US2822460A - Electrical heating devices - Google Patents

Electrical heating devices Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2822460A
US2822460A US505413A US50541355A US2822460A US 2822460 A US2822460 A US 2822460A US 505413 A US505413 A US 505413A US 50541355 A US50541355 A US 50541355A US 2822460 A US2822460 A US 2822460A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
conductors
heating
conductor
resistance
terminal
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
US505413A
Inventor
Goldstaub Henry Herbert
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
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 Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US505413A priority Critical patent/US2822460A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2822460A publication Critical patent/US2822460A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B3/00Ohmic-resistance heating
    • H05B3/40Heating elements having the shape of rods or tubes
    • H05B3/54Heating elements having the shape of rods or tubes flexible
    • H05B3/56Heating cables
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B3/00Ohmic-resistance heating
    • H05B3/40Heating elements having the shape of rods or tubes
    • H05B3/54Heating elements having the shape of rods or tubes flexible
    • H05B3/56Heating cables
    • H05B3/565Heating cables flat cables

Definitions

  • This invention relates to electrical heating cables and is concerned with cables intended for contact heating produced by winding the cable or otherwise physically applying the device to the object to be heated.
  • a flexible electrical heating cable including two continuously extending conductors and at least one heating resistance wire, the conductors and the resistance wire being electrically insulated from each other.
  • the two conductors act as bus bars, the conductors being connected at one end to the mains or to a similar flexible electrical heating device and the heating resistance Wire being connected between the bus bars.
  • Figure l is a perspective view of a flexible electrical heating cable joined to two connectors, one of the connectors being shown with its cover removed, and,
  • Figure 2 is a section on the line 22 of Figure 1.
  • this embodiment of the heating cable takes the form of a moulded cable of flattened cross-section.
  • the cable is flexible to enable it to be wrapped around an object to be heated and extending throughout the length of the cable are two conducting wires 1 and 2.
  • Between the conductors 1 and 2 are heating resistance wires 3 and 4.
  • Both the conductors 1 and 2 and the resistance wires 3 and 4 are moulded into the insulation 5 of the cable, such insulation 5 being chosen so as to withstand the temperatures at which the heating device is operated.
  • Various plastic materials have been found suitable in regard to their flexibility, electrical insulation properties, their mechanical and chemical suitability and heat resistance at the particular temperature at which a cable might be desired to operate.
  • the heating device has the insulation at each end removed to reveal the two conductors 1 and 2 and the heating resistance wires 3 and 4. At one end of the heating device the conductors 1 and 2 and the resistance wires 3 and 4 are joined to a conductor 6, whilst at the other end they are joined to a connector 7.
  • the connector 7 is similar in construction to the connector 6 and for the sake of simplicity only the detailed construction of the connector 7 is shown in Figure 1.
  • the connector 7 has two pairs of terminals 3 and 9, each terminal in one pair being permanently connected to a terminal in the other pair by a bar 10.
  • the conductor 2 is secured to one of the terminals 8, whilst the conductor 1 and the resistance wires 3 and 4 are connected to the other terminal 8.
  • The'wires and the conductors are held securely in position by a fixing bar 11 which is carried on two screws 12, it being possible to tighten the bar 11 by means of the screws 12.
  • a similar fixing bar is associated with the other pair of terminals 9.
  • the top of the connector 7 is shown as removed from the base thereof, so as to disclose the construction of the connector, but the top of the connector can be secured to the base by means of bolts passing through the holes 13.
  • Figure 1 also shows one end of another similar flexible electrical heating device, in which one of the conductors is secured by itself to the terminal 9 which is permanently connected by a bar It) to the terminal 3 to which the resistance wires 3 and 4 are connected.
  • the two resistance wires and the other conductor of this further heating device are connected to the terminal 9 to which the terminal 8 having only the conductor 2 connected thereto is permanently connected by one of the bars 10.
  • the conductors and the resistance wires of this further heating device are connected to the terminals 9 in the reverse arrangement to which the conductor and the resistance wires of the firstmentioned heating device are connected to the terminals 8.
  • a similar reverse arrangement of the unshown ends of the conductors and the resistance wires of the firstmentioned heating device is effected in the connector 6, but is not shown in the drawings for the sake of simplicity.
  • the two conductors 1 and 2 act as bus bars and the resistance wires 3 and 4 are con nected in parallel therebetween.
  • the resistance wires in the flexible heating device between the connectors 6 and 7 are connected in parallel with the resistance wire of the heating device which is shown as being fixed to the terminals 5 of the connector 7.
  • a flexible electrical heating cable comprising two co-extensive low-resistance conductors, at least one higherresistance, co-extensive conductor serving as a heating resistance element, a single mass of thermoplastic insulating material in which all the conductors are embedded and spaced apart throughout the length of the cable, a first terminal secured to one end of one of the low-resistance conductors and the adjacent end of the higher-resistance conductor, a second terminal secured to the adjacent end of the other low-resistance conductor, and an electrical connection between the higher-resistance conductor and said other low-resistance conductor situated at the end remote from the aforementioned ends.
  • a flexible electrical heating cable comprising two co-extensive low-resistance conductors, at least one higherresistance, co-extensive conductor serving as a heating resistance element, a single mass of thermoplastic insulating material in which all the conductors are embedded and spaced apart throughout the length of the cable, a first terminal secured to one end of one of the low-resistance conductors and the adjacent end of said higher-resistance conductor,- a second terminal secured to the adjacent end of the other low-resistance conductor, an electrical connection between the higher-resistance conductor and said other low-resistance conductor situated at the other end of the cable, a third terminal, a connection between said first terminal and said third terminal, a fourth terminal, and a connection between said fourth'terminal and said second terminal.

Landscapes

  • Resistance Heating (AREA)

Description

- Feb. 4, 1958 H. H. GOLDSTAUB ELECTRICAL HEATING DEVICES Filed May 2, 1955 United States Patent ELECTRICAL HEATING DEVICES Henry Herbert Goldstaub, Chigwell, England Application May 2, 1955, Serial No. 505,413
Claims. (Cl. 219-46) This invention relates to electrical heating cables and is concerned with cables intended for contact heating produced by winding the cable or otherwise physically applying the device to the object to be heated.
It is frequently required that objects such as pipe-lines, should be warmed or heated, and it is convenient to use an electrical heater than can be wrapped around the pipeline. It is an object of the invention to devise a flexible heating cable which can be wrapped around objects to be heated and which can be readily joined to similar heating cables or otherwise readily modified to meet various arising needs.
In accordance with the invention there is provided a flexible electrical heating cable including two continuously extending conductors and at least one heating resistance wire, the conductors and the resistance wire being electrically insulated from each other. The two conductors act as bus bars, the conductors being connected at one end to the mains or to a similar flexible electrical heating device and the heating resistance Wire being connected between the bus bars.
For a better understanding of the invention one embodiment thereof will now be described in greater detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure l is a perspective view of a flexible electrical heating cable joined to two connectors, one of the connectors being shown with its cover removed, and,
Figure 2 is a section on the line 22 of Figure 1.
As will be apparent from Figure 2, this embodiment of the heating cable takes the form of a moulded cable of flattened cross-section. The cable is flexible to enable it to be wrapped around an object to be heated and extending throughout the length of the cable are two conducting wires 1 and 2. Between the conductors 1 and 2 are heating resistance wires 3 and 4. Both the conductors 1 and 2 and the resistance wires 3 and 4 are moulded into the insulation 5 of the cable, such insulation 5 being chosen so as to withstand the temperatures at which the heating device is operated. Various plastic materials have been found suitable in regard to their flexibility, electrical insulation properties, their mechanical and chemical suitability and heat resistance at the particular temperature at which a cable might be desired to operate. The heating device has the insulation at each end removed to reveal the two conductors 1 and 2 and the heating resistance wires 3 and 4. At one end of the heating device the conductors 1 and 2 and the resistance wires 3 and 4 are joined to a conductor 6, whilst at the other end they are joined to a connector 7. The connector 7 is similar in construction to the connector 6 and for the sake of simplicity only the detailed construction of the connector 7 is shown in Figure 1.
The connector 7 has two pairs of terminals 3 and 9, each terminal in one pair being permanently connected to a terminal in the other pair by a bar 10. The conductor 2 is secured to one of the terminals 8, whilst the conductor 1 and the resistance wires 3 and 4 are connected to the other terminal 8. The'wires and the conductors are held securely in position by a fixing bar 11 which is carried on two screws 12, it being possible to tighten the bar 11 by means of the screws 12. A similar fixing bar is associated with the other pair of terminals 9. In Figure 1 the top of the connector 7 is shown as removed from the base thereof, so as to disclose the construction of the connector, but the top of the connector can be secured to the base by means of bolts passing through the holes 13. Figure 1 also shows one end of another similar flexible electrical heating device, in which one of the conductors is secured by itself to the terminal 9 which is permanently connected by a bar It) to the terminal 3 to which the resistance wires 3 and 4 are connected. The two resistance wires and the other conductor of this further heating device, are connected to the terminal 9 to which the terminal 8 having only the conductor 2 connected thereto is permanently connected by one of the bars 10. In other words, the conductors and the resistance wires of this further heating device are connected to the terminals 9 in the reverse arrangement to which the conductor and the resistance wires of the firstmentioned heating device are connected to the terminals 8. A similar reverse arrangement of the unshown ends of the conductors and the resistance wires of the firstmentioned heating device is effected in the connector 6, but is not shown in the drawings for the sake of simplicity.
It will be apparent that the two conductors 1 and 2 act as bus bars and the resistance wires 3 and 4 are con nected in parallel therebetween. t will also be seen that the resistance wires in the flexible heating device between the connectors 6 and 7 are connected in parallel with the resistance wire of the heating device which is shown as being fixed to the terminals 5 of the connector 7.
It will be obvious that by appropriately connecting the two resistance wires between the two conductors the two resistance wires can be brought into series and that, by employing a number of similar flexible electrical heating devices, the ends of one of which are connected to the mains, various local heating effects may be obtained. It will also be clear that by increasing the number of resistance wires in one of the heating devices, the different possibilities of parallel and series connection thereof between the bus bars will be increased.
I claim:
1. in combination a first conductor, a second conductor co-extensive therewith, a first heating resistance wire, the resistance wire being co-extensive with the first and second conductors, insulation separately enclosing the first and second conductors and the first heating resistance wire to form a first heating cable, a first terminal located at one end of said first heating cable and secured to said first heating resistance wire and said first conductor, a second terminal located at said one end and secured to said second conductor, a third conductor, a fourth conductor co-extensive therewith, a second heating resistance wire, the latter resistance wire being co-extensive with the third and fourth conductors, insulation separately enclosing the third and fourth conductors and the second heating resistance wire to form a second heating cable, a third terminal located at one end of said second heating cable and secured to said second resistance wire and to said third conductor, a fourth terminal located at said one end of said second heating cable and secured to said fourth conductor, a first connection between said first terminal and said fourth terminal, and a second connection between said second terminal and said third terminal.
2. In combination, a first conductor, a second conductor co-extensive therewith, a first heating resistance wire coextensive with the first and second conductors, insulation separately enclosing the first and second conductors and the first heating resistance wire to form a first heating cable, a third conductor connected in end-to-end relationship with the first conductor to form therewith a first bus bar, a fourth conductor co-extensive with the third conductor and similarly connected in end-to-end relationship with the second conductor to'form therewith a second bus bar, a second heating resistance wire co-extensive with the third and fourth conductors, insulation separately enclosing the third and fourth conductors and the second heating resistance wire to form a second heating cable, and electrical connections between the resistance wires and conductors such that the wires are effectively connected in parallel with one another across the bus bars.
3. The combination according to claim 2, wherein in each cable the conductors and wire are all embedded in a single mass of thermoplastic insulating material which spaces the conductors and wire apart throughout the length of the cable.
4. A flexible electrical heating cable, comprising two co-extensive low-resistance conductors, at least one higherresistance, co-extensive conductor serving as a heating resistance element, a single mass of thermoplastic insulating material in which all the conductors are embedded and spaced apart throughout the length of the cable, a first terminal secured to one end of one of the low-resistance conductors and the adjacent end of the higher-resistance conductor, a second terminal secured to the adjacent end of the other low-resistance conductor, and an electrical connection between the higher-resistance conductor and said other low-resistance conductor situated at the end remote from the aforementioned ends.
5. A flexible electrical heating cable, comprising two co-extensive low-resistance conductors, at least one higherresistance, co-extensive conductor serving as a heating resistance element, a single mass of thermoplastic insulating material in which all the conductors are embedded and spaced apart throughout the length of the cable, a first terminal secured to one end of one of the low-resistance conductors and the adjacent end of said higher-resistance conductor,- a second terminal secured to the adjacent end of the other low-resistance conductor, an electrical connection between the higher-resistance conductor and said other low-resistance conductor situated at the other end of the cable, a third terminal, a connection between said first terminal and said third terminal, a fourth terminal, and a connection between said fourth'terminal and said second terminal.
Referenee's Cited in the file of this atent UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,075,686 Wiegand Mar. 30, 1937 2,451,839 Lemon Oct. 19, 1948 2,5 2-l,540 Richardson Sept. 5 1950 2,529,914 Challenner Nov. 14, 1950 2,569,961 Tidd Oct. 2, 19 51 2,585,443 COX Feb. 12, 1 952
US505413A 1955-05-02 1955-05-02 Electrical heating devices Expired - Lifetime US2822460A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US505413A US2822460A (en) 1955-05-02 1955-05-02 Electrical heating devices

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US505413A US2822460A (en) 1955-05-02 1955-05-02 Electrical heating devices

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2822460A true US2822460A (en) 1958-02-04

Family

ID=24010204

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US505413A Expired - Lifetime US2822460A (en) 1955-05-02 1955-05-02 Electrical heating devices

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2822460A (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3214571A (en) * 1963-05-27 1965-10-26 William J Indoe Heating cable and connectors therefor
US3341690A (en) * 1965-01-13 1967-09-12 Northern Electric Co Heater cable assembly
US3959622A (en) * 1974-01-04 1976-05-25 Alexei Alexeevich Bogdanov Flexible electric heater element
FR2599115A1 (en) * 1986-05-26 1987-11-27 Aaa Telec Device for heating by means of electrical resistors, intended particularly for preventing fluid-conveying pipes from freezing
FR2683419A1 (en) * 1991-10-31 1993-05-07 Aaa Telec Modular heating system with electrical heating lead(s)

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2075686A (en) * 1935-09-07 1937-03-30 Edwin L Wiegand Heating
US2451839A (en) * 1944-02-15 1948-10-19 Tenaplas Ltd Electrical conductor
US2521540A (en) * 1946-09-17 1950-09-05 Max C Richardson Prefabricated panel and warming means therefor
US2529914A (en) * 1950-06-22 1950-11-14 Denison Mattress Factory Electrical heating element
US2569961A (en) * 1950-05-19 1951-10-02 Us Rubber Co Radiant heating installation
US2585443A (en) * 1949-03-15 1952-02-12 Duncan B Cox Electric heating unit

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2075686A (en) * 1935-09-07 1937-03-30 Edwin L Wiegand Heating
US2451839A (en) * 1944-02-15 1948-10-19 Tenaplas Ltd Electrical conductor
US2521540A (en) * 1946-09-17 1950-09-05 Max C Richardson Prefabricated panel and warming means therefor
US2585443A (en) * 1949-03-15 1952-02-12 Duncan B Cox Electric heating unit
US2569961A (en) * 1950-05-19 1951-10-02 Us Rubber Co Radiant heating installation
US2529914A (en) * 1950-06-22 1950-11-14 Denison Mattress Factory Electrical heating element

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3214571A (en) * 1963-05-27 1965-10-26 William J Indoe Heating cable and connectors therefor
US3341690A (en) * 1965-01-13 1967-09-12 Northern Electric Co Heater cable assembly
US3959622A (en) * 1974-01-04 1976-05-25 Alexei Alexeevich Bogdanov Flexible electric heater element
FR2599115A1 (en) * 1986-05-26 1987-11-27 Aaa Telec Device for heating by means of electrical resistors, intended particularly for preventing fluid-conveying pipes from freezing
FR2683419A1 (en) * 1991-10-31 1993-05-07 Aaa Telec Modular heating system with electrical heating lead(s)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4327282A (en) Electrical resistance heating element
US3757086A (en) Electrical heating cable
US2585443A (en) Electric heating unit
ES281130Y (en) A LONG ELECTRIC HEATING DEVICE
KR930702770A (en) PTC Dummyster Heating Device
US3354292A (en) Pipe heating arrangement
US2822460A (en) Electrical heating devices
US3784784A (en) Hair curler heating device with electric resistance cable
US2797296A (en) Electric heater
US3476916A (en) Electrical heater
JPS61502918A (en) electric heater
US3740527A (en) Electric convector heater
US3621203A (en) Electric resistance heating cable
US2834867A (en) Resistance heating element
US995051A (en) Helical heater for tubes, &c.
US1699323A (en) Electric heater
US1240771A (en) Electric heating unit.
US1257339A (en) Flexible electric heater.
US1074928A (en) Electric heating element.
US1433465A (en) Electric heater
US957226A (en) Electric heater.
US918732A (en) Electric heating device.
US1898632A (en) Electrical heating element
US2871329A (en) Electrical resistance wire nets and terminals
US3806703A (en) Flexible electrical heating assembly