Obstruction lighting system configured to emit visible and infrared light
10532824 ยท 2020-01-14
Assignee
Inventors
- Steven V. Ricca (Upper Arlington, OH, US)
- Lon E. Rhoades (Springfield, OH, US)
- Jeffrey A. Jacobs (Galloway, OH, US)
- Richard C. Mula (Westlake Village, CA, US)
- Brian J. Hockensmith (Columbus, OH, US)
- Michael A. Forhan (Urbana, OH, US)
Cpc classification
F21V23/009
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V23/003
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21W2111/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/89
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21S2/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21Y2115/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V7/28
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/70
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F21S2/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A lighting system includes a first light assembly that is configured to emit light periodically. The lighting system further includes a second light assembly that is spaced apart from the first light assembly, the second light assembly also being configured to emit light periodically. The periodic light emitted by the first and second light assemblies is synchronized such that the first and second light assemblies operate in unison to form a single light source.
Claims
1. A lighting system, comprising: a first light assembly configured to emit light periodically at a predetermined flashrate; a second light assembly spaced apart from the first light assembly, the second light assembly being configured to emit light periodically; a light sensor configured to detect light emitted by the first light assembly; and a controller coupled to the light sensor, the controller controlling the periodic light emissions of the second light assembly such that the light emissions of the second light assembly are slaved to the light emissions of the first light assembly, the light emissions of the second light assembly turning on and off at substantially the same times as the light emissions of the first light assembly, the first and second light assemblies operating in unison to form a single light source.
2. The lighting system of claim 1, further including a mounting bracket having a first and a second, opposing end extending between the first and the second light assemblies.
3. The lighting system of claim 2 wherein: the first light assembly further includes a mounting base; the first end of the mounting bracket is coupled to the mounting base; and the second light assembly is attached to the second end of the mounting bracket.
4. The lighting system of claim 3, further comprising: mounting hardware to selectably couple the mounting base to the first end of the mounting bracket; and at least one generally L-shaped aperture formed in the first end of the mounting bracket, the aperture being configured to receive the mounting hardware without removal of said mounting hardware from the mounting base.
5. The lighting system of claim 2 wherein the mounting bracket comprises: a generally planar first member; and a generally tubular second member attached to the first member and oriented generally perpendicularly with respect to the first member.
6. The lighting system of claim 5 wherein the second member is adjustably attached to the first member.
7. The lighting system of claim 1 wherein: the first light assembly emits visible light; and the second light assembly emits infrared light.
8. The lighting system of claim 7, wherein: the second light assembly further includes a reflector having a light-reflecting surface; and the light-reflecting surface of the reflector is coated with gold.
9. The lighting system of claim 1, further including a light discriminator configured to disable the second light assembly during daylight hours.
10. The lighting system of claim 1 wherein at least one of the first and second light assemblies comprises light emitting diodes.
11. The lighting system of claim 10, further including driver electronics to operate the light emitting diodes, the driver electronics being spaced apart from the light emitting diodes, thereby thermally isolating the driver electronics from the light emitting diodes.
12. The lighting system of claim 1, further including an alarm configured to provide an alerting signal upon detection of a fault in at least one of the first and second light assemblies.
13. The lighting system of claim 12 wherein the second light assembly comprises light emitting diodes, the alarm being configured to detect at least one of an open-circuit and a short-circuit condition in the light emitting diodes.
14. A lighting system, comprising: a first light assembly configured to emit light periodically at a predetermined flashrate; a second light assembly spaced apart from the first light assembly, the second light assembly being configured to emit light periodically; a mounting bracket having a generally planar first member and a generally tubular second member attached to the first member and oriented generally perpendicularly with respect to the first member, the second light assembly being coupled to the second member; a light sensor configured to detect light emitted by the first light assembly; and a controller coupled to the light sensor, the controller controlling the periodic light emissions of the second light assembly such that the light emissions of the second light assembly are slaved to the light emissions of the first light assembly, the light emissions of the second light assembly turning on and off at substantially the same times as the light emissions of the first light assembly, the first and second light assemblies operating in unison to form a single light source.
15. A method for providing lighting, comprising the steps of: configuring a first light assembly to emit light periodically at a predetermined flashrate; spacing a second light assembly apart from the first light assembly; configuring the second light assembly to emit light periodically; configuring a light sensor to detect light emitted by the first light assembly; and coupling a controller to the light sensor, the controller controlling the periodic light emissions of the second light assembly such that the light emissions of the second light assembly are slaved to the light emissions of the first light assembly, the light emissions of the second light assembly turning on and off at substantially the same times as the light emissions of the first light assembly, the first and second light assemblies operating in unison to form a single light source.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Further features of the inventive embodiments will become apparent to those skilled in the art to which the embodiments relate from reading the specification and claims with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(11) The general arrangement of an obstruction lighting system 10 configured to emit both visible and infrared light is shown in
(12) A mounting bracket 16 couples second light assembly 14 to a mounting base 15 of first light assembly 12 and also provides a mounting point for the second light assembly that positions the second light assembly with respect to the first light assembly.
(13) Details of an example first light assembly 12 are shown in
(14) Details of an example second light assembly 14 are shown in
(15) The infrared light 24 may be steady-burning or may flash at a predetermined flashrate and ON-OFF duty cycle. Second light assembly 14 may include at least some of the features of U.S. Pat. No. 9,016,896, which is commonly owned by the present applicant and is expressly incorporated by reference herein.
(16) In some embodiments thermal management of IRLEDs 26 is applied such that heat is spread generally evenly to a supporting metal heat sink 30 that is in thermal communication with the IRLEDs. Preferably, driver electronics 32 for powering IRLEDs 26 are thermally isolated from the IRLEDs, such as being located under the IRLEDs within a housing 33 or remotely located so the driver electronics do not gain heat from the IRLEDs. A similar arrangement may be utilized for visible-light LEDs 20.
(17) With reference to
(18) Mounting bracket 16 may be made from any suitable materials including, without limitation, steel, stainless steel, titanium, aluminum, composite and polymer materials and may be formed using any suitable processes including, without limitation, casting, machining, spinning, stamping, forming, molding and forging. Surfaces of the components of mounting bracket 16 may be prepared and treated in any suitable manner, or may be left unfinished. Non-limiting example treatments include any of painting, plastic coating, powder coating, hot-dip galvanizing, plating, dyes, polishing, and molded-in colors. In addition, at least some of the various components of mounting bracket 16 may be formed as an assembly of separate components and joined together, or may be made as a single unitary piece. The components of mounting bracket 16 may be heat treated and/or shot peened as appropriate for the materials selected for the components of the mounting bracket.
(19) With reference again to
(20) Mounting bracket 16 is preferably configured such that it can be installed without complete removal of mounting hardware 40 (
(21) Mounting bracket 16 is preferably further configured to allow electrical wiring (not shown) for second light assembly 14 to pass through second bracket portion 36 without obstructing the visible light output from first light assembly 12.
(22) As previously noted, first light assembly 12 and/or second light assembly 14 may be configured to be steady-burning or to flash at one or more predetermined flashrate and/or duty cycles. In one embodiment first light assembly 12 and second light assembly 14 flash independently of one another. In another embodiment the flashing of first light assembly 12 and second light assembly 14 may be controlled by a controller 54, shown in
(23) In some embodiments controller 54 may monitor first light assembly 12 and/or second light assembly 14 for faults including, but not limited to, failures of LEDs 20 and IRLEDs 26. Example failures include, without limitation, an open-circuit and a short-circuit condition in the light emitting diodes. Upon detection of faults controller 54 may activate one or more alarms 56, which may be local and/or remote to system 10, the alarm providing an alerting signal to alert service personnel of the faults.
(24) Alarm 56 may be a separate component, or may be partially or fully combined with controller 54. Alternatively, alarm 56 may be partially or fully incorporated into either or both of first light assembly 12 and second light assembly 14, with or without portions or all of controller 54.
(25) With reference to
(26) Light sensor 58 may be any suitable type of light sensor positioned to receive light emitted by visible-light LEDs 20. Examples include, without limitation, variable-resistance photocells such as cadmium sulfide photocells, photo-transistors, and photo-diodes.
(27) A light discriminator 66 may be coupled to controller 54 to evaluate synchronization signal 60 and enable the controller to ignore the synchronization signal. As a non-limiting example, light discriminator 66 may monitor for invalid or unchanging-state synchronization signals 60 and enable controller 54 via a light discriminator signal 68 to ignore the synchronization signal. In one embodiment light discriminator 66 is configured to deter an LED driver 64 from turning on IRLEDs 26 during daylight hours.
(28) In still another embodiment, shown in
(29) In still another embodiment, shown in
(30) Although controller 54 is shown as a separate component in the several Figures, it will be appreciated that the control may be made part of either first light assembly 12 or second light assembly 14. Alternatively, portions of controller 54 may be incorporated into any or all of first light assembly 12, second light assembly 14 and an assembly or assemblies that are separate from the first and second light assemblies. In still other embodiments synchronization signals may be generated by either or both first light assembly 12 and second light assembly 14 and supplied directly to the other without a controller.
(31) While this invention has been shown and described with respect to a detailed embodiment thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that changes in form and detail thereof may be made without departing from the scope of the claims of the invention.