FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to high voltage surge arresters that include disconnectors,
insulative mounting brackets, metal oxide varistors, and polymeric housings.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] In recent years, metal oxide surge arresters for protecting outdoor overhead high
voltage electrical systems against lightning have been advantageously provided with
polymeric weathershed housings, disconnectors, and with insulative brackets. Metal
oxide varistor blocks are sealed within the polymeric housings, which protect and
insulate the varistor blocks against the damaging effects of rain, snow and airborne
contamination, for example. The insulative brackets have provided electrical insulation
to allow for proper operation of the ground lead disconnector.
[0003] Prior art surge arresters have also included fiberglass tubes or wrappings supporting
the varistor blocks. Also, the inner diameter, or bore, of the polymeric housings
have been bonded to the outer peripheral surfaces of the tube or wrapping. U.S. Patents
Nos. 4,656,,555 and 4,404,614 disclose some embodiments of these, constructions and
methods of construction. Methods of bonding a polymeric housing along its bore directly
to varistor blocks, or to layers or coatings surrounding the blocks, are also disclosed
in U.S. Patent No. 4,161,012. Polymer housings molded directly onto the peripheral
surfaces of an arrester element as well as to flat end surfaces are disclosed in U.S.
Patent No. 4,833,438. Each of the methods and embodiments referred to in the aforementioned
U.S. patents involves a relatively expensive process for achieving a seal between
the inner surfaces of an arrester housing and the outer or peripheral surfaces of
arrester components enclosed within the housing.
[0004] A method of achieving an air free, sealed, moisture excluding interface between peripheral
surfaces of arrester components and inner surfaces of an elastomeric housing that
includes the use of silicone grease at the interface is also described with reference
to FIG. 8 in U.S. Patent No. 4,161,012. In a prior art embodiment using silicone grease
at the above-described interface, the elastomeric or polymeric housing surrounding
the arrester components has been also compressed between flat surfaces disposed at
the opposing flat ends of the housing. However, in this embodiment, silicone oil from
the silicone grease has escaped, along the flat surfaces, to outer surfaces of the
housing. Here, the oil has accumulated objectionable quantities of airborne dust
and dirt.
[0005] A surge arrester insulative bracket is shown in FIG. 3 of U.S. patent No. 4,609,902.
Others are identified as the insulating base shown on pages 10 and 11 of Ohio Brass
Catalog 94. The method of bolting the insulating base to a metallic arrester mounting
bracket is shown in detail on Ohio Brass Instruction Sheet No. 17-5113, whereon the
recommended mounting torque for the one-half inch (12.7 mm) fastener is forty ft-lbs
(54 newton-metres). Torque greater than forty ft-lbs has cracked the insulating base
in the area of the bolt hole ex tending through the insulating base. Restricting
the applied torque to forty ft-lbs (54 N.m) places the burden of not cracking the
insulating base, i.e., the insulative bracket, upon the skill, knowledge and diligence
of the installer.
[0006] In the prior art devices, a lockwasher on a mounting bolt of the metallic bracket
is compressed against a flat surface of an insulative bracket, the flat surface being
perpendicular to the bolt hole extending through the bracket. The tightening of a
threaded nut against the lockwasher transmits a mechanical force through the lockwasher
to the flat surface. At a level of mechanical force predetermined by the characteristics
of the insulative mass of material forming the insulative bracket, the flat surface
yields and the insulative material under the lockwasher is crushed into the clearance
that had surrounded the bolt in the bolt hole. Further tightening of the nut against
the lockwasher then produces radial cracks extending from the damaged bolt hole through
the insulative material, thereby weakening the bracket and drawing complaints from
users.
[0007] Thus there is a need for an improved insulating base that can withstand greater
torque during installation.
[0008] After a surge arrester has been bolted to a metallic mounting bracket, a threaded
nut must be tightened against a clamp at the top end of the arrester to connect the
arrester to an electrical power system. Similarly, a threaded nut at the bottom end
of the arrester must be tightened to connect the ground lead disconnector of the arrester
to a source of ground potential. During the tightening of either of these threaded
nuts, there has been a tendency for the arrester housing, including the varistor
blocks within the housing, to rotate with respect to the arrester insu lative bracket
thereby drawing complaints from users. Thus, there is a need to prevent such rotation.
[0009] In use, the metallic mounting bracket may also be connected to a source of ground
potential.
[0010] With all connections made as described above, the full voltage of the power system
exists across the arrester, from the top end of the arrester to the bottom end; and
little voltage, if any, is impressed across the insulative bracket. However, the internal
components of surge arresters have been known to become damaged, in which case the
disconnector will automatically disconnect the ground wire from the arrester. Now
the power line voltage may be impressed across the insulative bracket, as is known
to those skilled in the art, until such time as the damaged arrester is discovered
and replaced. Damaged arresters may not be discovered and replaced for hours, days,
or even months, during which time the insulative bracket must withstand the voltage
across it, without regard for weather conditions or atmosphere borne contaminants
that may become deposited on the insulative bracket.
[0011] Under damp or rain conditions, the contaminants and moisture combine on the broad
upper surfaces of prior art insulative brackets and conduct electrical leakage current
across those upper surfaces as well as up and down the vertical surfaces of interposed
baffles formed on the insulative brackets. Eventually, in the course of wetting and
drying, the electrical current flowing across those surfaces, including the baffle
surfaces, may damage the insulative bracket and/or cause it to fail to withstand the
impressed voltage, thereby causing an outage of the electrical system. Baffles are
known to be raised portions of insulative material disposed transversely to a leakage
current path along an insulative bracket as a means to increase the length of the
creepage distance, and thereby to decrease the magnitude of the leakage current.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0012] Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to provide a metal oxide surge
arrester having an improved weatherseal that is relatively easy to manufacture.
[0013] Another object of the invention is to prevent the rotation of a surge arrester element
with respect to a surge arrester insulative bracket.
[0014] Yet another object of the invention is to provide an improved method for sealing
a surge arrester.
[0015] Still another object of the invention is to provide a method for providing a seal
for a surge arrester while at the same time bonding the arrester components together
to prevent their relative rotation with respect to the insulative bracket component
of the arrester.
[0016] Briefly, the present invention comprises a surge arrester that is sealed and locked
together by the bonding of readily accessible flat end surfaces of an elastomeric
arrester housing and/or of the arrester element to readily accessible flat surfaces
of other components of the arrester. The bonding is achieved by applying adhesive
between opposing flat surfaces, or to one or the other of opposing flat surfaces.
All opposing surfaces are then pressed together, while at the same time compressing
the elastomeric housing. The compression of the housing spreads a line of adhesive
into a continuous thin layer, covering the entire end surfaces of the housing, and/or
holds the adhesive in place until cured and firmly bonded.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0017] The above and other objects and advantages and novel features of the present invention
will become apparent from the following detailed description of the embodiments of
the invention illustrated in the accompanying drawings wherein:
FIG. 1 is a side elevation, in partial section, of a preferred embodiment of a surge
arrester constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention, shown
attached to a portion of a metallic mounting bracket;
FIG. 2 is a top plan view of the insulative bracket shown assembled in the surge arrester
depicted in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view of the device of FIG. 2 taken along the line 3-3
of FIG. 2;
FIG. 4 is a side elevation in partial section, of an end portion of a prior art insulatlve
arrester bracket shown bolted to a metallic mounting bracket;
FIG. 5 is a side elevation, in partial section, of an end portion of a prior art
insulative arrester bracket shown damaged by assembly to a metallic mounting bracket;
FIG. 6 is a side elevation, in cross-section, of a portion of an insulative bracket
in accordance with an embodiment of the invention, shown attached to a portion of
a metallic mounting bracket; and
FIG. 7 is a side elevation, in cross-section, of the portion of the insulative bracket
in accordance with FIG., 1, shown attached to a metallic mounting bracket.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0018] FIG. 1 depicts a surge arrester 1 that includes a conventional clamping device 2
and threaded nut 4 for connecting the arrester 1 to an outdoor electric power distribution
system. A ground lead disconnector 6 includes a clamping device 9 and threaded nut
8 for connecting a metallic wire to ground or earth. The body 18 of the arrester,
the disconnector 6 and the insulative arrester bracket 21 are interconnected firmly
together by means of a threaded conductive stud 10. The arrester 1 is shown mounted
to a portion of a conventional metallic bracket 22 that includes a carriage bolt 23
that extends through the insulative bracket 23, a threaded nut 24, a helical spring
lockwasher 25 and an external tooth lockwasher 26. When the surge arrester 1 is placed
into service to protect an outdoor electric power distribution system, it is mounted
firmly to the bracket 22 by the tightening of the nut 24. The metallic bracket 22
may be electrically grounded by conventional means, not shown; and a ground wire,
not shown, will be connected in the clamp 9. One end of a conductive wire, not shown,
will be connected in the clamp 2 and its other end to the high voltage wires of the
electric power system.
[0019] The body 18 of the arrester 1 includes an arrester element 13 enclosed within a polymeric
weathershed housing 19. Arrester element 13 includes metallic spacers 15, 16 and metal
oxide varistor element 17, which may consist of one or more varistor blocks disposed
between and in electrical series contact with the metallic spacers 15, 16. The flat
series contact surfaces, e.g., 17a and 17b, as well as similar flat series contact
surfaces that may exist between varistor blocks forming varistor element 17, may be
bonded together by soldering or by the use of a conductive cement, such as a mixture
of silver and epoxy, as is known in the art. The arrester element 13 may also include
a relatively rigid insulative tube or wrapping 14, firmly attached to the spacers
15, 16 and retaining the spacers 15, 16 and the varistor element 17 together in series
electrical contact.
[0020] The spacers 15, 16 are centrally threaded to receive and engage the threads of the
threaded studs 3, 10, which pass through central holes of the metallic discs 11, 12.
[0021] During assembly of the arrester 1, a first layer of adhesive, not shown, is placed
between the metallic disc 12 and the adjacent flat end surfaces, namely, 19a of the
housing 19 and 15a of the spacer 15. Similarly, a second layer of adhesive is placed
between the metallic disc 11 and the end surface 19b of the housing 19 and of the
end surface 16a of the spacer 16. A third layer of adhesive is placed between the
disc 11 and the adjacent flat surface of the insulative bracket 21. The task of applying
the adhesive is relatively simple, since all of the surfaces to which the adhesive
is to be applied are end surfaces, fully exposed prior to assembly of the surfaces
together. The adhesive may be PLIOBOND #20, made by the Goodyear Tire Rubber Co.,
or another suitable adhesive.
[0022] The polymeric housing 19 may also be elastomeric, made of EPDM rubber, for example.
It is made longer In length than is the arrester element 13, by a predetermined amount;
just as it is in prior art arresters where silicone grease has been used to maintain
an atmosphere excluding interface at the end surfaces of an elastomeric housing as
well as along the entire internal bore of the housing. However, adhesive need not
be applied to the bore of the housing 19, nor along the peripheral surface of the
arrester element 13, but merely at the end surfaces referred to above. Whether the
adhesive is applied as a wafer cut to the shape of the opposing ends to be bonded,
or is spread or painted on, or is applied as a continuous bead or line, it is advantageous
that the elastomeric housing be as long, and preferably longer, than the arrester
element. Compression of the elastomeric housing then assures that the adhesive will
then bond to the entire end surface of the housing and to the opposing flat surface
to be bonded. PLIOBOND #20 is readily applied as a continuous bead which spreads to
fully cover the housing end when compressed, and it cures at room temperature, though
elevated temperature may be used. For wafers, elevated temperatures are usually required.
[0023] It is to be understood that any of the opposing flat surfaces that are to be bonded
need only be substantially flat; this is, adequately flat so that the compression
of the housing 19 will cause its end surfaces 19a, 19b to adequately conform to an
opposing substantially flat surface to form a moisture excluding seal when bonded.
As such, either or both of the opposing flat surfaces to be bonded may include concentric
annular grooves or bosses and still be considered as being substantially flat.
[0024] Thus, when the adhesive has been appropriately applied in a manner as described
above, and when the threaded stud 3, which includes a central flange portion 3a, and
the threaded stud 10, which includes an end flange 10a, are screwed into the spacers
15, 16, the flange 3a will bear against the disc 12, which, in turn, through the adhesive,
will bear against the housing end surface 19a and finally against the adjacent end
surface 15a of the spacer 15. Similarly the flange 10a will bear against the adjacent
portion of the insulative bracket 21, and the insulative bracket 21 will in turn,
through the adhesive, bear against the disc 11, which in turn, through the adhesive,
will bear against the housing end surface 19b and against the adjacent end surface
16a of the spacer 16. When the threaded studs 3, 10 have been fully tightened, the
housing 19 will be compressed to the same length as the arrester element 13. The force
then exerted by the housing 19 will assure that the adhesive at the end surfaces 19a
and 19b has been spread into a thin continuous layer, and that the adhesive layer
will not be disturbed during the time required for the adhesive to set up and bond
the housing surfaces 19a, 19b to the respective discs 11 and 12. When all three layers
of adhesive have set up to bond their respective surfaces, the arrester body 18 will
be permanently sealed against the ingress of moisture and permanently bonded to the
insulative bracket 21. Thus, when torque is applied to the nuts 4, 8, to connect the
arrester 1 to a high voltage electrical system and to a ground wire, respectively,
the torque thereby transmitted will not cause the arrester body 18 to be rotated with
respect to the insulative bracket 21, as may occur when the body 18 is not bonded
or otherwise locked to the insulative bracket 21.
[0025] In another embodiment, the arrester 1 of FIG. 1 may be assembled without inclusion
of the metallic disc 11. In this instance, the third layer of adhesive would also
be deleted, the second layer of adhesive therefore bonding the housing end surface
19b, and the end surface 16a of the spacer 16, directly to the adjacent surface of
the insulative bracket 21.
[0026] When the arrester 1 is electrically connected in service, the disc 12, electrically
connected to the clamp 2, is energized at high voltage. The disc 11, in contact with
the threaded stud 10 and metallic cup or cap 5, are all at near ground or earth potential,
as is the conductive metallic bracket 22. Therefore, little or no voltage is impressed
across or along the insulative arrester bracket 21, between the disc 11 and the metallic
bracket 22. It is well known and understood that varistor block or blocks 17 within
the arrester body 18 may eventually become damaged, causing the disconnector 6 to
automatically separate the clamp 9, and the attached ground wire, from the arrester
1, thereby causing the metal disc 11, together with the metallic cap 5 to which the
flange 10a is firmly attached, to become energized at high voltage. The disc 11 may
remain energized at high voltage until the damaged arrester 1 is replaced, or until
the insulative bracket 21 itself is unable to withstand the high voltage, flashes
over electrically from the energized disc 11 to the grounded metallic bracket 22,
and causes an outage of the electrical system.
[0027] When the interconnected spacer 16, the disc 11 the stud 10 and the cap 5 are energized
at high voltage, the amount or magnitude of the leakage current flowing along the
creepage distance surfaces, e.g., the horizontal surfaces 27-32a, added together with
the horizontal and vertical surfaces of the baffles 33-38 of the insulative bracket
21, will depend on the amount of the moisture and contaminants deposited on those
surfaces. In general, leakage current increases with increased moisture and contaminants,
e.g., rain water, dust, dirt, salts, etc., and electrical flashover is more likely
to occur with increased leakage current.
[0028] The manner in which the insulative bracket 21 has been improved to reduce its weight
and cost and to reduce the amount of moisture or liquid and contaminants deposited
along its creepage path or leakage distance is best explained with respect to FIGS.
2 and 3.
[0029] In FIGS. 1-7, the same numbers have been used to identify the same portions of the
insulative bracket 21 and of the metallic bracket 22.
[0030] FIG. 2 illustrates a preferred embodiment of the present invention, wherein a mass
of insulative material has been molded to form insulative bracket 21 which includes
end portions 39, 40 and baffles 33- 38. Also included are the horizontal surfaces
28-32 and 28a-32a, each of which is less than one quarter as wide as the end portions
39, 40, since their width is interrupted by the width of the included apertures 41-45.
[0031] The apertures 41-45 reduce the mass of the insulative material required to form the
insulative bracket 21, thereby reducing the weight and cost of bracket 21. Further,
liquids, including rain; and contaminants such as airborne dirt; can readily drain
or fall entirely through the apertures 41-45, thus reducing the amount of liquid,
moisture or contaminants that will remain on the insulative bracket 21. As a consequence,
the creepage path can dry quickly, leakage current flow trirough the moisture and
contaminants is reduced; and the probability that the bracket 21 will flashover and
cause an electrical outage is reduced.
[0032] FIG. 3 depicts the baffle 35 that is also typical of the baffles 33, 34, 36 and 37,
all of which have been necked down at their centers to even further reduce the amount
and cost of the mass of insulative material used to form the insulative bracket 21.
The surfaces 30, 30a are the top surfaces of the stringers 46, 47 that may be construed
as extending from and between the end portions 39, 40. The stringers 46, 47, the baffles
33-38 and the end portions 39, 40 are all rigidly interconnected as one single mass
of molded insulative material, a fiberglass reinforced polyester, for example.
[0033] In FIG. 3, the baffle 35 may also be construed as having been formed of three parts,
l.e., one baffle formed around stringer 46, a second baffle formed around stringer
47, and with the two separate baffles being aligned for interconnection by the necked
down portion 48 of baffle 35, thereby forming the single baffle 35. This construction
increases the rigidity and strength of the insulative bracket 21, particularly with
all baffles 33-37 being formed in this manner as single baffles, each enclosing both
stringers 46, 47.
[0034] As shown in FIG. 1, when the nut 24 has been tightened on the bolt 23 to compress
the helical spring lockwasher 25 as shown, the lockwasher 25 restrains the nut from
vibrating loose while the teeth of the external tooth lockwasher 26 bite into the
adjacent surfaces of the metallic bracket 22 and the insulative bracket 21 to prevent
rotation of the bracket 21 around the bolt 23. The configuration and function of the
convexity 49 are hereinunder explained with reference to FIG. 7.
[0035] FIG. 4 is a detailed enlargement of the portion of the prior art insulating base
or bracket depicted on the aforementioned Ohio Brass Instruction Sheet No. 17-5113,
whereon the recommended tightening torque for nut 24 is shown as 40 ft-lbs. (54 N.m).
[0036] The concavities 51, 52 of FIG. 4 are shown, without written description, on the aforementioned
Sheet No. 17-5113. Each concavity 51, 52 defines a flat surface 51a, 52a at opposing
ends of bolt hole 53. On FIG. 4, lockwasher 25 is shown fully compressed against the
flat surface 51a. The teeth of lockwasher 26 are shown at least partially embedded
or biting into the surface 54 of the partially shown insulative bracket 55, as it
might be with 40 ft-lbs of torque applied to the nut 24.
[0037] FIG. 5 is the same as FIG. 4 except that the nut 24 has been tightened beyond 40
ft-lbs to further embed the teeth of lockwasher 26 into the surface 54, and the insulative
material forming the bracket 55 has been cracked, crushed and displaced into the upper
portion of the bolt hole 53 and into the threads of the bolt 23, as depicted by the
dashed lines at 53a. When the nut 24 is then further tightened, the wedgelike form
of the crushed material 53a can cause radial cracks to then form and extend through
the insulative material from the bolt hole 53. This weakens the bracket and renders
it non-reusable, since any attempt to remove the bracket 55 from the bolt 23 requires
the removal of the crushed material 53a that extends into the threads of the bolt
23. The full embedment of the teeth of the lock-washer 26 tends to exacerbate the
cracking, as evidenced by cracks that have been found extending in line with the
teeth of the lockwasher 26.
[0038] FIG. 6 depicts the portion 40 of insulative bracket 21 shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, except
that the convexity 49 together with the concavity 50 have been deleted. Instead, in
accordance with another embodiment of the invention, a radiused surface 56 joins
the flat surface 27 and the bore surface 53 to form the concavity 57. The concavity
57 causes the washer 25, when compressed against the insulative bracket 21 by the
tightening of threaded nut 24, to contact the insulative bracket 21 only at contact
surfaces that are nearest or adjacent the outer diameter of the washer 25. As a result,
the crushing of the insulative material surrounding the bolt hole 53, as explained
hereinabove with respect to FIG. 5, has been alleviated, and greater torque may be
applied to the nut 24 before crushing or cracking of the insulatlve material surrounding
the bolt hole 53 may occur.
[0039] While the concavity 57 alleviates the cracking of the insulative bracket 21 that
is due to compressing of the washer 25 against the bracket 21, the cracking due to
penetration of the surface 54 by the teeth of the lockwasher 26 is not alleviated.
Such alleviation is achieved by the preferred embodiment of the invention as depicted
in FIG. 1, and in greater detail in FIG. 7. Here the insulative bracket 21 includes
annular convexities or bosses 49, 49a that define annular concavities 50, 50a formed
as a countersink at the predetermined angle A. The convexitles 49, 49a and the defined
or surrounded concavities 50, 50a are formed substantially concentrically to bolt
hole 53. The height of the convexities 49, 49a have been chosen so as to limit the
penetration of the teeth of the lockwasher 26 into the surface 54 to approximately
one-half of the penetration that can occur against the flat surface 54 as shown in
FIG. 5. Any further penetration of the teeth of washer 26 into the surfce 54, FIG.
7, is prevented when the central flat portion of the metallic lockwasher 26 impacts
the convexity 49a as the nut 24 is tightened.
[0040] Because of large variations in the actual configurations of washers, i.e., lockwasher
25, due to material thicknesses, forming methods, and corrosion protective coatings
of washers, a chamfer angle A of 4 to 8 decrees has been found to be most advantageous.
[0041] The provision of convexities 49, 49a so as to form concavities 50, 50a has been found
to raise the resistance to the cracking of insulative surge arrester brackets, the
cracking being due to the compression of a flat washer or a helical spring washer
against one side of an insulative bracket as well as that due to the compression of
an external tooth lockwasher against an opposing side.
[0042] While certain advantageous embodiments have been chosen to illustrate the invention,
it will be understood by those skilled in the art that any embodiment that includes
an annular convexity or concavity or spacing means substantially concentric to a bolt
hole through an arrester insulative bracket is considered to be within the teachings
of the invention if it causes an insulative bracket to contact a washer surface at
surfaces substantially adjacent the outer diameter of that washer surface rather than
at surfaces substantially adjacent the inner diameter of that washer surface, when
that washer surface is being compressed against the insulative bracket by the tightening
of a threaded means. When the tightening has been properly completed, it is to be
understood that the insulative material forming the bracket and the washer surface
itself, may have been mechanically deformed during the tightening, without deleterious
effect, so that contact between the washer surface and the bracket may then also exist
at the surfaces substantially adjacent the inner diameter of the washer surface.
1. A high voltage surge arrester comprising:
an elastomeric arrester housing (19) having a bore and first and second substantially
flat end surfaces (19a,19b) disposed at opposing ends of said bore;
a rigid arrester element (13) disposed within the bore, comprising at least one metal
oxide varistor block (17) and at least one metallic connector (15,16);
an arrester component (11 or 21) having a third substantially flat surface large enough
to at least substantially cover said first end surface (19b) of said housing; and
CHARACTERIZED IN THAT
a layer of adhesive is disposed between said first surface (19b) and said third surface,
said arrester housing (19) being compressed against said adhesive layer; no adhesive
being disposed between the bore of the housing (19) and the arrester element (13).
2. A high voltage surge arrester as defined in claim 1, further comprising a metallic
disc (12) having a fourth substantially flat surface large enough at least substantially
to cover the second end surface (19a) of the housing, wherein a second layer of adhesive
is disposed between the second surface (19a) and the fourth surface, the arrester
housing (19) being compressed against the second adhesive layer.
3. A high voltage surge arrester as defined in claim 1 or claim 2 wherein said arrester
component is a metallic disc (11).
4. A high voltage surge arrester is defined in claim 1 or claim 2 wherein said arrester
component is an insulative bracket (21).
5. A high voltage surge arrester as defined in claim 4, further comprising means for
preventing the relative rotation of said arrester element (13) with respect to said
insulative bracket (21), said preventing means comprising a layer of adhesive disposed
between said arrester element and said insulative bracket.
6. A method of bonding and sealing a high voltage surge arrester comprising the steps
of:
forming a rigid arrester element (13), comprising at least one metal oxide varistor
block (17) and at least one metallic connector (15,16);
forming an elastomeric housing (19) having a bore and first and second substantially
flat end surfaces (19a, 19b) disposed at opposing ends of said bore, said housing
also being formed to a length between said end surfaces that will exceed the length
of said arrester element (13) when said arrester element is disposed within said bore;
forming an arrester component (11 or 21) having a third substantially flat surface
large enough to at least substantially cover said first end surface (19b) of said
housing;v inserting said arrester element (13) into said bore;
placing an adhesive between said first surface (19b) of said housing and said third
surface of said arrester component; and
forcing said first surface (19b) and said third surface against said adhesive while
compressing said housing (19), to form a bond and seal between said first surface
and said third surface.
7. The method of bonding and sealing a high voltage surface arrester as defined in
claim 6 further including the step of placing an adhesive between said arrester element
(13) and said arrester component (21) and forcing said arrester element and said arrester
component against said adhesive.
8. The method defined in claim 7, further comprising the steps of:
forming a metallic disc (12) having a fourth substantially flat surface large enough
at least substantially to cover the second end surface (19a) of the housing;
placing an adhesive between the second surface (19a) of the huusing and the fourth
surface of the metallic disc (12); and forcing the second surface (19a) and the fourth
surface against the adhesive while composing the housing (19) to form a bond and seal
between the second surface and the fourth surface.