US3401363A - Multipole circuit breaker with trip indicator - Google Patents

Multipole circuit breaker with trip indicator Download PDF

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Publication number
US3401363A
US3401363A US593518A US59351866A US3401363A US 3401363 A US3401363 A US 3401363A US 593518 A US593518 A US 593518A US 59351866 A US59351866 A US 59351866A US 3401363 A US3401363 A US 3401363A
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Prior art keywords
trip
lever
tripped
indicator
trip lever
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US593518A
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Charles D Vyskocil
Robert W Dunham
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Schneider Electric USA Inc
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Square D Co
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Priority to GB41243/67A priority patent/GB1147488A/en
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01HELECTRIC SWITCHES; RELAYS; SELECTORS; EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE DEVICES
    • H01H71/00Details of the protective switches or relays covered by groups H01H73/00 - H01H83/00
    • H01H71/04Means for indicating condition of the switching device
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01HELECTRIC SWITCHES; RELAYS; SELECTORS; EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE DEVICES
    • H01H71/00Details of the protective switches or relays covered by groups H01H73/00 - H01H83/00
    • H01H71/10Operating or release mechanisms
    • H01H71/50Manual reset mechanisms which may be also used for manual release
    • H01H71/52Manual reset mechanisms which may be also used for manual release actuated by lever
    • H01H71/522Manual reset mechanisms which may be also used for manual release actuated by lever comprising a cradle-mechanism
    • H01H71/524Manual reset mechanisms which may be also used for manual release actuated by lever comprising a cradle-mechanism the contact arm being pivoted on handle and mechanism spring acting between cradle and contact arm

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a multipole circuit breaker having a trip indicator which is common to a plurality of sets of contacts of the breaker, and their respective trip mechanisms, and which indicates the tripped condition of the breaker when any one or more of the mechanisms is tripped.
  • this invention relates to a multipole circuit breaker having a plurality of separate individually operable sets of contacts, each having its own separate individually operable trip mechanism, and a common trip indicator which is biased toward nonindicating untripped position by a spring and is arranged to be driven positively by a trip bar common to all of the trip mechanisms.
  • the trip bar is drivable by each mechanism so that when any one of the trip mechanisms is tripped, the indicator is driven by the bar to a position indicating the tripped condition of the breaker.
  • the invention relates to a multipole brea'ker wherein, whether the circiut breaker is turned ON or OFF, if all of the trip mechanisms are in untripped condition, a visual indicator or flag, common to all of the sets of contacts, is displaced by its biasing spring from a window in the housing of the breaker to a nonindicating position.
  • a rotatable trip bar common to the trip levers of the individual mechanisms, is positively driven by whichever trip lever is tripped, as such lever moves to fully tripped position so as to drive the common indicator against the force of its biasing spring, to a trip indicating position in which the flag becomes visible through the window.
  • the arrangement of the indicator is such that, as in prior breakers, after the trip levers are set in untripped position, all sets of contacts of the breaker may be turned ON and OFF by a common manual operator or handle without rotation of the trip bar, and, therefore, without movement of the indicator out of its nonindicating position.
  • the trip indicator is shown as incorporated in a multipole breaker such as disclosed generally in US. Letters Patent No. 2,889,428 of Kingdon, et al., issued June 2, 1959, and employing the general type of individual trip mechanism fully described in Letters Patent No. 2,902,560 of Stanback et al., issued Sept. 1, 1958.
  • the use of the present invention with other types of breakers employing trip levers will be readily apparent from the illustrative example.
  • a signal drum or flag which indicates ON, OFF, OVERLOAD, TRIP, or SHORT CIRCUIT, by means of a drum biased by a torsion spring toward 3,401,363 Patented Sept. 10, 1968 the OFF indicating position.
  • the drum Upon manual closure of the circuit breaker the drum is rotated to ON indicating position against the bias of the torsion spring by an exten- 81011 on the contact arm.
  • the drum Upon tripping, the drum is released and the spring revolves to the appropriate one of the other positions, depending upon whether the magnetic trip responded to a short circuit or a bimetal. responded to an overload.
  • the drum therefore, though operated in direct response to the trip mechanism generally, is not operated directly in response to the trip lever.
  • the drum operates manually in response to movement of the contact arm.
  • a multipole circuit breaker of the type having a plurality of sets of contacts, each with its own tripping mechanism, so that upon the tripping of the trip lever of any one of the trip mechanisms, a common tie or trip cross bar is driven by the trip lever and, in turn, positively drives to an indicating position an indicator which normally is biased toward nonindicating possition by a spring.
  • a flag indicator which is pivoted for rocking in the housing of this multipole breaker in a position so as to move into and out of indicating position with respect to a window in the housing, which is biased by a spring to nonindicating position, and which is drivingly connected to all of the trip levers of the trip mechanisms of the sets of contacts of the breaker, by a common rotatable trip or cross bar in a manner such that movement of the levers to untripped position permits the flag to be moved out of indicating position, by its spring, and movement of any one or more of the levers to tripped position, rotates the trip bar and thereby causes it to rock the flag into indicating position against the force of the biasing spring.
  • FIG. 1 is a top plan view oi a multipole breaker and flag indicator embodying the principles of the present invention
  • FIG. 2 is an enlarged front elevation of the breaker illustrated in FIG. 1, with the forward breaker unit and front cover removed and part of the housing and operator being broken away for clearness in illustration, and showing the breaker parts and indicator in their relative positions when the breaker is in ON and untripped;
  • FIG. 3 is a right end elevation of the breaker illustrated in FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 4 is a view similar to FIG. 2 showing the relation of the indicator and parts of the breaker when the breaker is OFF and untripped;
  • FIG. 5 is a fragmentary view similar to FIG. 2 showing the relation between the indicator and certain parts of the breaker when the breaker is tripped.
  • the breaker comprises a housing 1 formed of a plurality of separate units 1a of molded insulating material, detachably secured together in face to face relation in a row, one end of the row being closed by a detachable cover 2.
  • the units 1a generally are identical except that the one at the opposite end of the row has a finished outer face and the central unit 1a and a portion of 'the unit 1a towhich the cover is secured each has an opening for the handle 6a and has the window 27, later to be described.
  • a manual operator 6 Pivotally mounted in the housing 1 is a manual operator 6, having an external operating handle 6a common to all-of the sets of contacts and .having a reset shoulder 61). Since the sets of contacts and their trip mechanisms are substantially identical, only one set and its tripping mechanism are described herein in detail.
  • the upper end of the carrier is provided with fingers 7 of which the upper ends engage in slots 8 in the manual operator 6 in rocking relation so that the carrier 5 can be rocked clockwise and counterclockwise about its upper ends.
  • a trip lever 10 having a resetpin 10a for cooperation with the shoulder 6b, as is later described herein.
  • the lever 10 is connected by a spring 11 to carrier 5.
  • the spring 11 urges the carrier 5 upwardly so as to seat and hold the upper ends of the fingers 7 in rocking contact with the walls of the slots 8.
  • the spring 11 also acts to rock the trip lever clockwise about its pivot 9 when the trip lever is released by the trip mechanism of the breaker.
  • the trip lever 10 has an actuating portion 12 which, when the trip lever is released and swings clockwise, engages a shoulder on the carrier 5 and drives the carrier 5 counterclockwise about the upper ends of the fingers 7 to open contact position.
  • the spring 11 has a dead center position and is arranged so that it biases the carrier 5 to contact making position when the lever 10 is untripped.
  • the lever 10 When the lever 10 is tripped, it swings clockwise and carries the upper end of the spring 11 past a dead center position, whereupon the spring 11 moves the carrier 5 to fully open position while at the same time still maintaining a downward force on the trip lever 10 urging it to rotate in the clockwise direction.
  • the trip mechanism 14 comprises a bimetal assembly comprising a conducting strap 15 connected to a terminal 16, and a bimetal member 17 fixedly connected at its upper end to the strap and extending downwardly therefrom.
  • a magnetic yoke member 18 is connected to the lower end of the bimetal 17.
  • a movable magnetic armature member 19 is pivotally cradled near its upper end in arms 20 on the yoke member 18 and is held by an armature spring 21 for yieldably resisted swinging movement relative to the yoke member 18.
  • To the lower end of the magnetic armature is secured a U-shape ambient temperature responsive bimetal member 23.
  • a flexible conductor 24- which may have a loop portion wound about a part of the magnetic yoke, is connected at one of its ends to the bimetal member 17 and at the other of its ends to the movable contact 4.
  • the bimetallic member 17 operates to cause the magnetic yoke to swing counterclockwise, swinging with it the magnetic armature 19.
  • a sudden undue surge in current causes the armature 19 to swing counterclockwise. In either event, the swinging action releases the trip lever 10.
  • the trip lever In order to hold the trip lever 10 in untripped position, the trip lever is provided at its outer end with a finger portion 26 (FIG. 5) which, at its lower edge, engages an upwardly facing latching shoulder 19a disposed in a notch in the armature 19 when the trip mechanism is in latching position, thereby preventing swinging of the trip lever 10 clockwise out of its untripped position.
  • a finger portion 26 FIG. 5
  • the tripped condition of the breaker is to be indicated.
  • a window 27 is provided in the top wall of the housing 1 adjacent to the manual operator.
  • a suitable viewing lens 28 is mounted within the window.
  • a suitable pivot 29 is mounted in the housing 1 adjacent to the window.
  • the indicator 30 comprises a body or rocker 31 which may be of sheet metal or molded composition.
  • the rocker 31 has a finger 32 extending radially therefrom partway of its lengthwith its outer end'bent over to extend axially and provide an indicator or flag 33.
  • the outer face of the flag 33 faces the lens and preferably is coated with red fluorescent paint.
  • rocker 31 is provided with a fin 31a having an aperture therein through which one end of a torsion spring 34 is received for connecting the spring to the rocker.
  • the opposite end of the spring 34 abuts asuitable shoulder 35 in the housing 1.
  • the spring 34 biases the flag 33 to nonindicating position wherein the flag is not visible through the lens 28.
  • the flag 33 be retained in the nonindicating position out of alignment with the window 27. Accordingly the torsion spring 34 is connected to the rocker fin 31a so as to bias the rocker counterclockwise and thus dispose the flag 33 out of alignment with the window.
  • the flag 33 be moved positively into indicating position in alignment with the window. Since one indicator 30 is common to all of the sets of complementary contacts and their trip mechanismspthe indicator must be moved to the trip indicating position when any one or more of the trip mechanisms releases its associated lever 10.
  • a common trip bar 40 is used. In the present breaker, the trip bar also operates the indicator.
  • the trip bar 40 comprises a plurality of bar elements 40a, each of which is connected to an associated lever 10. As best illustrated in FIG. 2, each trip bar element 40a has hub portions 41 at its opposite sides by which the element is supported in its associated housing unit It: for rocking about an exis parallel to the pivotal axis 9 of its associated trip lever 10.
  • the trip bar element'inthe unit lain which the indicator 30 is mounted has a cam portion 42 which is positioned so as to' engage the fin 31b of the rocker 31 and rotate the rocker against the force of its torsion spring 34clockwise to dispose the flag 33 is alignment with the lens when the 'trip bar 40 is rotated counterclockwise a predetermined distance about its pivotal axis.
  • trip bar elements 40a may be duplicates, though the cam portion 42is necessary only on the element which is to directly engage the rocker 31.
  • Each trip bar element 40a also has a finger 43 which extends alongside its associated trip lever 10 in a position to be engaged by a lug 44 on its trip lever'10 as its rock lever upon release swings clockwise to tripped position:
  • the lug 44 is so arranged relative to the finger 43 as to rock its trip bar elements 40a counter clockwise as the lever 10 swings clockwise and thus cause the cam portion 42 to engage the fin 31a and rock the rocker 31 clockwise against the force of the biasing spring 34 to dispose-the flag 3'3 beneath the lens 28.
  • the flag is out of indicating position and the trip lever is in untripped condition.
  • the spring 34 is urging the rocker 31 counterclockwise with sufiicient force to maintain the finl3la in engagement with the cam 42 and thus is urging the trip bar element 40a to rotate clockwise to the extent necessary to permit the flag 33 to move from beneath the lens 28.
  • the trip bar element 40a is constrained from being thus rotated clockwise. If, under these conditions, the lever is tripped, it immediately rotates the trip bar element 40a counterclockwise, causing the cam portion 42 to drive the flag 33 into alignment with the lens 28.
  • the breaker is shown in the tripped position in which case the lever 10 has swung clockwise, rocking the trip bar 40 counterclockwise and positively moving the flag 33 beneath the lens 28.
  • the breaker is restored to untripped condition by moving the manual operator 6 first clockwise to OFF position, thereby causing the reset shoulder 6b on the operator 6 to engage the reset pin 10a and swing the trip lever 10- counterclockwise into position such that its outer end engages the shoulder 19a of the trip mechanism and is latched thereby in untripped condition.
  • the manual operator 6 may be rotated counterclockwise to ON position to close the breaker and back to OFF position, as desired, the trip lever 10 remaining in latched position during such movements.
  • each unit houses an assembly comprising a set of contacts and a trip mechanism such as herein described.
  • the flag 33 is common to all of the units as also is the manual operator 6.
  • each of the assemblies is provided with an operator, such as manual operator 6, but without an external operating handle such as the handle 60, and all of these operators 6 are connected together by a suitable longitudinally extending key 46 which is eccentric to their common rotational axis.
  • the single handle 6a can operate all of the operators 6 to ON and OFF positions concurrently.
  • the trip bar elements 40a which are arranged one for each trip mechanism. are in coaxial relation and connected for rotation together by a suitable key 47 which extends from one end of the breaker housing to the other and constrains the trip 'bar elements 40a to rocking action as a unit or single trip bar 40.
  • all of the assemblies can be turned OFF and ON and set to untripped condition in either OFF or ON positions of the operator, and upon tripping of any one assembly, the unitary trip bar 40 is operated to move the flag 33 into indicating position in alignment 'with the lens 28.
  • the indicator is operated, through the mechanical connection afiorded by the trip bar by the tripped one of the trip levers 10 and is positively driven to indicating position u-pon tripping against the resistance of a biasing spring.
  • a contact making and breaking assembly comprising a stationery contact, a movable contact, and a movable carrier for the movable contact;
  • a trip mechanism comprising a pivoted trip lever rotatable about its axis to tripped and untripped position, respectively,
  • the means connecting the trip bar element to the indicator comprises a cam on the trip bar element normally permitting the indicator to move to non indicating position when the trip lever is in untripped position, and operative to positively move the indicator to indicating position when the trip bar element is rocked by the trip lever upon tripping of the trip lever.
  • the trip bar is common to all of said assemblies and is connected to all of said trip levers for rocking by whichever lever is tripped, independently of the tripped and untripped condition of the other trip levers.

Description

Sept. 10, 1968 c. D. VYSKOCIL ET AL 3,401,363
MULTIPOLE CIRCUIT BREAKER WITH TRIP INDICATOR Filed Nov; 10: 1966 3 Sheets-'Sheet 1 I ./Q E
I I I 60/ W /6 INVENTOR. M ,91/ 4 BY MW,
Sept. 10, 1968 c. D. VYSKOCIL ET AL 3,401,363
MULTIPOLE CIRCUIT BREAKER WITH TRIP INDICATOR Filed Nov. 10, 1966 v 5 Sheets-Sheet 2 Sept. 10, 1968 c. D VYSKOCIL ET AL 3,401,363
MULTIPOLE CIRCUIT BREAKER WITH TRII INDICATOR Filed Nov. 10, 1966 3 Sheets$heet 5 3 A rTaR/ws United States Patent "ice 3,401,363 MULTIPOLE CIRCUIT BREAKER WITH TRIP INDICATOR Charles D. Vyskocil and Robert W. Dunham, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, assignors to Square D Company, Park Ridge, III., a corporation of Michigan Filed Nov. 10, 1966, Ser. No. 593,518 3 Claims. (Cl. 33517) This invention relates to a multipole circuit breaker having a trip indicator which is common to a plurality of sets of contacts of the breaker, and their respective trip mechanisms, and which indicates the tripped condition of the breaker when any one or more of the mechanisms is tripped.
Particularly, this invention relates to a multipole circuit breaker having a plurality of separate individually operable sets of contacts, each having its own separate individually operable trip mechanism, and a common trip indicator which is biased toward nonindicating untripped position by a spring and is arranged to be driven positively by a trip bar common to all of the trip mechanisms. The trip bar is drivable by each mechanism so that when any one of the trip mechanisms is tripped, the indicator is driven by the bar to a position indicating the tripped condition of the breaker.
More particularly, the invention relates to a multipole brea'ker wherein, whether the circiut breaker is turned ON or OFF, if all of the trip mechanisms are in untripped condition, a visual indicator or flag, common to all of the sets of contacts, is displaced by its biasing spring from a window in the housing of the breaker to a nonindicating position. However, upon tripping of any one of the trip mechanisms of the breaker, whether due to a moderate and long sustained overload or sudden severe overload or fault, or for any reason, a rotatable trip bar, common to the trip levers of the individual mechanisms, is positively driven by whichever trip lever is tripped, as such lever moves to fully tripped position so as to drive the common indicator against the force of its biasing spring, to a trip indicating position in which the flag becomes visible through the window.
The arrangement of the indicator is such that, as in prior breakers, after the trip levers are set in untripped position, all sets of contacts of the breaker may be turned ON and OFF by a common manual operator or handle without rotation of the trip bar, and, therefore, without movement of the indicator out of its nonindicating position.
For the purposes of illustration, the trip indicator is shown as incorporated in a multipole breaker such as disclosed generally in US. Letters Patent No. 2,889,428 of Kingdon, et al., issued June 2, 1959, and employing the general type of individual trip mechanism fully described in Letters Patent No. 2,902,560 of Stanback et al., issued Sept. 1, 1959. The use of the present invention with other types of breakers employing trip levers will be readily apparent from the illustrative example.
Furthermore, it is known in the art, as evidenced by Green Patent No. 2,222,312, issued Nov. 19, 1940, to provide an indicating flag biased toward the nonindicating position by a torsion spring and the like, and driven against the force of the spring by a contact arm into an indicating position when the circuit breaker is tripped. In the breaker of Green the indicator or flog is not caused to move by manual operation of the circuit breaker to ON and OFF positions when the breaker is untripped.
In Platz Patent No. 2,905,795, issued Sept. 22, 1959, a signal drum or flag is provided which indicates ON, OFF, OVERLOAD, TRIP, or SHORT CIRCUIT, by means of a drum biased by a torsion spring toward 3,401,363 Patented Sept. 10, 1968 the OFF indicating position. Upon manual closure of the circuit breaker the drum is rotated to ON indicating position against the bias of the torsion spring by an exten- 81011 on the contact arm. Upon tripping, the drum is released and the spring revolves to the appropriate one of the other positions, depending upon whether the magnetic trip responded to a short circuit or a bimetal. responded to an overload. The drum, therefore, though operated in direct response to the trip mechanism generally, is not operated directly in response to the trip lever. The drum operates manually in response to movement of the contact arm.
The above patents evidence that it is known heretofore (a) to operate an indicator of a circuit breaker by the usual bimetal of the trip mechanism, by magnetic trip, by the manual operator, or by the contact arm, and (b) to spring bias the indicator toward either nonindicating or tripped indicating position.
However, it is new, and it is a principal feature of the present invention, to arrange a multipole circuit breaker of the type having a plurality of sets of contacts, each with its own tripping mechanism, so that upon the tripping of the trip lever of any one of the trip mechanisms, a common tie or trip cross bar is driven by the trip lever and, in turn, positively drives to an indicating position an indicator which normally is biased toward nonindicating possition by a spring.
Specifically it is new to provide a flag indicator which is pivoted for rocking in the housing of this multipole breaker in a position so as to move into and out of indicating position with respect to a window in the housing, which is biased by a spring to nonindicating position, and which is drivingly connected to all of the trip levers of the trip mechanisms of the sets of contacts of the breaker, by a common rotatable trip or cross bar in a manner such that movement of the levers to untripped position permits the flag to be moved out of indicating position, by its spring, and movement of any one or more of the levers to tripped position, rotates the trip bar and thereby causes it to rock the flag into indicating position against the force of the biasing spring.
Various advantages of the invention will become apparent from the illustrative example wherein reference is made to the drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a top plan view oi a multipole breaker and flag indicator embodying the principles of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is an enlarged front elevation of the breaker illustrated in FIG. 1, with the forward breaker unit and front cover removed and part of the housing and operator being broken away for clearness in illustration, and showing the breaker parts and indicator in their relative positions when the breaker is in ON and untripped;
FIG. 3 is a right end elevation of the breaker illustrated in FIG. 1;
FIG. 4 is a view similar to FIG. 2 showing the relation of the indicator and parts of the breaker when the breaker is OFF and untripped; and
FIG. 5 is a fragmentary view similar to FIG. 2 showing the relation between the indicator and certain parts of the breaker when the breaker is tripped.
Referring to the drawings, since the breaker itself is essentially the one described in detail in Kingdon, et al., US. Patent No. 2,889,428, it is described herein only briefly.
The breaker comprises a housing 1 formed of a plurality of separate units 1a of molded insulating material, detachably secured together in face to face relation in a row, one end of the row being closed by a detachable cover 2. The units 1a generally are identical except that the one at the opposite end of the row has a finished outer face and the central unit 1a and a portion of 'the unit 1a towhich the cover is secured each has an opening for the handle 6a and has the window 27, later to be described. Mounted in the housing units, respectively, are .sets of stationary contacts 3, and complementary sets of movable contacts 4 which are mounted on carriers 5, respectively.
Pivotally mounted in the housing 1 is a manual operator 6, having an external operating handle 6a common to all-of the sets of contacts and .having a reset shoulder 61). Since the sets of contacts and their trip mechanisms are substantially identical, only one set and its tripping mechanism are described herein in detail. Referring to the unit shown in FIG. 2, the upper end of the carrier is provided with fingers 7 of which the upper ends engage in slots 8 in the manual operator 6 in rocking relation so that the carrier 5 can be rocked clockwise and counterclockwise about its upper ends.
Also pivotally mounted in the housing 1 for rocking about a pivot 9 parallel to that of the operator 6 is a trip lever 10 having a resetpin 10a for cooperation with the shoulder 6b, as is later described herein. The lever 10 is connected by a spring 11 to carrier 5. The spring 11 urges the carrier 5 upwardly so as to seat and hold the upper ends of the fingers 7 in rocking contact with the walls of the slots 8. The spring 11 also acts to rock the trip lever clockwise about its pivot 9 when the trip lever is released by the trip mechanism of the breaker. The trip lever 10 has an actuating portion 12 which, when the trip lever is released and swings clockwise, engages a shoulder on the carrier 5 and drives the carrier 5 counterclockwise about the upper ends of the fingers 7 to open contact position.
The spring 11 has a dead center position and is arranged so that it biases the carrier 5 to contact making position when the lever 10 is untripped. When the lever 10 is tripped, it swings clockwise and carries the upper end of the spring 11 past a dead center position, whereupon the spring 11 moves the carrier 5 to fully open position while at the same time still maintaining a downward force on the trip lever 10 urging it to rotate in the clockwise direction.
In order to latch the trip lever in the untripped position, a trip mechanism 14 is provided. The trip mechanism 14 comprises a bimetal assembly comprising a conducting strap 15 connected to a terminal 16, and a bimetal member 17 fixedly connected at its upper end to the strap and extending downwardly therefrom. A magnetic yoke member 18 is connected to the lower end of the bimetal 17. A movable magnetic armature member 19 is pivotally cradled near its upper end in arms 20 on the yoke member 18 and is held by an armature spring 21 for yieldably resisted swinging movement relative to the yoke member 18. To the lower end of the magnetic armature is secured a U-shape ambient temperature responsive bimetal member 23. A flexible conductor 24-, which may have a loop portion wound about a part of the magnetic yoke, is connected at one of its ends to the bimetal member 17 and at the other of its ends to the movable contact 4.
Thus, upon a moderate sustained overload, the bimetallic member 17 operates to cause the magnetic yoke to swing counterclockwise, swinging with it the magnetic armature 19. On the other hand, a sudden undue surge in current causes the armature 19 to swing counterclockwise. In either event, the swinging action releases the trip lever 10.
In order to hold the trip lever 10 in untripped position, the trip lever is provided at its outer end with a finger portion 26 (FIG. 5) which, at its lower edge, engages an upwardly facing latching shoulder 19a disposed in a notch in the armature 19 when the trip mechanism is in latching position, thereby preventing swinging of the trip lever 10 clockwise out of its untripped position. Upon movement of the armature 19 counterclockwise, the
released and the spring 11 becomes operative to swing the trip lever 10 clockwise.
The trip structure thus far described is that fully disclosed in the above Patent No. 2,889,428.
As mentioned, in accordance with the present invention, the tripped condition of the breaker is to be indicated. For this purpose a window 27 is provided in the top wall of the housing 1 adjacent to the manual operator. A suitable viewing lens 28 is mounted within the window. In the housing 1 adjacent to the window is a suitable pivot 29 on which is pivotally mounted an indicator 30. The indicator 30 comprises a body or rocker 31 which may be of sheet metal or molded composition. The rocker 31 has a finger 32 extending radially therefrom partway of its lengthwith its outer end'bent over to extend axially and provide an indicator or flag 33. The outer face of the flag 33 faces the lens and preferably is coated with red fluorescent paint. At the opposite side of the pivotal axis, rocker 31 is provided with a fin 31a having an aperture therein through which one end of a torsion spring 34 is received for connecting the spring to the rocker. The opposite end of the spring 34 abuts asuitable shoulder 35 in the housing 1. The spring 34 biases the flag 33 to nonindicating position wherein the flag is not visible through the lens 28.
It is desirable that when the trip lever 10 is in the untripped position as illustrated in FIG. 2, the flag 33 be retained in the nonindicating position out of alignment with the window 27. Accordingly the torsion spring 34 is connected to the rocker fin 31a so as to bias the rocker counterclockwise and thus dispose the flag 33 out of alignment with the window. On the other hand, it is desirable that when the trip lever is tripped for any reason, that the flag 33 be moved positively into indicating position in alignment with the window. Since one indicator 30 is common to all of the sets of complementary contacts and their trip mechanismspthe indicator must be moved to the trip indicating position when any one or more of the trip mechanisms releases its associated lever 10. As is usual in multipole breakers, to ensure simultaneous opening of all contacts upon release of anyone of the trip levers 10, a common trip bar 40 is used. In the present breaker, the trip bar also operates the indicator.
The trip bar 40 comprises a plurality of bar elements 40a, each of which is connected to an associated lever 10. As best illustrated in FIG. 2, each trip bar element 40a has hub portions 41 at its opposite sides by which the element is supported in its associated housing unit It: for rocking about an exis parallel to the pivotal axis 9 of its associated trip lever 10. The trip bar element'inthe unit lain which the indicator 30 is mounted has a cam portion 42 which is positioned so as to' engage the fin 31b of the rocker 31 and rotate the rocker against the force of its torsion spring 34clockwise to dispose the flag 33 is alignment with the lens when the 'trip bar 40 is rotated counterclockwise a predetermined distance about its pivotal axis. For economy in construction, the trip bar elements 40a may be duplicates, though the cam portion 42is necessary only on the element which is to directly engage the rocker 31. Each trip bar element 40a also has a finger 43 which extends alongside its associated trip lever 10 in a position to be engaged by a lug 44 on its trip lever'10 as its rock lever upon release swings clockwise to tripped position: The lug 44 is so arranged relative to the finger 43 as to rock its trip bar elements 40a counter clockwise as the lever 10 swings clockwise and thus cause the cam portion 42 to engage the fin 31a and rock the rocker 31 clockwise against the force of the biasing spring 34 to dispose-the flag 3'3 beneath the lens 28.
Thus, in FIG. 2, the flag is out of indicating position and the trip lever is in untripped condition. In this condition, the spring 34 is urging the rocker 31 counterclockwise with sufiicient force to maintain the finl3la in engagement with the cam 42 and thus is urging the trip bar element 40a to rotate clockwise to the extent necessary to permit the flag 33 to move from beneath the lens 28. However, due to the engagement of the lug 44 with the finger 43, the trip bar element 40a is constrained from being thus rotated clockwise. If, under these conditions, the lever is tripped, it immediately rotates the trip bar element 40a counterclockwise, causing the cam portion 42 to drive the flag 33 into alignment with the lens 28.
In this connection, it will be noted that when the trip levers 10 are in latched position, the manual operator 6 may be moved to ON and OFF positions without moving the trip levers and hence without moving the trip bar 40. Therefore, the flag 33 remains in the nonindicating position.
Referring to FIG. 5, the breaker is shown in the tripped position in which case the lever 10 has swung clockwise, rocking the trip bar 40 counterclockwise and positively moving the flag 33 beneath the lens 28. From the tripped position, illustrated in FIG. 5, the breaker is restored to untripped condition by moving the manual operator 6 first clockwise to OFF position, thereby causing the reset shoulder 6b on the operator 6 to engage the reset pin 10a and swing the trip lever 10- counterclockwise into position such that its outer end engages the shoulder 19a of the trip mechanism and is latched thereby in untripped condition. When in this position, the manual operator 6 may be rotated counterclockwise to ON position to close the breaker and back to OFF position, as desired, the trip lever 10 remaining in latched position during such movements.
As mentioned, a plurality of housing units 1a are provided and each unit houses an assembly comprising a set of contacts and a trip mechanism such as herein described. However, the flag 33 is common to all of the units as also is the manual operator 6. Accordingly, each of the assemblies is provided with an operator, such as manual operator 6, but without an external operating handle such as the handle 60, and all of these operators 6 are connected together by a suitable longitudinally extending key 46 which is eccentric to their common rotational axis. Thus, the single handle 6a, can operate all of the operators 6 to ON and OFF positions concurrently.
Likewise, since the flag 33 is to indicate a tripped condition of any one or more of the assemblies, the trip bar elements 40a, which are arranged one for each trip mechanism. are in coaxial relation and connected for rotation together by a suitable key 47 which extends from one end of the breaker housing to the other and constrains the trip 'bar elements 40a to rocking action as a unit or single trip bar 40.
Thus, all of the assemblies can be turned OFF and ON and set to untripped condition in either OFF or ON positions of the operator, and upon tripping of any one assembly, the unitary trip bar 40 is operated to move the flag 33 into indicating position in alignment 'with the lens 28.
Thus, the indicator is operated, through the mechanical connection afiorded by the trip bar by the tripped one of the trip levers 10 and is positively driven to indicating position u-pon tripping against the resistance of a biasing spring.
Having thus described our invention, we claim:
1. In a circuit breaker:
a contact making and breaking assembly comprising a stationery contact, a movable contact, and a movable carrier for the movable contact;
a trip mechanism comprising a pivoted trip lever rotatable about its axis to tripped and untripped position, respectively,
current-responsive trip means operative under normal current conditions to latch the trip lever in untripped position and operative under abnormal current conditions to release the trip lever for movement to tripped position,
means operative to move the trip lever to tripped position when the lever is released by the trip mechanism,
and means connecting the trip lever and movable contact carrier for moving the carrier out of contact making position when the trip lever is moved to tripped position while the manual operation is in ON position;
an indicator movable into and out of an indicating position;
a manual operator movable to ON and OFF positions for moving the movable contact to and from contact making position, respectively;
and means connecting the trip lever and movable contact carrier for moving the carrier out of contact making position when the trip lever is moved to tripped position while the manual operator is in ON position;
a movable trip bar element;
means connecting the trip bar element to the trip lever for rocking the bar element by the lever when the lever is tripped;
means connecting the trip bar element to the indicator so as to move the indicator to an indicating position by the trip bar element when the trip lever is moved to tripped position, and
means operative to move the indicator to a nonindicating position when the trip lever is moved to untripped position.
2. The structure according to claim 1 wherein spring means bias the indicator to nonindicating position;
the means connecting the trip bar element to the indicator comprises a cam on the trip bar element normally permitting the indicator to move to non indicating position when the trip lever is in untripped position, and operative to positively move the indicator to indicating position when the trip bar element is rocked by the trip lever upon tripping of the trip lever.
3. The structure according to claim 1 wherein a plurality of additional ones of said contact making and breaking assemblies, each with one of said associated tripping mechanisms and manual operators, are arranged in a row in alignment with each other in a direction endwise of the pivotal axes of their trip levers; and
the trip bar is common to all of said assemblies and is connected to all of said trip levers for rocking by whichever lever is tripped, independently of the tripped and untripped condition of the other trip levers.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,367,382 1/1945 Taylor 200-116 FOREIGN PATENTS 657,744 2/1963 Canada.
BERNARD A. GILHEANY, Primary Examiner.
R. COHRS, Assistant Examiner.
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE PATENT OFFICE Washington, D.C. 20231 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE CERTIFICATE OF CORRECTION Patent No. 3,401,363 September 10, 1968 Charles D. Vyskocil et a1. It is certified that error appears in the above identified patent and that said Letters Patent are hereby corrected as shown below:
Column 1, line 27, "circiut" should read circuit line 64, "flog" should read flag Column 2, line 27, "possition" should read position line 29, "this", second occurrence, should read the Column 4, line 49, "exis" should read axis Column 5, line 65, "breakerz" should read breaker, line 67, "stationery" should read stationary Column 6, line 1, after "tripped" insert position line 10, beginning with "and means" cancel all to and including "ON position;" in line 14, same column 6.
Signed and sealed this 10th day of February 1970.
(SEAL) Attest:
WILLIAM E. SCHUYLER, JR.
Commissioner of Patents Edward M. Fletcher, Jr.
Attesting Officer

Claims (1)

1. IN A CIRCUIT BREAKER: A CONTACT MAKING AND BREAKING ASSEMBLY COMPRISING A STATIONARY CONTACT, A MOVABLE CONTACT, AND A MOVABLE CARRIER FOR THE MOVABLE CONTACT; A TRIP MECHANISM COMPRISING A PIVOTED TRIP LEVER ROTATABLE ABOUT ITS AXIS TO TRIPPED AND UNTRIPPED POSITION, RESPECTIVELY, CURRENT-RESPONSIVE TRIP MEANS OPERATIVE UNDER NORMAL CURRENT CONDITIONS TO LATCH THE TRIP LEVER IN UNTRIPPED POSITION AND OPERATIVE UNDER ABNORMAL CURRENT CONDITIONS TO RELEASE THE TRIP LEVER FOR MOVEMENT TO TRIPPED POSITION, MEANS OPERATIVE TO MOVE THE TRIP LEVER TO TRIPPED POSITION WHEN THE LEVER IS RELEASED BY THE TRIP MECHANISM, AND MEANS CONNECTING THE TRIP LEVER AND MOVABLE CONTACT CARRIER FOR MOVING THE CARRIER OUT OF CONTACT MAKING POSITION WHEN THE TRIP LEVER IS MOVED TO TRIPPED POSITION WHILE THE MANUAL OPERATION IS IN ON POSITION; AN INDICATOR MOVABLE INTO AND OUT OF AN INDICATING POSITION; A MANUAL OPERATOR MOVABLE TO ON AND OFF POSITIONS FOR MOVING THE MOVABLE CONTACT TO AND FROM CONTACT MAKING POSITION, RESPECTIVELY; AND MEANS CONNECTING THE TRIP LEVER AND MOVABLE CONTACT CARRIER FOR MOVING THE CARRIER OUT OF CONTACT MAKING POSITION WHEN THE TRIP LEVER IS MOVED TO TRIPPED POSITION WHILE THE MANUAL OPERATOR IS IN ON POSITION; A MOVABLE TRIP BAR ELEMENT; MEANS CONNECTING THE TRIP BAR ELEMENT TO THE TRIP LEVER FOR ROCKING THE BAR ELEMENT BY THE LEVER WHEN THE LEVER IS TRIPPED; MEANS CONNECTING THE TRIP BAR ELEMENT TO THE INDICATOR SO AS TO MOVE THE INDICATOR TO AN INDICATING POSITION BY THE TRIP BAR ELEMENT WHEN THE TRIP LEVER IS MOVED TO TRIPPED POSITON, AND MEANS OPERATIVE TO MOVE THE INDICATOR TO A NONINDICATING POSITION WHEN THE TRIP LEVER IS MOVED TO UNTRIPPED POSITION.
US593518A 1966-11-10 1966-11-10 Multipole circuit breaker with trip indicator Expired - Lifetime US3401363A (en)

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Cited By (32)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3488610A (en) * 1967-09-21 1970-01-06 Gen Electric Circuit breaker with improved thermalmagnetic tripping mechanism
US3953812A (en) * 1974-10-09 1976-04-27 General Electric Company Electric circuit breaker
US3959752A (en) * 1975-03-04 1976-05-25 I-T-E Imperial Corporation Narrow multi-pole circuit breaker having bodily movable instantaneous trip structure
US4276457A (en) * 1979-07-30 1981-06-30 Gould Inc. Circuit breaker having planar cradle with edge portions providing relatching and contact kicker functions
FR2540284A1 (en) * 1983-01-28 1984-08-03 Terasaki Denki Sangyo Kk INDICATOR FOR ELECTRIC SWITCHES
EP0143981A1 (en) * 1983-10-29 1985-06-12 Square D Company Circuit breaker mounted on panel boards
WO1986001935A1 (en) * 1984-09-12 1986-03-27 Square D Company Circuit breaker
EP0370385A2 (en) * 1988-11-21 1990-05-30 Licentia Patent-Verwaltungs-GmbH Arrangement for the connection of a position indicator
US5173674A (en) * 1992-02-25 1992-12-22 General Electric Company Thermal-magnetic trip unit with low current response
US5319169A (en) * 1992-08-06 1994-06-07 Eaton Corporation Molded case circuit breaker having rectangular knee pin non-rotatably keyed to toggle linkage
US5694101A (en) * 1995-02-01 1997-12-02 Square D Company Circuit breaker
US5701110A (en) * 1996-04-09 1997-12-23 Square D Company Circuit breaker accessory module
DE19704941A1 (en) * 1997-02-10 1998-08-20 Kloeckner Moeller Gmbh Mechanical device for detecting short-circuit currents in electric switching devices , such as power switches
US6020802A (en) * 1998-04-02 2000-02-01 Square D Company Circuit breaker including two magnetic coils and a positive temperature coefficient resistivity element
FR2786314A1 (en) * 1998-11-19 2000-05-26 Gen Electric CIRCUIT BREAKER WITH VISIBLE TRIP INDICATOR
US6104266A (en) * 1999-06-02 2000-08-15 General Electric Company Circuit breaker with trip indication arrangement
US6128168A (en) * 1998-01-14 2000-10-03 General Electric Company Circuit breaker with improved arc interruption function
US6232857B1 (en) 1999-09-16 2001-05-15 General Electric Company Arc fault circuit breaker
US6239962B1 (en) 1999-02-09 2001-05-29 General Electric Company ARC fault circuit breaker
US6259340B1 (en) 1999-05-10 2001-07-10 General Electric Company Circuit breaker with a dual test button mechanism
US6268989B1 (en) 1998-12-11 2001-07-31 General Electric Company Residential load center with arcing fault protection
US6356426B1 (en) 1999-07-19 2002-03-12 General Electric Company Residential circuit breaker with selectable current setting, load control and power line carrier signaling
US6466424B1 (en) 1999-12-29 2002-10-15 General Electric Company Circuit protective device with temperature sensing
US6678137B1 (en) 2000-08-04 2004-01-13 General Electric Company Temperature compensation circuit for an arc fault current interrupting circuit breaker
US6803535B1 (en) 2004-02-19 2004-10-12 Eaton Corporation Circuit breaker with a visual indication of a trip
US20060202785A1 (en) * 2005-03-11 2006-09-14 Eaton Corporation Trip indicator and electrical switching apparatus employing the same
US20060254893A1 (en) * 2005-05-16 2006-11-16 Eaton Corporation Electrical switching apparatus indicating status through panel aperture
US20070200652A1 (en) * 2006-02-24 2007-08-30 Eaton Corporation Electrical switching apparatus and trip indicator therefor
US8866569B2 (en) * 2012-10-25 2014-10-21 Wenzhou New Blue Sky Electrical Co., Ltd. Pry plate tripping circuit breaker
US20190074153A1 (en) * 2017-09-07 2019-03-07 Carling Technologies, Inc. Circuit Interrupter With Status Indication
US10460897B2 (en) * 2017-01-05 2019-10-29 Lsis Co., Ltd. Magnetic trip device for circuit breaker
US10522314B2 (en) * 2017-03-15 2019-12-31 Lsis Co., Ltd. Magnetic trip device for circuit breaker

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DE19819242B4 (en) * 1998-04-29 2005-11-10 Ge Power Controls Polska Sp.Z.O.O. Thermomagnetic circuit breaker

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US2367382A (en) * 1942-07-07 1945-01-16 Chase Shawmut Co Circuit breaker
CA657744A (en) * 1963-02-12 N. Meikle William Switch

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Cited By (40)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3488610A (en) * 1967-09-21 1970-01-06 Gen Electric Circuit breaker with improved thermalmagnetic tripping mechanism
US3953812A (en) * 1974-10-09 1976-04-27 General Electric Company Electric circuit breaker
US3959752A (en) * 1975-03-04 1976-05-25 I-T-E Imperial Corporation Narrow multi-pole circuit breaker having bodily movable instantaneous trip structure
US4276457A (en) * 1979-07-30 1981-06-30 Gould Inc. Circuit breaker having planar cradle with edge portions providing relatching and contact kicker functions
FR2540284A1 (en) * 1983-01-28 1984-08-03 Terasaki Denki Sangyo Kk INDICATOR FOR ELECTRIC SWITCHES
EP0143981A1 (en) * 1983-10-29 1985-06-12 Square D Company Circuit breaker mounted on panel boards
WO1986001935A1 (en) * 1984-09-12 1986-03-27 Square D Company Circuit breaker
US4616200A (en) * 1984-09-12 1986-10-07 Square D Company Circuit breaker
EP0370385A2 (en) * 1988-11-21 1990-05-30 Licentia Patent-Verwaltungs-GmbH Arrangement for the connection of a position indicator
EP0370385A3 (en) * 1988-11-21 1990-08-22 Licentia Patent-Verwaltungs-Gmbh Driver for a power circuit breaker
US5173674A (en) * 1992-02-25 1992-12-22 General Electric Company Thermal-magnetic trip unit with low current response
US5319169A (en) * 1992-08-06 1994-06-07 Eaton Corporation Molded case circuit breaker having rectangular knee pin non-rotatably keyed to toggle linkage
US5694101A (en) * 1995-02-01 1997-12-02 Square D Company Circuit breaker
US5701110A (en) * 1996-04-09 1997-12-23 Square D Company Circuit breaker accessory module
DE19704941A1 (en) * 1997-02-10 1998-08-20 Kloeckner Moeller Gmbh Mechanical device for detecting short-circuit currents in electric switching devices , such as power switches
DE19704941C2 (en) * 1997-02-10 2001-10-04 Moeller Gmbh Mechanical device for detecting short-circuit currents
US6128168A (en) * 1998-01-14 2000-10-03 General Electric Company Circuit breaker with improved arc interruption function
US6020802A (en) * 1998-04-02 2000-02-01 Square D Company Circuit breaker including two magnetic coils and a positive temperature coefficient resistivity element
FR2786314A1 (en) * 1998-11-19 2000-05-26 Gen Electric CIRCUIT BREAKER WITH VISIBLE TRIP INDICATOR
US6107902A (en) * 1998-11-19 2000-08-22 General Electric Company Circuit breaker with visible trip indicator
US6268989B1 (en) 1998-12-11 2001-07-31 General Electric Company Residential load center with arcing fault protection
US6239962B1 (en) 1999-02-09 2001-05-29 General Electric Company ARC fault circuit breaker
US6259340B1 (en) 1999-05-10 2001-07-10 General Electric Company Circuit breaker with a dual test button mechanism
US6104266A (en) * 1999-06-02 2000-08-15 General Electric Company Circuit breaker with trip indication arrangement
US6356426B1 (en) 1999-07-19 2002-03-12 General Electric Company Residential circuit breaker with selectable current setting, load control and power line carrier signaling
US6232857B1 (en) 1999-09-16 2001-05-15 General Electric Company Arc fault circuit breaker
US6466424B1 (en) 1999-12-29 2002-10-15 General Electric Company Circuit protective device with temperature sensing
US6678137B1 (en) 2000-08-04 2004-01-13 General Electric Company Temperature compensation circuit for an arc fault current interrupting circuit breaker
US6803535B1 (en) 2004-02-19 2004-10-12 Eaton Corporation Circuit breaker with a visual indication of a trip
US20060202785A1 (en) * 2005-03-11 2006-09-14 Eaton Corporation Trip indicator and electrical switching apparatus employing the same
US7135945B2 (en) 2005-03-11 2006-11-14 Eaton Corporation Trip indicator and electrical switching apparatus employing the same
US7569785B2 (en) 2005-05-16 2009-08-04 Eaton Corporation Electrical switching apparatus indicating status through panel aperture
US20060254893A1 (en) * 2005-05-16 2006-11-16 Eaton Corporation Electrical switching apparatus indicating status through panel aperture
US20070200652A1 (en) * 2006-02-24 2007-08-30 Eaton Corporation Electrical switching apparatus and trip indicator therefor
US7358838B2 (en) 2006-02-24 2008-04-15 Eaton Corporation Electrical switching apparatus and trip indicator therefor
US8866569B2 (en) * 2012-10-25 2014-10-21 Wenzhou New Blue Sky Electrical Co., Ltd. Pry plate tripping circuit breaker
US10460897B2 (en) * 2017-01-05 2019-10-29 Lsis Co., Ltd. Magnetic trip device for circuit breaker
US10522314B2 (en) * 2017-03-15 2019-12-31 Lsis Co., Ltd. Magnetic trip device for circuit breaker
US20190074153A1 (en) * 2017-09-07 2019-03-07 Carling Technologies, Inc. Circuit Interrupter With Status Indication
US10468219B2 (en) * 2017-09-07 2019-11-05 Carling Technologies, Inc. Circuit interrupter with status indication

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