[0001] The invention relates to an electric reflector lamp comprising:
a hollow moulded reflector body having an optical axis and having a neck-shaped
portion which has a free-end portion;
a lamp cap provided with contacts and connected to the neck-shaped portion;
a light source arranged in the reflector body and electrically connected to the
contacts of the lamp cap by means of current conductors;
an insulator body around the free-end portion of the neck-shaped portion,
a stop being present for limiting the depth to which the neck-shaped portion enters
the insulator body.
[0002] Such a reflector lamp is known from EP-0 422 936 A2.
[0003] The known lamp has a neck-shaped insulator body with a wide portion which surrounds
the neck-shaped portion over the major part of the latter's length, and a narrow portion
which is accommodated in the lamp cap.
[0004] In the known lamp, the insulator body has the object of preventing light from radiating
from the neck-shaped portion to the exterior as a result of an imperfect coating of
that portion with a mirroring layer.
[0005] A disadvantage of the known lamp is that the insulator body must be fastened to the
reflector body with a first adhesive compound. It is apparently necessary for this
to provide the insulator body with a projection and the reflector body with a groove
cooperating therewith in order to give the fastening the required torsional strength.
A second adhesive compound is necessary for fastening the lamp cap to the insulator
body.
[0006] The said projection and groove may at the same time form the stop for limiting the
depth to which the neck-shaped portion enters the insulator body. The reflector body,
which is externally conical, and the insulator body, which is internally conical,
however, by their very shape and dimensions already constitute a depth stop,
i.e. a stop in the direction of the optical axis.
[0007] The known reflector lamp complies with the ANSI standard for the dimensions of the
lamp contours. This standard envisages
inter alia to prevent that a lamp can be screwed tightly into a lampholder without the lamp
cap thereby making electrical contact with the bottom of the lampholder. The known
lamp for this purpose has a width in the immediate vicinity of the lamp cap which
corresponds to the greatest width of the lamp cap.
[0008] Another disadvantage of the known lamp is that the lamp does not comply with the
IEC standard as regards its contours. This standard is in contradiction to the ANSI
standard and indeed requires the width of the lamp in the immediate vicinity of the
lamp cap to be greater than the width of the lamp cap. The object of this is to avoid
that the lamp cap can be touched when the lamp is inserted in a lampholder.
[0009] It is an object of the invention to provide an electric reflector lamp of the kind
described in the opening paragraph which is of a simple construction that can be readily
manufactured. In particular, it is an object to provide a lamp which can comply with
the said IEC standard and which is capable of complying with the said ANSI standard
without different or additional components.
[0010] According to the invention, this object is achieved in that the insulator body is
a ring which is wider than the lamp cap and which in its entirety surrounds the neck-shaped
portion, while the lamp cap surrounds the free-end portion and is directly fastened
thereto.
[0011] The ring in the lamp according to the invention essentially has no constructional
function, in contrast to the insulator body of the known lamp. The ring accordingly
need not be fastened, for example, with an adhesive. It is sufficient for the ring
to be present. The ring is then capable of complying with the IEC standard. Without
the use of different or additional components, a lamp which can comply with the ANSI
standard is obtained from the same components in that the ring is left out during
lamp assembly.
[0012] It is noted that one reflector body may be used for two types of lamps. The reflector
body is an expensive lamp component because of the cost of the mould in which the
body is formed, for example by pressing, for example, from glass.
[0013] It is further noted that the measure in the lamp according to the invention yields
a lamp of high quality and at the same time of a low cost price. If a reflector body
itself were to have a great width at its free-end portion, this body would have to
have a greater wall thickness in the neck-shaped portion. The lamp would then be comparatively
heavy, but also sensitive to heat shocks. Alternatively, the reflector body could
have a neck-shaped portion which is comparatively wide not only externally, but also
internally, so that the wall thickness is comparatively small. Lamp quality would
be less good also in that case because an internally wide neck-shaped portion causes
a greater hole in the reflector surface area in the location where the neck-shaped
portion merges into it, so that the reflector body collects less light into a beam.
Alternatively, a projecting collar could be formed at the neck-shaped portion, integral
therewith. This, however, would increase the cost price of the lamp because a multiple,
and thus much more expensive mould would then be necessary for forming the reflector
body.
[0014] The reflector body may be moulded from glass or formed from a synthetic resin by,
for example, pressing, casting, or injection-moulding. The reflector body may be closed
off in the finished lamp with a lid which is fastened, for example, with cement. Pollution
of the reflector can be counteracted by this. The lid, however, may in addition have
an optical function, for example, for forming a beam or smoothing the light.
[0015] The lamp cap may be fastened to the reflector body in a conventional manner with,
for example, glue or cement. In an attractive embodiment, however, the free-end portion
has one or several pits into which the lamp cap is dimpled. Such pits may be readily
obtained without provisions in the mould in that the reflector body is dented while
still hot upon leaving the mould.
[0016] The insulator body may be made of, for example, ceramic material. Favourable, however,
is a body of synthetic resin, for example, of thermoplastic resin such as, for example,
polyphenylene sulphide.
[0017] In a favourable embodiment, the insulator body is U-shaped in axial section. The
bottom of the U may have a small thickness, for example, of the order of 1 mm, while
the legs of the U have a greater length chosen so as to be convenient.
[0018] In an embodiment, the bottom of the U abuts against a stop at the free-end portion,
while the lamp cap abuts against the ring. The lamp cap is then remote by no more
than the small distance equalling the thickness of the bottom of the U from the position
in which the lamp cap would be if it should abut against the stop at the free-end
portion if the ring were absent. The presence of the ring then has a negligible influence
on the total axial dimension of the lamp.
[0019] In a modification, the ring has a radial recess in its bottom. Alternatively, the
ring may have several or a plurality of such recesses. Such recesses may render it
possible for pits in the free-end portion to be freely accessible to tools in order
to dimple the lamp cap into them. In the case in which the ring may have one out of
a number of rotational positions about the neck-shaped portion, it is favourable for
the ring to have the same number of recesses, so that the ring can be provided without
being aligned.
[0020] The light source may be, for example, an incandescent body or a pair of electrodes
in an ionizable gas. A light source in an inner envelope which is sealed in a gas-tight
manner is favourable.
[0021] The lamp is of an easy-to-assemble construction when the inner envelope of the light
source has a seal which is accommodated in an opening in a, for example, metal plate
which rests against a narrowed portion in the neck-shaped portion. The inner envelope
may be fixed, for example, with cement.
[0022] The reflector body may have a bottom in the neck-shaped portion with openings therein
through which respective current conductors extend.
[0023] In a favourable embodiment, the light source is mounted in the insulator body in
that the current conductors are fixed tautly tensioned to the bottom. This may be
very readily realised in an embodiment in which respective tubes are provided around
the current conductors, resting against the bottom at the side thereof facing the
lamp cap and fastened to the current conductors, for example, by flattening and/or
welding. It is favourable when the tube becomes wider towards the bottom, for example,
conically.
[0024] An embodiment of the electric reflector lamp is shown in the drawing, in which
Fig. 1 is an axial section of a lamp;
Fig. 2 shows the lamp of Fig. 1 rotated through 90°;
Figs. 3a, b, c show the insulator body of the preceding Figures in lateral elevation,
axial section and in elevation seen along IIIc, respectively.
[0025] In Figs. 1 and 2, the electric reflector lamp has a hollow moulded reflector body
1, for example, moulded from glass, with an optical axis 11 and a neck-shaped portion
12 comprising a free-end portion 13. The reflector body has a mirror coating, for
example internally, for example a vapour-deposited aluminium layer 19. The reflecting
surface is smoothly curved. Alternatively, it may be faceted or, for example, subdivided
into axial lanes. The reflector body 1 shown is closed off by a lid 10, for example
made of moulded glass, which is fixed, for example, with cement. A lamp cap 2 which
is provided with contacts 21,22 is connected to the neck-shaped portion. A light source
3 is arranged in the reflector body and electrically connected to the contacts of
the lamp cap 2 by current conductors 4. The light source in the Figures is an incandescent
body 31 in an inner envelope 32.
An insulator body 5 is arranged around the free-end portion 13 of the neck-shaped
portion 12. A stop 14 is present, formed in the Figures by axially extending ridges,
for limiting the depth to which the neck-shaped portion 12 enters the insulator body
5.
[0026] The insulator body 5 is a ring, for example made of polyphenylene sulphide, which
is wider than the lamp cap 2 and in its entirety surrounds the neck-shaped portion
12. The lamp cap 2 surrounds the free-end portion 13 and is directly fastened thereto.
[0027] The insulator body 5 (Fig. 3b) is U-shaped in axial section, with a bottom 51 and
legs 52.
[0028] The free-end portion 13 has a pit 15 into which the lamp cap 2 is dimpled so as to
fix it directly to the freed portion 13.
[0029] The insulator body 5, see Figs. 3a-c, has a recess 53 in its bottom 51 near a pit
15. The insulator body also has recesses 54 for accommodating the same number of ridges
14. The axial dimension of the insulator body as a result may be chosen at will. The
number of recesses 53 is equal to the number of recesses 54, so that the insulator
body can be provided without being aligned.
[0030] Thanks to the presence of the insulator body 5, the lamp cap 2 of the lamp cannot
be touched with a test finger after insertion into a lampholder. Owing to the small
thickness of the bottom 51, the lamp cap 2 need only be farther away from the stop
14 by that thickness than in a comparable lamp not according to the invention, which
does not comprise the insulator body in order to comply with an ANSI standard.
[0031] The light source 3 (Figs. 1,2) has an inner envelope 32 with a seal 33 which is accommodated
in a plate 34, for example, made of metal. The plate rests on a narrowed portion 16
in the neck-shaped portion 12 and has tags 35 which securely hold on to the seal 33.
[0032] The current conductors 4 run through respective openings 17 in a bottom 18 of the
neck-shaped portion 12 and are fixed tautly tensioned to the bottom 18. A tube 41
is fixed around each of the current conductors 4, which tube rests against the bottom
18 at a side thereof facing the lamp cap 2. The tube 41 widens conically towards the
bottom 18. Melting fuses 42 are included in the current conductors 4.
1. An electric reflector lamp comprising:
a hollow moulded reflector body (1) having an optical axis (11) and having a neck-shaped
portion (12) which has a free-end portion (13);
a lamp cap (2) provided with contacts (21,22) and connected to the neck-shaped
portion;
a light source (3) arranged in the reflector body and electrically connected to
the contacts of the lamp cap by means of current conductors (4);
an insulator body (5) around the free-end portion of the neck-shaped portion,
a stop (14) being present for limiting the depth to which the neck-shaped portion
enters the insulator body,
characterized in that the insulator body is a ring which is wider than the lamp
cap (2) and which in its entirety surrounds the neck-shaped portion (12), while the
lamp cap (2) surrounds the free-end portion (13) and is directly fastened thereto.
2. An electric reflector lamp as claimed in Claim 1, characterized in that the insulator
body (5) is U-shaped in axial section.
3. An electric reflector lamp as claimed in Claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the free-end
portion (13) has a pit (15) into which the lamp cap (2) is dimpled.
4. An electric reflector lamp as claimed in Claim 3, characterized in that the insulator
body (5) has a recess (53) in a bottom (51) of this body near a pit (15).
5. An electric reflector lamp as claimed in Claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the light
source (3) has an inner envelope (32) with a seal (33) which is accommodated in a
plate (34), which plate rests on a narrowed portion (16) in the neck-shaped portion
(12).
6. An electric reflector lamp as claimed in Claim 5, characterized in that the current
conductors (4) run through respective openings (17) in a bottom (18) of the neck-shaped
portion (12) and are fixed tautly tensioned to the bottom (18).
7. An electric reflector lamp as claimed in Claim 6, characterized in that a tube (41)
is fixed around each of the current conductors (4), which tube rests against the bottom
(18) at a side thereof facing the lamp cap (2).