[0001] The invention relates to a capped electric lamp comprising:
a glass lamp vessel with, in mutually opposing arrangement, a first and a second
neck-shaped portion with seals through which respective current supply conductors
extend to an electric element arranged in the lamp vessel;
a metal sleeve having a longitudinal slot around the first neck-shaped portion
of the lamp vessel, holding the lamp vessel with clamping fit, which sleeve has a
welding zone and a first and a second clamping zone each with a loop in the shape
of an open hairpin, which clamping zones have respective, mutually opposing welding
lugs which are interconnected by means of a welded joint so as to close the sleeve;
a metal fixation member provided with tongues which are welded to the sleeve in
the latter's welding zone;
a lamp cap of insulating material connected to the lamp vessel, in which lamp cap
the fixation member is fixed and which has contact members to which the current supply
conductors are connected.
[0002] Such a lamp, in which the electric element is a pair of electrodes, is known from
EP 0 478 058 A1.
[0003] The lamp is designed to be used as a light source in optical systems, for example
as a vehicle headlamp.
[0004] The sleeve and the fixation member are necessary for fixing the lamp vessel to the
lamp cap in a position in which the electric element, or in the case of a pair of
electrodes the discharge arc between them, is aligned relative to reference locations
on the lamp cap. As a result, the electric element is given a predetermined position
when the lamp is placed in an optical system. The lamp vessel may be shifted, tilted,
and rotated during alignment, as necessary.
[0005] It is of major importance for the sleeve to hold on to the lamp vessel securely and
nevertheless to cause no damage to the glass. It should be prevented that the sleeve
loses its grip in the case of a temperature rise, during lamp operation, owing to
a comparatively great thermal expansion, while on the other hand it should be prevented
that the sleeve clamps too strongly at normal temperatures, when the lamp is extinguished,
and generates undesirable strain in the glass.
[0006] It was found that the known sleeve involves the risk of causing damage to the glass
it clasps when it is closed through making of welded joints during mechanized manufacture.
Premature lamp failure can occur as a result of this. It was also found to be difficult
to provide the known sleeve in mechanized manufacture.
[0007] It is an object of the invention to provide an electric lamp of the kind mentioned
in the opening paragraph in which the said risk of premature failure is counteracted
and the sleeve is of a design which can be readily assembled with the lamp vessel.
[0008] According to the invention, this object is achieved in that the welding zone has
mutually opposing closing tags alongside the slot.
[0009] With the sleeve of the known lamp, the electrodes used for making the welded joints
between the mutually opposing welding lugs, must exert on the welding lugs at force
which is necessary for bringing the latter against one another before the welded joint
can be made. The welding electrodes must exert a force during this which is different
from the ideal mechanical force during welding. In addition, the electrodes may perform
uncontrolled lateral movements during this, whereby the sleeve is also moved and damage
to the glass may ensue.
[0010] In the sleeve of the lamp according to the invention, the closing tags form a provision
which is separate from the welding lugs and on which tools can bear so as to pull
them towards one another and thus press the welding lugs against one another. The
closing tags, however, may also be used for opening the sleeve further while it is
being provided. For this purpose, the closing tags are preferably so positioned as
to be spaced apart from one another in the finished lamp, and accordingly also during
and after fixing of the sleeve. It is ensured thereby to a greater extent that the
welding lugs can actually be brought against one another. It is alternatively possible,
however, for the closing tags to have the same interspacing as the welding lugs. The
loop in the shape of an open hairpin then provides the tolerance necessary in view
of dimensional variations of the clamped-in glass. The tools keep the sleeve stationary,
so that welding electrodes cannot cause a movement of the sleeve.
[0011] It is in addition favourable that the closing tags render it possible to close the
sleeve in a contactless manner, for example by means of laser welding, because the
welding lugs are already pressed against one another by the force applied to the closing
tags.
[0012] In a favourable embodiment of the lamp, the welding zone lies clear of the clamped-in
glass. This has the advantage that strong local heating of the glass is avoided during
making of the welded joints with the tongues of the fixation member. Such heating
may give rise to undesirable strain in the glass, depending on the degree of heat
generation.
[0013] A very wide tolerance as to the circumference of the clamped-in glass is offered
by an embodiment of the sleeve in which each clamping zone comprises a second loop
in the shape of an open hairpin. It is very favourable if the loops are positioned
symmetrically relative to the longitudinal slot, for example, in a geometry in which
the loops each enclose an angle of 90 ± 10° with the welding lugs. It was found that
additional loops do not lead to a substantial further widening of the tolerances.
[0014] The two loops in the geometry described have the advantage that the sleeve can be
provided with a comparatively great pre-tension,
i.e. that the sleeve already surrounds the glass with clamping fit when it has been provided,
but has not yet been closed.
[0015] An attractive aspect of the sleeve is that it can be readily provided, also when
pre-tension is present, in that the sleeve can be opened by forcing apart of the closing
tags. In an embodiment, however, the sleeve has guiding tags which are directed towards
the electric element and whose interspacing increases in a direction away from the
sleeve, which guiding tags guide the glass to be clamped into the sleeve, acting as
a funnel, when the sleeve is being provided.
[0016] The electric element may be a pair of electrodes in an ionizable gas, but alternatively
may be an incandescent body, for example, in an inert gas comprising halogen.
[0017] The lamp vessel usually comprises glass with an SiO₂ content of at least 95% by weight,
such as quartz glass, or alternatively hard glass.
[0018] An outer envelope may surround the lamp vessel. This envelope may be coupled to the
first neck-shaped portion, for example, by means of a narrowed portion in the former.
In that case the sleeve may also bear directly on the first neck-shaped portion, but
it is alternatively possible for the sleeve to bear on the outer envelope while surrounding
the first neck-shaped portion. In that caste the sleeve holds the lamp vessel with
clamping fit in that the outer envelope is coupled to the lamp vessel.
[0019] The sleeve may be readily made from plate material, for example, stainless steel,
for example, spring steel.
[0020] The contact members at the lamp cap may be formed as, for example, pins, strips,
bushes, etc., or a combination thereof, so as to cooperate with a connector which
is connected to a supply source. It is alternatively possible, however, that an insulated
cable is fastened to each of the contact members with electric conduction, issuing
to the exterior from a cover fastened to the lamp cap. Detachable electrical connections
may thus be displaced towards the supply source.
[0021] The lamp cap may consist of, for example, a synthetic resin, for example, a thermoplastic
synthetic resin such as polyether imide, polyether sulphon, polyphenylene sulphide,
polyether etherketone, polypropylene oxide, polyamide imide, polyimide, polybutylene
terephthalate, which may be charged with powdery or fibrous substances such as, for
example, glass, chalk. The lamp cap may be integrated with or form part of a reflector
for the light generated by the lamp.
[0022] Obviously, it is immaterial to the essence of the invention that variants are possible
as to the electric element and the kind of lamp vessel and lamp cap of the lamp according
to the invention, and as to the presence or absence of an outer envelope.
[0023] Embodiments of the capped electric lamp according to the invention are shown in the
drawings, in which
Fig. 1 shows a first embodiment in side elevation;
Fig. 2 shows a second embodiment in side elevation;
Fig. 3 shows a third embodiment without lamp cap in side elevation;
Fig. 4 shows the fixation member of the lamps of Figs. 1 and 2 in side elevation;
and
Figs. 5a, b, c show the sleeve of the lamp of the preceeding Figs, Fig. 5a taken on
the line Va in Fig. 3.
[0024] In Figs. 1 and 2, the capped electric lamp has a glass lamp vessel 1 with, in mutually
opposing arrangement, a first 2 and a second 3 neck-shaped portion with seals through
which respective current supply conductors 4, 5 extend to an electric element 6 arranged
in the lamp vessel. The said element in the Figures is a pair of electrodes in an
ionizable gas.
[0025] A metal sleeve 10 (see Figs. 4 and 5) with a longitudinal slot 11 is present around
the first neck-shaped portion 2 of the lamp vessel 1, holding the lamp vessel with
clamping fit. The sleeve (see Fig. 5) has a welding zone 12 and a first 13 and a second
14 clamping zone, each with an open hairpin loop 15. The clamping zones 13, 14 each
have a welding lug 16 alongside the slot 11, which lugs oppose one another and are
interconnected by means of a welded joint so as to close the sleeve 10.
[0026] A metal fixation member 20 (Fig. 4) is provided with tongues 21 which are welded
to the clamping member 10 in the welding zone 12 thereof.
[0027] The lamp has a lamp cap 30 (30' in Fig. 2) of insulating material which is connected
to the lamp vessel 1 and in which the fixation member 20 is fixed, in the figure by
means of scraping tags 22 present on said member. Contact members 35, 36 (35', 36')
are present, connected to the current supply conductor 4 and, through a connection
conductor 7, to the current supply conductor 5. The contact member 36 is a cylindrical
ring at the outside of a collar 39 which surrounds the central, pin-shaped contact
member 35. The cap can make contact with a bayonet connector which mechanically cooperates
with a projection 38.
[0028] The lamp cap 30 (30') has a screen cap 31 (31'). The lamp cap 30' of Fig. 2 has a
cover 37 from which cables issue to the exterior, carrying the contacts. In Fig. 1,
the lamp vessel 1 has an outer envelope 40 which is kept centred around the conductor
3 by means of a narrowed portion 41. In Fig. 2, the connection conductor 7 is surrounded
by an insulator 8.
[0029] The welding zone 12 of the sleeve 10 has mutually opposing closing tags 17 (see Fig.
5) alongside the slot 11.
[0030] In Fig. 3, the lamp vessel 1 has an outer envelope 50 which at the area of narrowed
portions 51, 52 therein is securely coupled to the lamp vessel. The diagrammatically
indicated sleeve 10 around the first neck-shaped portion 2 is securely coupled to
the outer envelope, and thus to the lamp vessel. The seal in the said neck-shaped
portion has reference numeral 9.
[0031] In Fig. 4, the fixation member 20 is fixed with its tongues 21 in the welding zone
12 of the diagrammatically indicated sleeve 10 by means of welding. The sleeve is
present with direct clamping action on the neck-shaped portion 2 comprising the seal
9 of a lamp vessel as in Figs. 1 and 2.
[0032] In the embodiment of the sleeve 10 shown in Fig. 5, the closing tags 17 are at a
distance from one another, also when mutually opposing welding lugs 16 have been brought
into contact with one another in that the closing tags were pulled towards one another
by tools. This is evident from the greater interspacing between the closing tags 17
as compared with the welding lugs 16 (see Figs. 5a and b).
[0033] The welding zone 12 for making welded joints with the fixation member 20 (Fig. 4)
in the mounted sleeve 10 clears the clamped-in glass 2 (Fig. 4), which is evident
from the fact that the internal diameter of the sleeve is greater in the welding zone
than in the first 13 and second 14 clamping zone adjoining it on either side.
[0034] Each clamping zone 13, 14 has a second open hairpin loop 15 (Fig. 5a). The loops
15 are symmetrically arranged relative to the slot 11 (Figs. 5a, b). They enclose
an angle of 90 ± 10° with the welding lugs 16.
[0035] The sleeve 10 shown has guiding tags 18 which are directed towards the electric element
6 and whose interspacing increases in a direction away from the sleeve, so that they
give the sleeve a funnel shape, whereby the sleeve can be readily provided around
the glass 2 also if it has a smaller internal diameter than the glass in the non-assembled
state.
1. A capped electric lamp comprising:
a glass lamp vessel (1) with, in mutually opposing arrangement, a first (2) and
a second neck-shaped portion (3) with seals through which respective current supply
conductors (4, 5) extend to an electric element (6) arranged in the lamp vessel;
a metal sleeve (10) having a longitudinal slot (11) around the first neck-shaped
portion (2) of the lamp vessel (1), holding the lamp vessel with clamping fit, which
sleeve has a welding zone (12) and a first (13) and a second clamping zone (14) each
with a loop in the shape of an open hairpin (15), which clamping zones (13, 14) have
respective, mutually opposing welding lugs (16) which are interconnected by means
of a welded joint so as to close the sleeve (10);
a metal fixation member (20) provided with tongues (21) which are welded to the
sleeve (10) in the latter's welding zone (12);
a lamp cap (30) of insulating material connected to the lamp vessel (1), in which
lamp cap the fixation member (20) is fixed and which has contact members (35, 36)
to which the current supply conductors (4, 5) are connected,
characterized in that the welding zone (12) has mutually opposing closing tags
(17) alongside the slot (11).
2. A capped electric lamp as claimed in Claim 1, characterized in that the closing tags
(17) lie at a distance from one another.
3. A capped electric lamp as claimed in Claim 1, characterized in that the welding zone
(12) clears the clamped-in glass (2).
4. A capped electric lamp as claimed in Claim 1 or 3, characterized in that each clamping
zone (13, 14) has a second loop (15) in the shape of an open hairpin.
5. A capped electric lamp as claimed in Claim 4, characterized in that the loops (15)
are arranged symmetrically relative to the slot (11).
6. A capped electric lamp as claimed in Claim 5, characterized in that the loops enclose
an angle of 90 ± 10° with the welding lugs (16).
7. A capped electric lamp as claimed in Claim 1, 3 or 4, characterized in that the sleeve
(10) has guiding tags (18) which are directed towards the electric element (6) and
whose interspacing increases in a direction away from the sleeve.