of said discs having a silicone varnish coating and being interposedbetween said certain discs in contact with said depressions through the medium of saidsilicone varnish, and biasing means urging said stacked discs toward each other.
  • a lightning arrester including a housing and closure means at both ends thereof, a spark gap within the housing comprising a plurality of discs having central and adjacent portions depressed respectively to define contact surfaces lying in opposed planes on each side of a medium plane normal to the axis of each disc, said discs being stacked in adjacent axial alignment and including a silicone varnish coating contiguous with said contact surfaces and normally electrically insulating said discs from each other.

Description

Feb. 26, 1957 e. H. MANKE LIGHTNING ARRESTERS Filed Sept. 8, 1952 IN EN TOR.
fll'lor ne ey Geo United States Patent LIGHTNING ARRESTERS George H. Manke, South Milwaukee, Wis., assignor to McGraw Electric Company, Milwaukee, Wls., a corporation of Delaware Application September 8, 1952, Serial No. 308,474 4 Claims. (Cl. 313-446) spark gap a series of silicone coated formed conducting discs.
Other objects will appear from time to time in the course of specification and claims.
I illustrate several embodiments of this invention in the accompanying drawings in which:
Fig. l is a sectional view of a spark gap enclosing a series of silicone coated conducting discs and formed conducting discs.
Fig. 2 is a sectional view of a similar spark gap with valve material included.
Fig. 3 is a sectional view of a formed disc.
Fig. 4 is a fragmentary view of a variation of a formed disc.
Fig. is a fragmentary view of another variation of a formed disc.
In spark gaps with a series of metal conductors within, a spark over is apt to cause a slight pitting of the metal. My invention takes advantage of this action on the metal. I use a silicone varnish and coat some or all of the conductors with it. The silicone varnish becomes an excellent insulator under the influence of an electric arc. The high temperature of the arc causes the silicone to decompose, leaving a highly resistive residue at the point of current flow.
When a lightning impulse passes through the spark gap, it punctures the silicone varnish. The silicone at the puncture point decomposes and in its decomposed state is able to interrupt the current flow. The puncture voltage depends upon the thickness of the silicone coating which can be increased or decreased to suit the requirements. Various voltage ratings are obtained by stacking various numbers of silicone coated discs in series.
When subsequent lightning impulses travel through the spark gap, they puncture the silicone in a different spot each time. This gives a good life expectancy to the spark gap.
In Fig. l, I show a spark gap 1 consisting of a housing 2 with a cap 3 in threaded relation at the upper end of the housing 2 and a similar enclosure 4 in threaded rela tion at the lower end of the housing 2.
A bore 5 extends through the interior of the housing and held in this bore by a spring means 6 is a series of formed discs 7 alternating with silicone coated conductor discs 8. The formed discs 7 are shaped so that their edges will not touch the edge of the silicone coated discs. The
discs 7 are dish-shaped with a flange portion around the outer edge and when two discs are placed facing each other the flange portions are in contact. This removes the edge from the vicinity of the silicone coated discs so that the raw edges of the punched silicone coated discs will not make contact with adjacent discs. This forces the current to flow through a path punctured in the silicone coating.
There are various ways of shaping these formed discs. In Fig. 4, I show a manner of shaping the discs so that only one is necessary between the silicone coated discs. The discs 9 are formed in their mid portion to contact adjacent silicone coated discs 10 on both sides while the edges extend approximately midway between the adjacent discs In Fig. 5, I coat modified dish-shaped discs 11 with a silicone coating 12 and place them in pairs facing each other. By forming the outer edge with an outward and inward curve, the contact point 13 is removed from the edge so that in case a raw metal edge protrudes through the silicone coat it will not make an electrical contact point between adjacent discs.
This spark gap can be used with or without valve material. The valve material freely conducts the surge current to ground and also offers high resistance to the power current which tends to follow the surge. This valve material is a chemically stable refractory crystalline material which combines marked valve action with high discharge capacity and permanence of characteristic. It is characterized by low impedance when subjected to very high potentials and high impedance when subjected to relatively low potentials, properties which render it very useful for lightning arrester service. The question of whether or not to use valve material and the quantity to use is determined by the extent of the follow current that is apt to occur.
In Fig. 2, I show my new spark gap with valve material. It consists of a circular glass housing 14 with a fiat bottom 15 that has an opening 16 through its center area. The top of the glass housing 14 is open and a flange 17 surrounds this upper open edge. Within the housing 14 is a series of discs, two facing cup-shaped metal discs 18 alternating with silicone coated metal discs 19. The cupshaped discs 18 have raised and flanged edges forming a rim, said rims facing each other in close proximity while the dished portions of each pair of discs are spaced apart. It can be seen that this manner of facing the rims of each pair of discs provides edge clearance for the raw surfaces of the silicone coated discs 19, and provides a contact space in the mid portion of the discs.
Below this series of discs two plain fiat conductor discs 20 and 21, spaced apart, hold the granular valve material 22 between them at the bottom of the glass housing 14. The lower of these two discs, disc 21 has a ground terminal 23 attached to it. The ground terminal extends downwardly from the lower disc 21, through the opening 16 in the housing.
The upper opening of the housing is enclosed by a copper cap 24 spun over the flange 17 of the housing 14. Between this copper cap 24 and the top cup-shaped disc 18 within the housing is a spring 25 that serves to press the cup-shaped metal discs and the silicone coated discs in close proximity. A conductor line 26 connects the copper cap 24 with the line.
With this new device for carrying electrical impulses to the ground, I provide a simple construction that is inexpensive to make and serves adequately on low voltage lines. It puts to new use silicone coated metal, and the parts can be easily stamped from silicone coated sheet stock.
IIclaim:
1. A lightning arrester including a housing and closure means at both ends of the housing, a spark gap Within said housing and comprising a plurality of alternately stacked discs, saidv stacked discs each having .a depressed central portion and a; radially disposed flange in'contact relation to the flange of an adjacent alternate disc, substantially fiat discs. having a silicone varnish coating-interposed between and in contact relation to said depressed portions, and a spring interposedv between said closure means and. said discs biasing said discs toward each other.
2. A lightning arrester including a housing and closure means at both ends of the housing, a spark gap within said. housing and comprising a plurality of alternately stacked discs, each disc having silicone varnish coating and a depressed central portion in contact with the central portion of an adjacent disc through the medium of said silicone varnish and. an arcuately flanged portion in contact with the flanged portion of an adjacent disc through the medium of said silicone varnish, and biasing means urging said discs toward each other.
3.. A lightning arrester including a housing and closure means at both ends of the housing, a spark gap within said housing and comprising a plurality of stacked discs, certain of said discs having opposed depressions, other of said discs having a silicone varnish coating and being interposedbetween said certain discs in contact with said depressions through the medium of saidsilicone varnish, and biasing means urging said stacked discs toward each other.
4. A lightning arrester including a housing and closure means at both ends thereof, a spark gap within the housing comprising a plurality of discs having central and adjacent portions depressed respectively to define contact surfaces lying in opposed planes on each side of a medium plane normal to the axis of each disc, said discs being stacked in adjacent axial alignment and including a silicone varnish coating contiguous with said contact surfaces and normally electrically insulating said discs from each other.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,238,660 Field-Frank Aug. 26, 1917 1,723,872 Louge V Aug. 6, 1926 2,060,509 'Krause Nov. 10,v 1936 2,173,625 Fujitaka Sept. 19, 1939 2,264,700 Johnson et al. Dec. 2, 1941 FOREIGN PATENTS 605,793 Great Britain July 30, 1948
US308474A 1952-09-08 1952-09-08 Lightning arresters Expired - Lifetime US2783410A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US308474A US2783410A (en) 1952-09-08 1952-09-08 Lightning arresters

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US308474A US2783410A (en) 1952-09-08 1952-09-08 Lightning arresters

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2783410A true US2783410A (en) 1957-02-26

Family

ID=23194127

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US308474A Expired - Lifetime US2783410A (en) 1952-09-08 1952-09-08 Lightning arresters

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2783410A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2973448A (en) * 1957-09-23 1961-02-28 Ohio Brass Co Lightning arrester and housing therefor
US3018406A (en) * 1958-07-17 1962-01-23 Westinghouse Electric Corp Lightning arrester
US3062989A (en) * 1957-05-22 1962-11-06 Mc Graw Edison Co Capacitor protective circuit and apparatus
US3798505A (en) * 1972-09-25 1974-03-19 Gen Electric Low voltage surge arrester

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1238660A (en) * 1916-01-27 1917-08-28 Gen Electric Electric discharge apparatus.
US1723872A (en) * 1921-10-03 1929-08-06 Gen Electric Lightning arrester
US2060509A (en) * 1934-03-15 1936-11-10 Westinghouse Electric & Mfg Co Arrester of extremely high discharge capacity
US2173625A (en) * 1934-05-08 1939-09-19 Fujitaka Shuhei Lightning arrester
US2264700A (en) * 1939-06-23 1941-12-02 Westinghouse Electric & Mfg Co Lightning arrester
GB605793A (en) * 1945-01-08 1948-07-30 British Thomson Houston Co Ltd Improvements in and relating to lightning arresters

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1238660A (en) * 1916-01-27 1917-08-28 Gen Electric Electric discharge apparatus.
US1723872A (en) * 1921-10-03 1929-08-06 Gen Electric Lightning arrester
US2060509A (en) * 1934-03-15 1936-11-10 Westinghouse Electric & Mfg Co Arrester of extremely high discharge capacity
US2173625A (en) * 1934-05-08 1939-09-19 Fujitaka Shuhei Lightning arrester
US2264700A (en) * 1939-06-23 1941-12-02 Westinghouse Electric & Mfg Co Lightning arrester
GB605793A (en) * 1945-01-08 1948-07-30 British Thomson Houston Co Ltd Improvements in and relating to lightning arresters

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3062989A (en) * 1957-05-22 1962-11-06 Mc Graw Edison Co Capacitor protective circuit and apparatus
US2973448A (en) * 1957-09-23 1961-02-28 Ohio Brass Co Lightning arrester and housing therefor
US3018406A (en) * 1958-07-17 1962-01-23 Westinghouse Electric Corp Lightning arrester
US3798505A (en) * 1972-09-25 1974-03-19 Gen Electric Low voltage surge arrester

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2783410A (en) Lightning arresters
US2135085A (en) Lightning arrester
US3018406A (en) Lightning arrester
US1754158A (en) Lightning arrester
US2018672A (en) Surge diverter
US2151559A (en) Lightning arrester
US1561249A (en) Spark-gap lighting arrester
US2473850A (en) Lightning arrester
US2109266A (en) Condenser
US6430018B2 (en) Three-electrode-discharge surge arrester
US1603279A (en) Spark arrester
US1901893A (en) Electrical protector device
US2365595A (en) Spark gap device
US1361800A (en) Voltage-protective device
US3524099A (en) Spark gap assembly for lightning arresters
US2279249A (en) Spark gap device
US2264699A (en) Lightning arrester block
US2628292A (en) Electrical apparatus
US1483540A (en) Lightning arrester
US3087094A (en) Lightning arrester
US2264700A (en) Lightning arrester
US3106661A (en) Lightning arrester
US1011493A (en) Lightning-arrester.
US2012342A (en) Lightning arrester
US1667873A (en) Disk-pile lightning arrester