[0001] The present invention relates to an antenna for trains.
[0002] Currently, antennas are generally provided with devices that allow to protect them
from so-called static charges that can accumulate on the radiating rods.
[0003] Such devices are generally constituted by an inductor, which is sized according to
procedures known per se and is interposed between the radiating rod and the ground
so as to discharge the static charges towards the ground.
[0004] Therefore, the presence of the inductor allows to eliminate the danger that may arise
from the conduction of the charges towards devices connected to the antenna, i.e.
downstream of the feeder cable, and on which several personnel performing various
tasks work.
[0005] Since static charges are rather weak, the inductor does not have to withstand strong
currents, because as the charges reach the antenna they are immediately dissipated
to the ground before they can accumulate thus become potentially dangerous to personnel.
[0006] For this reason, the inductors currently used to eliminate static charges are generally
constituted by a wire that has a rather small cross-section, and they are sized so
as to generally withstand the flow of a current comprised between 2 and 100 amperes
according to the type and size of antenna being considered.
[0007] However, antennas used on trains may be subjected not only to static charges but
also to dynamic voltages or currents, such as those carried by high-voltage cables
suspended from electric power line pylons or by electric lines that supply power to
the trains.
[0008] Moreover, it should be noted that this risk is increased by the fact that the antennas
used on trains are generally located in the uppermost regions and possibly at regions
that are clear of obstacles.
[0009] From the above description it is evident that currently an antenna for trains is
particularly exposed to the danger of electrical shock, which is extremely dangerous
not so much for the possible destruction of the antenna but rather because of the
consequences that such shocks can cause to the personnel using the services of the
antenna on board the trains.
[0010] If an antenna accidentally makes contact, for example, with a high-voltage line,
the current carried by the line, in contact with the antenna, in fact immediately
fuses the grounding inductor and therefore discharges along the antenna feeder.
[0011] It is evident that this phenomenon entails as a consequence, the carrying of high-voltage
to the vicinity of operators, with great danger for their safety.
[0012] In order to solve the drawback noted above, antennas have been devised in which an
attempt has been made to increase so-called robustness.
[0013] However, in the application described above these solutions are difficult to use,
essentially because of the fact that in order to ensure indestructibility of the inductor,
since high-voltage lines can carry currents with tens of thousands of amperes, it
would be necessary to size such inductor with wire diameters of approximately ten
centimeters.
[0014] It is immediately evident that such an approach is difficult to provide, first of
all because of the highly problematic dimensions of the inductor and secondly because
of the fact that by working frequently with antennas operating at a frequency around
900 MHz (for example in the GSM band), the dimensions of the inductor would no longer
allow resonance of the antenna, since they would be physically larger than the wavelengths
related to these frequencies.
[0015] Accordingly, antennas are commercially available which are also used as train antennas
and are provided with safety devices constituted by "compromise" inductors, which
however cannot ensure safety to the operator.
[0016] The aim of the present invention is to eliminate or at least drastically reduce the
drawback noted above in known types of train antennas.
[0017] Within this aim, an object of the present invention is to provide a train antenna
that ensures operator safety even if it is subjected to intense electrical shocks.
[0018] Another object of the present invention is to provide a train antenna that has a
very simple structure and a competitive production cost.
[0019] This aim and these and other objects that will become better apparent hereinafter
are achieved by a train antenna according to the invention, comprising a radiating
element that is connected to a feeder cable and to a grounding inductor, characterized
in that it comprises an unbreakable protective enclosure for said radiating element,
a fuse element provided with a first end for connection to a first end portion of
said radiating element and a second end for connection to said inductor and to said
feeder cable, said fuse element being adapted to disconnect said first connection
end from said second connection end upon flow of a current whose intensity exceeds
a limit current, said first end portion of said radiating element being connected
to at least one spark-gap unit connected to the ground.
[0020] Advantageously, an antenna according to the invention is characterized in that the
spark-gap unit comprises a spark gap provided with two electrodes facing each other.
[0021] Conveniently, an antenna according to the present invention is characterized in that
it comprises means for adjusting the distance between said pair of facing electrodes
according to the critical trigger voltage.
[0022] Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will become better apparent
from the description of preferred but not exclusive embodiments of an antenna according
to the invention, illustrated by way of non-limiting example in the accompanying drawings,
wherein:
Figure 1 is an electrical diagram of a train antenna according to the present invention;
Figure 2 is a partially sectional side elevation view of an example of embodiment
of a train antenna according to the invention;and
Figure 3 is a rear elevation view of the train antenna according to the invention
shown in Figure 2.
[0023] In the examples of embodiment that follow, individual characteristics, given in relation
to specific examples, may actually be interchanged with other different characteristics
that exist in other examples of embodiment.
[0024] With reference to the figures, an antenna according to the invention, generally designated
by the reference numeral 1, comprises a radiating element 2, constituted for example
by a rod, which is connected to a feeder cable 3 that is meant to connect the antenna
1 to devices that use said antenna 1.
[0025] The radiating element 2 is connected to a grounding inductor 4.
[0026] Furthermore, the antenna 1 is provided with an unbreakable protective enclosure 10
for the radiating element 2.
[0027] Moreover, according to the present invention, an antenna 1 has a fuse element 6 that
is interposed between the radiating element 2 and the feeder cable 3.
[0028] In practice, according to a preferred embodiment, the fuse element 6 has a first
connecting end 6a that is connected to a first end portion 2a of the radiating element
2 and a second connecting end 6b that is connected to the feeder cable 3.
[0029] Conveniently, as clearly shown in the electrical diagram illustrated in Figure 1,
connection to the inductor 4 is provided at a connecting region that is located substantially
proximate to the second connecting end.
[0030] According to a further important aspect of the invention, the first end portion 2a
of the radiating element 2 is connected to at least one grounding spark-gap unit 7.
[0031] According to a preferred embodiment, the spark-gap unit 7 can be constituted by a
spark gap that is provided with two electrodes 8a and 8b facing each other.
[0032] Conveniently, the antenna 1 is provided with means 9 for adjusting the distance between
the pair of facing electrodes 8a and 8b.
[0033] For example, as shown in Figures 2 and 3, one of the two electrodes, for example
electrode 8a, can be supported by a threaded element that is coupled to a bracket
10: screwing or unscrewing the threaded element moves electrode 8a closer to electrode
8b.
[0034] Advantageously, according to a preferred embodiment the fuse element 6 can be constituted
by a microfuse supported by a printed circuit.
[0035] In particular, it has been found that the antennas 1 described above may operate
in single-band mode at a frequency comprised between 440 and 470 MHz or at a frequency
comprised between 870 and 960 MHz. However, an antenna 1 may also be of the multiband
type and more precisely may operate in dual-band or tri-band mode.
[0036] Operation of an antenna according to the present invention is as follows.
[0037] Practically simultaneously with the flow of current, the fuse element 6 fuses and
vaporizes.
[0038] If the antenna 1, or rather its radiating element 2 (or the unbreakable protective
enclosure 10) collides with a high-voltage line, the current flows through the antenna
1 following the path constituted by the radiating element 2, the fuse element 6, and
the inductor 4.
[0039] Due to vaporization of the fuse element 6, an electric arc is established which in
any case limits the current that will flow through the inductor 4.
[0040] The current that flows through the inductor is further reduced by the action of the
spark gap.
[0041] The distance between the electrodes 8a and 8b is in fact advantageously shorter than
the length of the electric arc generated at the vaporized fuse element 6, and this
entails the triggering of an additional electric arc between the tips of the electrodes
8a and 8b.
[0042] This subsequent triggering divides the current into two arcs, with a consequent further
limitation of the current that flows through the inductor 4, preventing its fusing.
[0043] All the characteristics of the invention that are described above as being advantageous,
convenient or the like, may also be omitted or replaced by equivalents.
[0044] Thus, for example, the fuse element 6 can be replaced by a low-voltage capacitor,
which when subjected to a high voltage is destroyed, simulating the fusing of the
fuse element 6.
[0045] The invention thus conceived is susceptible of numerous modifications and variations,
all of which are within the scope of the appended claims.
[0046] In practice it has been found that in all the embodiments the invention has achieved
the intended aim and objects.
[0047] In particular, it has been found experimentally that an antenna according to the
invention can withstand the flow of intense currents for times on the order of one
tenth of a second without voltages that are dangerous for users appearing on the feeder
cable.
[0048] This result appears to be highly satisfactory also in relation to the fact that the
safety devices (such as disconnectors) that operate on high-voltage lines have reaction
times on the order of hundredths of a second.
[0049] In practice, the materials used, as well as the dimensions and contingent shapes,
may be any according to requirements.
[0050] All the details may further be replaced with other technically equivalent elements.
[0051] Where technical features mentioned in any claim are followed by reference signs,
those reference signs have been included for the sole purpose of increasing the intelligibility
of the claims and accordingly such reference signs do not have any limiting effect
on the interpretation of each element identified by way of example by such reference
signs.
1. A train antenna comprising a radiating element that is connected to a feeder cable
and to a grounding inductor, characterized in that it comprises an unbreakable protective enclosure for said radiating element, a fuse
element provided with a first end for connection to a first end portion of said radiating
element and a second end for connection to said inductor and to said feeder cable,
said fuse element being adapted to disconnect said first connection end from said
second connection end upon flow of a current whose intensity exceeds a limit current,
said first end portion of said radiating element being connected to at least one spark-gap
unit connected to the ground.
2. The antenna according to one or more of the preceding claims, characterized in that said at least one spark-gap unit comprises a spark gap provided with two facing electrodes.
3. The antenna according to one or more of the preceding claims, characterized in that it comprises means for adjusting the distance between said pair of facing electrodes
according to the critical trigger voltage.
4. The antenna according to one or more of the preceding claims, characterized in that said radiating element comprises a radiating rod.
5. The antenna according to one or more of the preceding claims, characterized in that said fuse element comprises a microfuse that is supported by a printed circuit.
6. An antenna, characterized in that the distance between said facing electrodes is shorter than the length of said fuse
element.