GFCI with voltage level comparison and indirect sampling
US-9118174-B2 · Aug 25, 2015 · US
US2016178691A1 · US · A1
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-2016178691-A1 |
| Application number | US-201414577086-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | A1 |
| Filing date | Dec 19, 2014 |
| Priority date | Dec 19, 2014 |
| Publication date | Jun 23, 2016 |
| Grant date | — |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A software code operates with a circuit interrupting device having an auto-monitoring circuit including a controller for automatically testing various functions and structures of the device. The auto-monitoring circuit initiates the software code which includes an auto-monitoring routine which, among other things, establishes a self-test fault during the positive or negative half-wave of an AC power cycle and determines whether the detection mechanisms within the device properly detect the self-test fault. Moreover, the software code executed by the controller compares sensed voltages from test signals with a determined or set maximum voltage value and compares the sensed voltages with a set or determined minimum voltage value. The sensed voltages must be greater than the maximum voltage value or lower than the minimum voltage value for a predetermined number of counts before an end-of-life state is determined for the circuit interrupting device. The number of counts reduces the likelihood of false detections of error conditions by the auto-monitoring circuit when determining whether the circuit interrupting device has reached the end of its useful life.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1 . A recordable medium on which software code is stored, the software code comprising: code for auto-monitoring an electrical wiring device; code for monitoring a test signal output from a fault detection circuit to determine an operational state of the electrical wiring device; code for determining an end-of-life state if the test signal from the fault detection circuit is less than a threshold value a first predetermined number of times within a first predetermined time period; and code for generating an alarm signal when the end-of-life state is determined. 2 . The recordable medium recited in claim 1 , including a programmable circuit device, and wherein the code for determining an end-of-life state determines an end-of-life state when the test signal from the fault detection circuit is greater than a maximum threshold value a second predetermined number of times within a second predetermined time period. 3 . The recordable medium recited in claim 1 , wherein the software code further comprises: code for monitoring an output signal from a contacts sensing device; and code for determining whether the electrical wiring device is in a tripped state in which an AC power signal is prevented from being delivered to a load, or in a reset state in which the AC power signal is delivered to the load based on the output signal from the contacts sensing device. 4 . The recordable medium recited in claim 2 , wherein the software code further comprises: code for determining, in the programmable circuit device, a frequency associated with the AC power signal based on an evaluation of the test signal; code for delaying the auto-monitoring program if the frequency associated with the AC power signal is not stable; and code for incrementing a fail tally if the frequency associated with the AC power signal does not stabilize to within a predetermined range of frequencies within a predetermined period of time. 5 . The recordable medium recited in claim 1 , wherein the software code further comprises: code for checking the supply voltage level of one or more electrical components of the electrical wiring device; code for initializing a watch dog timer function in a processing device of the electrical wiring device; code for activating one or more input or output ports of the processing device. 6 . The recordable medium recited in claim 1 , wherein the software code further comprises: code for detecting an edge of a line input voltage signal; code for determining a frequency of the line input signal based on a relative timing of the detected edge. 7 . An electrical wiring device comprising: a processing device having stored software code; an interrupting device electrically connecting one or more line terminals to one or more load terminals when the circuit interrupting device is in a reset condition and disconnecting the line terminals from the load terminals when the circuit interrupting device is in a tripped condition; and a fault detection circuit that detects a fault condition in the circuit interrupting device and generates a fault detection signal when the fault condition is detected, the fault detection signal being provided to the interrupting device to place the circuit interrupting device in the tripped condition, wherein the stored software code includes code for setting one or more input/output (I/O) ports of the processing device to either an input port or an output port, and wherein the stored software code includes code for determining an end-of-life state if a test signal from the fault detection circuit is less than a threshold value a predetermined number of times within a predetermined time period, and code for generating an alarm signal when the end-of-life state is determined. 8 . The electrical wiring device claimed in claim 7 , further comprising: an auto-monitoring circuit including the processing device electrically coupled to the fault detection circuit and the interrupting device and continuously monitoring one or more signals to determine an operating state of the electrical wiring device. 9 . The electrical wiring device claimed in claim 8 , wherein the software code of the processing device further includes: code for initiating at least one self-test timer having a respective timing variable for enabling the software code to operate different processing functions at different timing requirements. 10 . The electrical wiring device claimed in claim 9 , wherein the software code of the processing device further includes: code for initializing an analog-to-digital (A2D) converter in the processing device. 11 . A method for auto-monitoring a ground fault circuit interrupter device comprising the steps of: monitoring a test signal output from a fault detection circuit to determine an operational state of the electrical wiring device; determining an end-of-life state if the test signal from the fault detection circuit is less than a minimum threshold value for a first predetermined number of testing times within a first predetermined time period; determining the end-of-life state if the test signal from the fault detection circuit is greater than a maximum threshold value for a second predetermined number of testing times within a second predetermined time period; and generating an alarm signal when the end-of-life state is determined. 12 . The method claimed in claim 11 , further comprising: monitoring an output signal from a contacts sensing device; and based on the output signal from the contacts sensing device, determining whether the electrical wiring device is in a tripped state in which an AC power signal is prevented from being delivered to a load, or in a reset state in which the AC power signal is delivered to the load. 13 . The method claimed in claim 12 , further comprising: determining, in the programmable circuit device, a frequency associated with the AC power signal based on an evaluation of the test signal; delaying the auto-monitoring program if the frequency associated with the AC power signal is not stable; and incrementing a fail tally if the frequency associated with the AC power signal does not stabilize to within a predetermined range of frequencies within a third predetermined period of time. 14 . The method claimed in claim 13 , further comprising: checking the supply voltage level of one or more electrical components of the electrical wiring device; initializing a watch dog timer function in a processing device of the electrical wiring device; activating one or more input or output ports of the processing device; detecting an edge of a line input voltage signal; and determining a frequency of the line input signal based on a relative timing of the detected edge. 15 . The method claimed in claim 11 , further comprising: checking the supply voltage level of one or more electrical components of the electrical wiring device; initializing a watch dog timer function in a processing device of the electrical wiring device; activating one or more input or output ports of the processing device; detecting an edge of a line input voltage signal; and determining a frequency of the line input signal based on a relative timing of the detected edge.
Testing of circuit interrupters, switches or circuit-breakers · CPC title
Testing of electronic protection circuits (testing switches G01R31/327; checking alarm systems G08B29/00; self test of summation current transformers H02H3/335) · CPC title
for AC systems · CPC title
Built-in tests · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.