Method of installing light fixture

09782875 · 2017-10-10

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    A method of installing a light fixture base to a surface is disclosed that employs an elongated tool that engages a mounting screw in rough alignment with an axis of the elongated member. The mounting screw and elongated tool are inserted through a mounting hole in the base and moved upward through thermal insulation in the base. The elongated tool is then manipulated while viewing both a tip end of the mounting screw and a threaded hole in a mounting bracket attached to a junction box so as to attach the mounting screw to the mounting bracket. The elongated tool then serves as a guide while sliding the base upward along the elongated tool so as to rapidly attach the base to a mounting screw in the mounting bracket.

    Claims

    1. A method of installing a light fixture, said method comprising the following steps: (a) insert an elongated tool, having a hollow portion at one end and a head of a mounting screw frictionally engaged by the hollow portion and with a tip end of the mounting screw extending outside the hollow portion, through a mounting hole in a base of a light fixture that is to be mounted to a support bracket of a junction box, as well as through a thermal insulation contained in the base until the tip end emerges above the thermal insulation; (b) while viewing both the tip end of the mounting screw and the support bracket, manipulate the elongated tool so as to insert the tip end within a threaded hole of the support bracket; (c) rotate the elongated tool so that the mounting screw engages the threaded hole; (d) slide the base up along the elongated tool until the mounting hole of the base is above the head of the mounting screw, the base having a mounting slot contiguous to the mounting hole that is larger in width than a shaft portion of the mounting screw but smaller than the head of the mounting screw; and (e) move the base so that the shaft portion of the mounting screw enters the mounting slot.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

    (1) FIG. 1 shows the method steps (a)-(e) of the present invention.

    (2) FIG. 2 illustrates an elongated tool that is used in the installation method of the present invention.

    (3) FIG. 3 illustrates a conventional electrical junction box when mounted within an octagonal opening in a surface, such as a ceiling.

    (4) FIG. 4 illustrates a conventional light fixture (that includes a globe and a base) that is to be mounted to a surface by attaching the base to the junction box shown in FIG. 3.

    (5) FIG. 5 illustrates two mounting holes, each with a slot contiguous thereto, that are in the base of the light fixture shown in FIG. 3 (as viewed from below, without the globe).

    (6) FIG. 6 illustrates a conventional mounting bracket, with threaded holes therein, that is used to mount a light fixture to the electrical junction box shown in FIG. 3.

    (7) FIG. 7 illustrates a pair of conventional machine screws that are used to attach the mounting bracket shown in FIG. 6 to the electrical junction box shown in FIG. 3 (using the outermost threaded holes shown in FIG. 6).

    (8) FIG. 8 illustrates a pair of conventional machine screws that are used to mount the base of the light fixture shown in FIG. 5 to the conventional mounting bracket shown in FIG. 6.

    (9) FIG. 9 is a vertical cross-sectional view of a hollow end portion of an elongated tool that frictionally engages a head of mounting screw in a region of the elongated tool where the head has caused the hollow end portion to expand due to the head being larger than the hollow end portion. FIG. 9 also illustrates the elongated tool shown in FIG. 2 when being used to install the base of a light fixture, which supports a thermal insulation, to a mounting bracket at the point in time: (a) after the elongated tool has been used to mount the mounting screw into a threaded hole in mounting bracket; (b) after the base has been raised along the elongated tool to a point where the mounting hole and its contiguous slot in the base are above the head of the mounting screw; and (c) after the base has been moved so that the elongated tool and shaft of the mounting screw enter that contiguous slot.

    (10) FIG. 10 is an enlarged view (corresponding roughly to actual size) of the mounting hole and contiguous slot in the base that are illustrated in the left part of FIG. 5. This figure shows an expanded portion of the elongated tool and the head of a frictionally engaged mounting screw as they pass through a mounting hole in the base, as viewed from below the base. This situation occurs both before each mounting screw has been mounted to the mounting bracket as well as afterwards.

    (11) FIG. 11 shows the same mounting hole and mounting slot in the base as illustrated in FIG. 10, but from a viewpoint above the base and at a point in time: (a) after the mounting screw has been mounted to the mounting bracket; (b) after the base has been raised along the elongated tool until the head of the mounting screw has passed below the mounting hole in the base; and (c) after the base has then been moved so that the shaft of the mounting screw has entered the mounting slot in the base that is contiguous to that mounting hole.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

    (12) FIG. 1 illustrates the steps (a)-(e) of the method of installing a light fixture according to the present invention.

    (13) FIG. 2 illustrates an elongated tool 1, having a hollow end portion 14, at one end that is used in the installation method of the present invention.

    (14) FIG. 3 illustrates a conventional electrical junction box 2 when mounted within an octagonal opening in a surface, such as a ceiling. (For clarity of illustration the electrical wiring of the junction box has been omitted from the figure.)

    (15) FIG. 4 illustrates a conventional light fixture, including a globe 3 and a base 4, that is to be mounted to a surface by attaching the base shown in FIG. 5 to the junction box shown in FIG. 3.

    (16) FIG. 5 illustrates two mounting holes 5 and 5′ in the base 4, each with a respective slot 6 and 6′ contiguous thereto, as viewed from below the base, without the globe.

    (17) FIG. 6 illustrates a conventional mounting bracket 7, with multiple pairs 8, 8′ of threaded holes therein.

    (18) FIG. 7 illustrates a pair of conventional machine screws 9, 9′ that are used to attach the mounting bracket shown in FIG. 6 to the electrical junction box shown in FIG. 3 using the outermost pair of threaded holes 8, 8′ shown in FIG. 6.

    (19) FIG. 8 illustrates a pair of conventional machine screws 10, 10′ having heads 11, 11′ shafts 12, 12′ and tip ends 13, 13′ that are used to mount the base of the light fixture shown in FIG. 5 to the conventional mounting bracket shown in FIG. 6. So as to enable the mounting bracket to accommodate different styles of light fixtures, it is not uncommon for the mounting bracket to include two pairs of threaded holes for mounting the base, but only a single pair is used for mounting a given style of light fixture.

    (20) FIG. 9 is a vertical cross-sectional view (corresponding roughly to actual size) of a hollow end portion 14 of an elongated tool 1 that frictionally engages a head 11 of mounting screw 10 in a region 15 of the elongated tool where the head has caused the hollow end portion to expand due to the head being larger than the hollow end portion. FIG. 9 also illustrates the elongated tool when being used to install the base 4 of a light fixture, that supports a thermal insulation 16, to a mounting bracket 7 at the point in time: (a) after the mounting tool has been used to mount the mounting screw into a threaded hole in the mounting bracket 14; (b) after the base has been raised along the elongated tool to a point where a slot 6 in the base is above the head of the mounting screw; and (c) after the base has been moved so that both the elongated tool 1 and the shaft 12 of the mounting screw have entered the slot 6.

    (21) FIG. 10 is an enlarged view (corresponding roughly to actual size) of the mounting hole 5 and contiguous slot 6 illustrated in FIG. 5. This figure also shows, from a viewpoint directly below the mounting hole in the base, an expanded portion 15 of the elongated tool and the head 11 of a frictionally engaged mounting screw as they pass through the mounting hole. This situation occurs both before and after each mounting screw shown in FIG. 8 has been attached to the mounting bracket. The first occurrence is after the elongated tool with a frictionally engaged mounting screw has been inserted into hole in the base from below and is being manipulated upward through a thermal insulation that is supported by the base, as well as after that mounting screw has been mounted to the mounting bracket and the base is raised upward along the elongated tool.

    (22) FIG. 11 shows (from a hypothetical viewpoint directly above the mounting slot 6 that assumes both the mounting bracket 7 of FIG. 9 and the thermal insulation 16 of FIG. 9 are invisible) the same mounting hole 5 and mounting slot 6 illustrated in FIG. 10. The orientation of the mounting slot relative to the mounting hole is different due to the viewing direction of FIG. 10 being upward versus that of FIG. 11 being downward. FIGS. 9 and 11 illustrate the interaction of components at a point in time: (a) after the mounting screw has been mounted to the mounting bracket; (b) after the base has been raised along the elongated tool until the head of the mounting screw has passed below the mounting hole; and (c) after the base has been moved so that the shaft 12 of the mounting screw has entered the mounting slot 6 by the installer moving the base.

    (23) Rather than installing the mounting screws in the mounting bracket with their heads lowermost, and then raising the base so that the mounting screw heads pass though mounting holes in the base, the present invention avoids these two steps.

    (24) According to the preferred embodiment of the present invention, once the electrical connections have been made, a first mounting screw is inserted, head-first, into an elongated tool that is hollow at one end. The elongated tool frictionally engages the head of the mounting screw and keeps its shaft in rough alignment with an axis of the elongated tool, leaving about ⅛″ of the shaft of the mounting screw sticking out from the elongated tool. The elongated tool is of a size that allows it (and the head of the mounting screw inserted within) to pass upward through the mounting hole of the base, and is of a length as to allow the installer (while holding the elongated tool from below the base), to manipulate the mounting screw's tip end into an appropriate threaded hole of the mounting bracket. This last-mentioned task is performed while viewing the base with the installer's eyes above the base. Thus, both the mounting screw's tip end and the threaded hole(s) in the mounting bracket are visible to the installer. Prior to this, while viewing from below the base, the tool with inserted mounting screw is guided by the installer into the mounting hole of the base and pushed upward through a hole or aperture in the insulation.

    (25) The installer then changes his view, (e.g., by standing higher on a ladder) so that the screw tip and the mounting hole(s) in the bracket are visible and takes the following actions:

    (26) (a) using the elongated tool, the installer guides the first mounting screw into an appropriate threaded mounting hole of the bracket, and rotates the elongated tool until the first mounting screw is secured in that mounting hole;

    (27) (b) the base is raised by sliding it along the elongated tool, with the elongated tool serving as a guide, until the head of the first mounting screw engaged by the elongated tool passes through the mounting hole in the base;

    (28) (c) the base is moved so that the elongated tool and shaft of the first mounting screw enter the contiguous mounting slot in the base;

    (29) (d) the elongated tool is disengaged from the first mounting screw by pulling sharply downward on the elongated tool; and

    (30) (e) the elongated tool is inserted once more into the same mounting hole of the base as before, so as to block the first mounting screw from re-occupying that space;

    (31) The first mounting screw may be left as is, partially tightened, or fully tightened prior to the installer beginning work pertaining to a second mounting screw so as to mount the base more securely than when a single mounting screw employed.

    (32) If the first mounting screw has been fully tightened so as to make the light fixture snug against the ceiling on one side of the base, the elongated tool can be removed from its blocking position and the above-mentioned process repeated for the second mounting screw using the same elongated tool. However, fully tightening the first mounting screw is not recommended, as the base will be more difficult to move when aligning the base to accept the second mounting screw through a second mounting hole.

    (33) If the first mounting screw has not been fully tightened, it is prudent to leave the elongated tool in its blocking position, and to use a second elongated tool, similar in shape and size to the first elongated tool, during the remainder of the installation process. Using two elongated tools as opposed to one is advantageous in that the second mounting screw may be initially screwed into the mounting bracket with there being additional space between the ceiling and the base, since the first mounting screw has not been tightened or has been only partially tightened. If a lateral force is needed in order to get the second mounting screw to align with a threaded hole in the mounting bracket (as is usually the case), it will be easier to install the base to the mounting bracket as a result of that extra space.

    (34) Once the second mounting screw has been inserted into an appropriate threaded hole in the mounting bracket and then rotated by a second elongated tool so that the threads of its engaged mounting screw engage the threads of that threaded hole, the light fixture base up can be slid upward along that elongated tool. Just as before, when sliding the base upward, the elongated tool occupies the space of the mounting hole in which it was first inserted, and thus guides the base to be in alignment so that the head of the mounted screw will pass through the mounting hole in the base once the base is raised sufficiently.

    (35) Moreover, when using the present method, in the event a lateral force is needed in order to get the second mounting screw's head through a mounting hole in the base, it is readily apparent to the installer in what direction the lateral force should be applied. Namely, once the second mounting screw has been screwed into a threaded hole in the mounting bracket by rotating the elongated tool which engages it, the lateral force should be applied to the base in a direction so as to make the elongated tool with its engaged mounting screw be roughly perpendicular to the surface of the mounting bracket.

    (36) Having described the invention, it will be readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention is equally advantageous when mounting a light fixture base to a surface other than a ceiling. Thus, “upward” and “above” are defined herein more broadly than in a dictionary. “Upward” is defined as—a direction toward the mounting surface—and “above” is defined as—a position nearer the mounting surface—. Likewise, “downward” is defined as—a direction away from the mounting surface—and “below” is defined as—a position more remote from the mounting surface—. Further, it will be readily apparent that the elongated tool(s) used in the method can be of various cross-sectional shapes (e.g., circular, triangular, square, pentagonal, hexagonal, etc.), the cross-section need not be the same over the length of the elongated tool(s), and it (they) can be made from various materials, such a extruded plastic, moulded plastic, paper, metal, and so on.