[0001] The invention relates to a method of placing a single-capped electric lamp in a lampholder
of a luminaire,
whereby the electric lamp provided with:
a lamp cap having a metal shell with an axis, a first end which is closed by an electric
insulator, and an open second end with an adjoining end zone, the metal shell having
coupling means outside the end zone for fixing the lamp cap in a lampholder;
a light-transmitting lamp vessel with an electric element inside which is connected
to contacts of the lamp cap by means of conductors, which lamp vessel is fastened
in the open second end of the shell,
is gripped by a tool,
is inserted with its lamp cap into the lampholder which has means for
cooperating with the coupling means of the lamp cap, and
is fixed in the lampholder by rotation, the end zone remaining outside the lampholder
thereby.
[0002] The invention also relates to an electric lamp suitable for use with the method and
to a luminaire which is provided with the single-capped electric lamp.
[0003] Such a method is generally known. Wherever a large number of lamps is to be placed
in holders, as in or for the motorcar industry, automated tools such as robots are
used for this purpose. The lampholders may form part of, for example, lighting units
which are to be placed at the rear of a car and which comprise lamps for the stop/rear
light, reversing light, indicator light, fog rear light.
[0004] The tool grips the electric lamp by the lamp vessel or by the end zone of the metal
shell.
[0005] The coupling means of the lamp cap may consist of screwthread, as is the case with
Edison lamp caps. Alternatively, they may consist of projections, as is the case in
the lamp according to US 4 396 860, which has symmetrically arranged projections,
or of asymmetrically arranged projections, for example, positioned at different heights.
It is also possible that more than two projections are present as the coupling means,
for example, at equal height but asymmetrically arranged according to Addition 50
610 to FR 853 358, or asymmetrically and at unequal heights according to JP 2-90483.
Asymmetrical coupling means serve not only for coupling the lamp to the lampholder,
but also as a key for rendering possible the coupling in one position only.
[0006] A disadvantage of the known method is that rejects frequently occur: lamp vessels
break, for example, because they are gripped with excessive force or because the lamp
is screwed home with excessive force; detaching of the lamp vessel from the lamp cap
can also occur, during which electrical connections may also be broken; lamp caps
are damaged, for example, because the surface of the end zone is scraped off or deformed.
Damage of the lamp cap may result in a loss of corrosion resistance. A major disadvantage
is that the lamp may suffer damage which is not immediately observable, but which
nevertheless leads to early failure of the lamp.
[0007] It is an object of the invention to provide a method of the kind mentioned in the
opening paragraph by which damage to the lamp is counteracted, and to provide a lamp
suitable for use with the method and a luminaire which is provided with the single-capped
electric lamp.
[0008] According to the invention, this object is achieved in that the lamp cap has a relief
in the end zone of the shell, with which relief the tool engages.
[0009] The relief may comprise an indentation in the end zone. This achieves that the tool
has a better grip on the lamp, while the lamp need be clamped in with lesser force.
In addition, lamps of one kind may all have the relief in the same rotational position
relative to the coupling means of the metal shell, for example, relative to the entrance
of a screwthread. This renders it simpler to insert the lamp, brought into the correct
rotational position, into the lampholder and fix it therein by rotation. It is favourable
if the end zone has at least a second relief. A very good grip on the lamp is then
possible with little clamping force.
[0010] In a favourable embodiment, the electric lamp suitable for use with the method has
a relief in the form of a projection. A projection can be universely used; both in
lamps; the lamp vessel of which has in the lamp cap circumferentially only a small
distance to the shell, and in lamps, as the lamp according to the cited US 4 396 860,
where only a flat seal of the lamp vessel enters the lamp cap and where there are
accordingly portions with a greater distance between lamp vessel and shell than elsewhere
around said seal. A projection is also favourable because of the smaller proneness
to wear of tools having recesses. With tools having, for example, a thin projection
which is to cooperate with an indentation in the end zone, wear of this projection
may reduced the operating life of the tool.
[0011] Reliefs in the end zone of the shell of the lamp cap, in particular a projection,
more in particular two projections, are of special interest for bayonet lamp caps
such as BA9 and BA15 lamp caps. Bayonet lamp caps in fact generally have at most two
discrete rotational positions in which they can be inserted into a lampholder. For
some types of bayonet lamp caps there is only one rotational position, as is the case
with, for example, BAY lamp caps. The coupling means in these cases consist of projections,
for example pins, at the metal shell which are present at unequal heights at the shell,
which are of unequal lengths, or which enclose unequal angles with one another.
A relief in the end zone now renders it possible to provide the tool with information
about the rotational position which the coupling means occupy relative to the tool.
This renders it possible for the tool to make the lamp approach the lampholder in
the correct position. A risk of damage to the lamp or lampholder is avoided by this.
[0012] A favourable embodiment of the electric lamp is one which has a projection as the
relief which lies in one line with a coupling means in the longitudinal direction
of the shell. The tool can then be readily aligned relative to the lampholder. It
is also favourable if a second projection, for example, rotated through less than
180° relative to the first projection, or, for example, having a dissimilar length
or shape, is present as a relief. In the case of an asymmetrical lamp cap, the tool
can then be given information about this asymmetry by the asymmetry of the relief.
A projection may consist of a pin connected to the shell, but advantageous is a protuberance
provided in the shell itself.
[0013] The method and the lamp suitable therefor are especially important if the lamp has
a rated operational voltage of up to several tens of V. This is because the lamp cap
need not be recessed in a lampholder in that case. Indeed, the IEC standards prescribe
a portion projecting from the lampholder for bayonet lamp caps, for example, of at
least 4.2 mm in IEC 7004-14-7 for BA9 and at least 2.6 mm in IEC 7004-11A-7 for BA15.
[0014] The electric element in the lamp vessel may be a pair of electrodes in an ionizable
gas or an incandescent body, possibly in a gas containing a halogen, or alternatively
two or more of such elements. The lamp cap may have one or several contacts at the
electric insulator, but may in addition have a contact at the shell.
[0015] An embodiment of the method according to the invention, of the lamp suitable for
use in the method, and of the luminaire comprising this lamp are shown in the drawing,
in which:
Fig. 1 shows a step in the method of placing a single-capped electric lamp suitable
for use in the method in a lampholder of a luminaire; and
Fig. 2 shows a modification of the lamp cap of Fig. 1.
[0016] In Fig. 1, the electric lamp 1 is provided with a lamp cap 3 which has a metal shell
4 with an axis 5, a first end 6 which is closed by an electric insulator 7, and an
open second end 8 with an adjoining end zone 9, the metal shell having coupling means
10 outside the end zone for fixing the lamp cap 3 in a lampholder 20. The coupling
means in the Figure consist of two projections which have been pressed out from the
shell so as to form a bayonet cap.
[0017] The lamp also has a light-transmitting lamp vessel 11 with an electric element 12
inside, an incandescent body in the Figure, which is connected to contacts 14 of the
lamp cap 3 by means of conductors 13, which lamp vessel 11 is fastened in the open
second end 8 of the shell 4 of the lamp cap 3.
[0018] The lamp is gripped by tool 30 and inserted with its lamp cap 3 into a lampholder
20 of a luminaire 22, the lampholder comprising means 21 for cooperating with the
coupling means 10 of the lamp cap 3. These means 21 in the Figure consist of substantially
L-shaped slots for forming a bayonet lampholder.
[0019] The lamp is fixed in the lampholder 20 by rotation, the end zone 9 remaining outside
the lampholder 20. In contrast to known lamps, for example, that of the cited JP 2-90483,
where the profile of the lamp cap is inside the holder, here the relief present in
the end zone will not be inside the lampholder.
[0020] The lamp cap 3 has a relief 15 engaging with the tool 30 in the end zone 9 of the
shell 4. The relief in the embodiment drawn consists of two projections, protuberances
in the Figure,
i.e. pressed-out portions of the shell. The tool 30 comprises a head 31 which has movable
arms 32 comprising profiled jaws 33 which fit the relief 15 of the lamp cap 3.
[0021] The Figure shows the phase in the method in which the tool 30, for example a robot,
has gripped the lamp 1 at the relief 15 in the end zone 9 of the shell 4 of the lamp
cap 3. The tool 30 then performs a rotation
a for aligning the lamp cap 3 relative to the lampholder 20, upon which a translation
b is performed for inserting the lamp 1 with its lamp cap 3 into the lampholder, upon
which a rotation
c is performed for turning the lamp 1 home in the lampholder 20. In the case of a lampholder
and a lamp cap of the bayonet type, as shown, the invention offers the possibility
for the tool, after the movements
a,
b and
c have been performed, to perform a translation
d opposed to the translation
b, if so desired, to make sure that the lamp cap has been locked in the bayonet of
the lampholder. Lampholders in fact may be designed with such a fit that the elasticity
of a contact in the base of the lampholder is not capable of immediately forcing the
translation
d on the lamp, the moment the tool has released the lamp. If so desired, the lamp may
be burned before the tool releases the lamp.
[0022] The lampholder forms part of a luminaire 22 which may or may not be provided with
a cover plate, which in its turn may or may not be coloured, refracting, scattering
or transparent.
[0023] Since the tool has profiled jaws which match and cooperate with the relief in the
end zone of the lamp cap shell, the tool has a grip on the lamp cap and the tool can
securely hold the lamp cap with little clamping force. The lamp vessel and the connections
with the lamp cap are not loaded at all during this. Since the relief in the embodiment
drawn is oriented relative to the coupling means,
i.e. in the Figure in the axial direction of the lamp cap in line with these coupling
means, it is also possible for the tool to make the lamp cap approach the lampholder
in the aligned state, after a rotation
a in the case of the lamp drawn.
[0024] In the luminaire resulting in Fig. 1, the end zone 9 with the relief is outside the
lampholder. The end zone 9 extends between the second end 8 and the dash-dot line
drawn parallel thereto.
[0025] In Fig. 2, portions of the lamp cap 43 corresponding to portions in Fig. 1 have reference
numerals which are 40 higher than in Fig. 1. The lamp cap is of the BAY type and has
two contacts 54 at its base. The coupling means 50a, b are at unequal heights, diametrically
opposed to one another and spaced away from one another in the direction of the axis
45. The lamp cap can be placed in a holder designed for it in one discrete manner
only. Information about the location of the projection 50a and the projection 50b
is provided to the mounting tool in that the relief in the end zone 49, the projections
55a and 55b, is also asymmetrical. The projections enclose an angle of less than 180°
with one another. The projection 55a lies in one line with the projection 50a in the
direction of the axis 45. To an observer O, the coupling means 50b lies closer than
does 50a, and the projection 55b of the relief 55a, b lies between the coupling means
50a and 50b. The observer O, who knows the configuration of the coupling means 50a,
b and of the relief 55a, b, can deduce from the position of the relief where the projection
50a is located and where the projection 50b is located.
1. A method of placing a single-capped electric lamp (1) in a lampholder (20) of a luminaire
(22),
whereby the electric lamp provided with:
a lamp cap (3) having a metal shell (4) with an axis (5), a first end (6) which is
closed by an electric insulator (7), and an open second end (8) with an adjoining
end zone (9), the metal shell having coupling means (10) outside the end zone for
fixing the lamp cap (3) in a lampholder (20);
a light-transmitting lamp vessel (11) with an electric element (12) inside which is
connected to contacts (14) of the lamp cap (3) by means of conductors (13), which
lamp vessel (11) is fastened in the open second end (8) of the shell (4),
is gripped by a tool (30),
is inserted with its lamp cap (3) into the lampholder (20) which has means (21)
for cooperating with the coupling means (10) of the lamp cap (3), and
is fixed in the lampholder (20) by rotation, the end zone (9) of the shell (4)
remaining outside the lampholder (20) thereby,
characterized in that the lamp cap (3) has a relief (15) in the end zone (9) of
the shell (4), with which relief the tool (30) engages.
2. A single-capped electric lamp suitable for use with the method as claimed in Claim
1, which lamp is provided with:
a lamp cap (3) having a metal shell (4) with an axis (5), a first end (6) which
is closed by an electric insulator (7), and an open second end (8) with an adjoining
end zone (9), the metal shell having coupling means (10) outside the end zone for
fixing the lamp cap (3) in a lampholder;
a light-transmitting lamp vessel (11) with an electric element (12) inside which
is connected to contacts (14) of the lamp cap (3) by means of conductors (13), which
lamp vessel (11) is fastened in the open second end (8) of the shell (4),
characterized in that the lamp cap (3) has a relief comprising a projection (15)
in the end zone (9) of the shell (4).
3. A single-capped electric lamp as claimed in Claim 2, characterized in that the relief
comprises at least two projections (15).
4. A single-capped electric lamp as claimed in Claim 2, characterized in that the relief
(15) lies in one line with the coupling means (10) seen in the direction of the axis
(5).
5. A single-capped electric lamp as claimed in Claim 3, characterized in that the relief
(15) is asymmetrical.
6. A single-capped electric lamp as claimed in Claim 2, 3, 4 or 5, characterized in that
the lamp cap (3) is a bayonet cap.
7. A luminaire manufactured by the method as claimed in Claim 1 and provided with a single-capped
electric lamp.
8. A luminaire (22) provided with a lampholder (20) in which a single-capped electric
lamp (1) is accommodated,
which electric lamp (1) is provided with:
a lamp cap (3) having a metal shell (4) with an axis (5), a first end (6) which is
closed by an electric insulator (7), and an open second end (8) with an adjoining
end zone (9), the metal shell having coupling means (10) outside the end zone for
fixing the lamp cap (3) in a lampholder (20);
a light-transmitting lamp vessel (11) with an electric element (12) inside which is
connected to contacts (14) of the lamp cap (3) by means of conductors (13), which
lamp vessel (11) is fastened in the open second end (8) of the shell (4) of the lamp
cap (3),
the lampholder (20) comprising means (21) for cooperating with the coupling means
(10) of the lamp cap (3), and
the lamp cap (3) being fixed in the lampholder (20) by rotation, whereby the end
zone (9) of the shell (4) remains outside the lampholder (20),
characterized in that the lamp cap (3) has projections (15) in the end zone (9)
of the shell (4).