[go: up one dir, main page]

US1751263A - Electrical switching system - Google Patents

Electrical switching system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1751263A
US1751263A US187971A US18797127A US1751263A US 1751263 A US1751263 A US 1751263A US 187971 A US187971 A US 187971A US 18797127 A US18797127 A US 18797127A US 1751263 A US1751263 A US 1751263A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
relay
relays
contact point
circuit
arrangement
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US187971A
Inventor
Cesareo Orfeo
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
AT&T Corp
Original Assignee
Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc filed Critical Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority to US187971A priority Critical patent/US1751263A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1751263A publication Critical patent/US1751263A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M19/00Current supply arrangements for telephone systems
    • H04M19/02Current supply arrangements for telephone systems providing ringing current or supervisory tones, e.g. dialling tone or busy tone

Definitions

  • This invention relates to electrical switching systems, and particularly to interrupting means.
  • the embodiment of the invention which has been herein chosen for the purpose of illustration is a circuit arrangement'in which a pair of ordinary non-marginal relays are employed with an interrupter running at one rate to cause a signal lam to operate at just one-half that rate.
  • the rawin consists of a diagrammatic representation 0 this circuit.
  • the interrupter 1 ma be assumed to-transmit a series of perio ically recurrin impulses.
  • a circuit is closed from round throug thenormal contact of relay TV, winding of relay W, resistance 3 tobattery Relay W operates and looks through its alternate contacts.
  • relay Z is short circuited first from the left hand terminal of relay Z, the normal con tacts of relay Z, the normal contacts of relay W to the right hand terminal of relay Z, and after relay W has operated from the left hand terminal of relay Z, the normal contacts of relay Z, interrupter 1 to ground, and from ground, the alternate contacts of relay W to the right hand terminal of relay Z.
  • relay W is short circuited first 1927. Serial No. 187,971.
  • relay W from the left hand terminal of relay W, through the alternate contacts of the left mature of relay Z, the normal contacts of rea lay W tothe right hand terminal of relay W.
  • relay W After relay W has returned to normal relay Z is maintained energized in a circuit from ground, interrupter 1, normal contacts of relay W, winding of relay Z, resistance 4 to battery.
  • Two. relays each having an armature and a set of contzct points, aprotective resistance for-each relay, an external contact point and asource of current, said elements eing interconnected in a circuit arrangement whereby in response to the first closure of said external contact point one of said relays will be energized and the other of said relays will be short circuited, whereby in response to a subsequent opening of said external contact point said one of said relays hand armature of relay Z, interrupter 1 to 7' will remain energized and said other of said relays will become energized, whereby in response to a secondclosure .of said external contactpoint said one of said relays will become deenergized and said other of said relays will remain energized and whereby in response to a second subsequent opening of said external contact point said one of said relays will remain deenergized and said other of said relays will become deenergized.
  • a relay having an armature and a makebefore-break contact point arrangement, a relay having an armature, a front and a back contact point arrangement, a protective re"- sistance for each of said relays, an external contact point and a circuit arrangement interconnecting said relays, said resistances and said contact points, whereby in response to a cycle consisting of two successive closures and openings of said external contact. point said relays will operate in a cycle consisting of first an energization of said first relay, second an energization of said second relay, third a deenergization of said first relay and fourth a deenergization of said second relay.
  • a relay (W) having an armature and a make-before-break contact point arrangement
  • a relay (Z) having an armature, a front and a back contact point arrangement, a protective resistance for each of said relays, an external contact point and a circuit arrangement interconnecting said relays, said resistances and said contact points whereby in response to a cycle consisting of two successive closures and openings of said external contact point said relays will operate in a cycle consisting of first an energization of relay (W), second an energization of relay (Z), third a deenergization of relay (glf) and fourth a deenergization of relay 4.
  • a relay arrangement for translating a series of electrical impulses received at one rate into a series of electrical impulses at another rate comprising a control relay having an armature and a make-before-break contact point arrangement, asignal relay circuit means including said elements r'esponsive to two successive closures and openings of said contact point to cause said relays to be successively actuated in a particular permutation of allposs'ible combinations.
  • said relays having an armature, a front and a back'contact point arrangement, a protective resistance for each of said relays, a means for producing a series of electrical impulses at one rate and a circuit arrangement interconnect ing said relays, said resistances, said contact points and said impulse producing means whereby in response to two complete cycles of said impulse producing means said relays will operate in a cycle consisting of first an energization of said control relay, second an energization of said signal relay, third a deenergization of said control relay and fourth a deenergization of said signal relay, and a signal circuit contact point controlled by said signal relay.
  • Two relays each having but a single winding, a protective resistance for each of said relays, a contact point, and circuit means including said elements responsive to two successive closures and openings of said contact point to cause said relays to be successively actuated in a particular permutation of all possible combinations.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Relay Circuits (AREA)

Description

March 18, 1930.
o. CESAREO 1,751,263
ELECTRIGAL SWITCHING SYSTEM Filed April 30, 1927 //VVEN7'0R Patented 18,- 1,930
OFF EQ I PATE' QRFEO GEfiABEO, OF ENGLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY, ASSIGNOE T BELL TELEPHONE LABORATORIES, INCORPORATED, OF NEW YORK, N. Y., A CORPORATION OF NEW roan ELECTRICAL swrrcnrne sys'r'nm Application filed April 30,
This invention relates to electrical switching systems, and particularly to interrupting means.
Heretofore a need has arisen for-a means responsive to impulses transmitted at one rate for retransmitting impulses at a different rate. Such a means is shown in Patent No. 1,438,743, granted to E. H. Clark on December 12, 1922, comprising his relays 209 and 207. Clarks relay combination involved a marginal operation and a double wound relay and thereb imposed certain commercial limitations which prohibited a wider use of his circuit. The present invention is an im- 16 provement on Clarks circuit, wherein the marginal operation is eliminated and a pair ofordinary relays are used.
The embodiment of the invention which has been herein chosen for the purpose of illustration is a circuit arrangement'in which a pair of ordinary non-marginal relays are employed with an interrupter running at one rate to cause a signal lam to operate at just one-half that rate. The rawin consists of a diagrammatic representation 0 this circuit.
The interrupter 1 ma be assumed to-transmit a series of perio ically recurrin impulses. Upon the first closure of the circuit through the interru ter a circuit is closed from round throug thenormal contact of relay TV, winding of relay W, resistance 3 tobattery Relay W operates and looks through its alternate contacts. At the-same time relay Z is short circuited first from the left hand terminal of relay Z, the normal con tacts of relay Z, the normal contacts of relay W to the right hand terminal of relay Z, and after relay W has operated from the left hand terminal of relay Z, the normal contacts of relay Z, interrupter 1 to ground, and from ground, the alternate contacts of relay W to the right hand terminal of relay Z.
When the circuit through interrupter l is opened, ground is removed from the left hand termin'al of relay Z and this relay now operates in series with resistance 4 and bat- V tery. At this time a circuit is closed through signal lamp 2. v 1
When the circuit through interrupter 1 is againclosed, relay W is short circuited first 1927. Serial No. 187,971.
from the left hand terminal of relay W, through the alternate contacts of the left mature of relay Z, the normal contacts of rea lay W tothe right hand terminal of relay W. After relay W has returned to normal relay Z is maintained energized in a circuit from ground, interrupter 1, normal contacts of relay W, winding of relay Z, resistance 4 to battery. v
When-the circuit through interrupter 1 is again opened the last described circuit is v opened and relay Z returns to normal and the circuit .for signal lamp 2 is opened.
Thus there is provided an arrangement of two relays and a circuit including a contact point whereby two successive closures and openings of said contact point will cause said relays to be successively actuated in all ossible combinations and in so doing will 0 ose and open a secondary contact point once. This cycle of operations will be repeated as the interrupter operates.
What is claimed is:
1. Two. relays each having an armature and a set of contzct points, aprotective resistance for-each relay, an external contact point and asource of current, said elements eing interconnected in a circuit arrangement whereby in response to the first closure of said external contact point one of said relays will be energized and the other of said relays will be short circuited, whereby in response to a subsequent opening of said external contact point said one of said relays hand armature of relay Z, interrupter 1 to 7' will remain energized and said other of said relays will become energized, whereby in response to a secondclosure .of said external contactpoint said one of said relays will become deenergized and said other of said relays will remain energized and whereby in response to a second subsequent opening of said external contact point said one of said relays will remain deenergized and said other of said relays will become deenergized.
2. A relay having an armature and a makebefore-break contact point arrangement, a relay having an armature, a front and a back contact point arrangement, a protective re"- sistance for each of said relays, an external contact point and a circuit arrangement interconnecting said relays, said resistances and said contact points, whereby in response to a cycle consisting of two successive closures and openings of said external contact. point said relays will operate in a cycle consisting of first an energization of said first relay, second an energization of said second relay, third a deenergization of said first relay and fourth a deenergization of said second relay.
3. A relay (W) having an armature and a make-before-break contact point arrangement, a relay (Z) having an armature, a front and a back contact point arrangement, a protective resistance for each of said relays, an external contact point and a circuit arrangement interconnecting said relays, said resistances and said contact points whereby in response to a cycle consisting of two successive closures and openings of said external contact point said relays will operate in a cycle consisting of first an energization of relay (W), second an energization of relay (Z), third a deenergization of relay (glf) and fourth a deenergization of relay 4. A relay arrangement for translating a series of electrical impulses received at one rate into a series of electrical impulses at another rate comprising a control relay having an armature and a make-before-break contact point arrangement, asignal relay circuit means including said elements r'esponsive to two successive closures and openings of said contact point to cause said relays to be successively actuated in a particular permutation of allposs'ible combinations.
In witness whereof, I hereunto subscribe my name this 28th day of April, A. D. 1927.
- ORFEO CESAREO.
having an armature, a front and a back'contact point arrangement, a protective resistance for each of said relays, a means for producing a series of electrical impulses at one rate and a circuit arrangement interconnect ing said relays, said resistances, said contact points and said impulse producing means whereby in response to two complete cycles of said impulse producing means said relays will operate in a cycle consisting of first an energization of said control relay, second an energization of said signal relay, third a deenergization of said control relay and fourth a deenergization of said signal relay, and a signal circuit contact point controlled by said signal relay.
5. Two relays each having but a single winding, a protective resistance for each of said relays, a contact point, and circuit means including said elements responsive to two successive closures and openings of said contact point to cause said relays to be successively actuated in a particular permutation of all possible combinations.
6. Two non-marginal relays-each having but a single winding, a protective resistance for each of said relays, a contact point and r
US187971A 1927-04-30 1927-04-30 Electrical switching system Expired - Lifetime US1751263A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US187971A US1751263A (en) 1927-04-30 1927-04-30 Electrical switching system

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US187971A US1751263A (en) 1927-04-30 1927-04-30 Electrical switching system

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1751263A true US1751263A (en) 1930-03-18

Family

ID=22691252

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US187971A Expired - Lifetime US1751263A (en) 1927-04-30 1927-04-30 Electrical switching system

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1751263A (en)

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2442794A (en) * 1941-05-03 1948-06-08 Clifton A Furman Planter and process of operating the same
US2713675A (en) * 1954-06-04 1955-07-19 Remington Rand Inc Single core binary counter
US2737614A (en) * 1953-03-23 1956-03-06 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Pulse divider
US2749540A (en) * 1950-09-29 1956-06-05 Int Standard Electric Corp Impulse register-translator arrangement
US2958016A (en) * 1958-08-25 1960-10-25 Gen Electric Impulse generating device for a watthour meter
US2962634A (en) * 1958-08-14 1960-11-29 Acf Ind Inc Single push button motor starter
US3025433A (en) * 1959-06-01 1962-03-13 Hughes Aircraft Co Relay binary counter
US3067363A (en) * 1959-11-19 1962-12-04 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Pulse frequency divider
US3129362A (en) * 1960-12-05 1964-04-14 Scm Corp Relay control circuits
US4065643A (en) * 1976-11-17 1977-12-27 Bell Telephone Laboratories Communication facility integrity checking arrangement

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2442794A (en) * 1941-05-03 1948-06-08 Clifton A Furman Planter and process of operating the same
US2749540A (en) * 1950-09-29 1956-06-05 Int Standard Electric Corp Impulse register-translator arrangement
US2737614A (en) * 1953-03-23 1956-03-06 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Pulse divider
US2713675A (en) * 1954-06-04 1955-07-19 Remington Rand Inc Single core binary counter
US2962634A (en) * 1958-08-14 1960-11-29 Acf Ind Inc Single push button motor starter
US2958016A (en) * 1958-08-25 1960-10-25 Gen Electric Impulse generating device for a watthour meter
US3025433A (en) * 1959-06-01 1962-03-13 Hughes Aircraft Co Relay binary counter
US3067363A (en) * 1959-11-19 1962-12-04 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Pulse frequency divider
US3129362A (en) * 1960-12-05 1964-04-14 Scm Corp Relay control circuits
US4065643A (en) * 1976-11-17 1977-12-27 Bell Telephone Laboratories Communication facility integrity checking arrangement

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1751263A (en) Electrical switching system
IE46059B1 (en) Telephone set with loop current interruption timing control
US2414443A (en) Time measuring device
US2759130A (en) Relay circuits
US2023011A (en) Telephone system
US1589409A (en) Automatic telephone-exchange system
US2302587A (en) Telephone trunking system
US3187105A (en) Pulse corrector
US2260722A (en) Telephone system
US1394642A (en) Electric signaling system
US2608607A (en) Contact spark suppression circuit
US2321412A (en) Dial controlled signaling system
US2864075A (en) Switching network
US2154230A (en) Signaling system
US3387186A (en) Relay counting chain
US1465393A (en) Telephone-exchange system
US2576098A (en) Storage of electrical impulses
US2634403A (en) Control and marking circuits for adding-type impulse counters
US2071078A (en) Signaling system
US1990569A (en) Signaling system
US1835737A (en) Electrical recorder
US1563556A (en) Telephone system
US1179741A (en) Automatic telephone system.
US3666997A (en) Circuit for speeding the operation of a relay
US966901A (en) Alarm system.