Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6254403
-
Patent Number
6,254,403
-
Date Filed
Friday, July 30, 199925 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, July 3, 200123 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Paumen; Gary
- Harvey; James
Agents
- Hauptman; Lowe
- Gilman & Berner
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 439 95
- 439 108
- 439 608
- 439 620
- 439 96
- 439 97
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
An assembly for selectively grounding one or more contacts of a connector includes an elongate ground insert having a resilient outer periphery for fixing and electrically connecting the ground insert to an inner wall of a rear portion of the connector, the ground insert including an inner wall forming a perimeter around and spaced from all of the back portions of the contacts of the connector, while the ground insert is fixed to and within the rear portion. The assembly includes an elongate grounding leg fastenable to an upper rim of the ground insert, the grounding leg including first and second spaced ends for respectively engaging the ground insert and a back portion of a selected contact to be grounded, to thereby electrically connect the selected contact to the rear portion through the grounding leg and the ground insert.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to electrical grounding devices, and more particularly, to such a device for selectively grounding one or more electrical contacts of an electrical connector.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
There often arises a need to electrically connect one or more electrical contacts of an electrical connector to a ground potential, and more specifically, to connect the one or more electrical contacts to a grounding site near or within the electrical connector. This need can arise during connector assembly or after connector assembly. After connector assembly, the need to ground one or more contacts can arise before connecting any electrical wires to the connector contacts, or after connecting wires to the connector contacts, as for example, in a fielded connector system.
One attempt to meet the described need is described in U.S. Pat. 5,290,191. The '191 patent discloses a device for grounding a contact in a commonly known, standardized type of electrical connector. The electrical connector includes a housing or connector shell and an insulating support fixed to and within the connector shell. A plurality of electrical contacts arranged in a predetermined pattern and in parallel spaced relation to each other extend through respective openings formed in the insulating support. Front ends or portions of the contacts respectively engage opposing contacts of a mating connector.
The device includes a grounding wafer or electrically conductive disc slidably inserted into a front shell portion of the connector, and thus between opposing front shells of mating connectors. An outer periphery of the disc includes conductive fingers engaging an inner surface of the grounded front shell of the connector to thus ground the disc. The disc includes a plurality of holes arranged in the same predetermined pattern as the contacts so as to receive the contact front portions while the disc is installed in the front shell of the connector. The holes and contacts are sized to provide a clearance gap between the contacts and the disc. However, to ground a selected contact, conductive fingers are bonded to the disc around the periphery of the hole corresponding to the selected contact. The fingers extend toward and into grounding contact with the front portion of the selected contact.
The device disclosed in the '191 patent has several disadvantages. Specifically, the disc thickness is limited to approximately {fraction (30/1000)} of an inch to prevent interference between mating connectors. This structural limitation results in increased fragility and decreased reliability of the device. Also, a given disc has a limited application or adaptability because it can only be used with a connector having a matching contact arrangement. Requiring different discs for different contact arrangements drives up the cost and complexity of the disclosed grounding technique because each different disc must be fabricated using expensive, circuit card fabrication techniques. Often, the need arises for a field technician to retrofit or modify the present grounding configuration of a connector. Such field modification using the disclosed disc is extremely difficult without the provision of a suitably modified replacement disc. Also, the disc is so fragile that proper installation/removal of the disc is difficult, disadvantageously requiring specialized equipment.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,169,323 discloses another technique for grounding a contact in an electrical connector. An integrally formed grounding member is sandwiched between a connector shell, a first insulating support and a second insulating support for the contacts. The grounding member includes a grounding clip embedded in the first insulating support and contacting the contact. Installing and/or removing the grounding member disadvantageously requires connector disassembly. Also, the grounding member can only be used in a connector having contacts sized and arranged within the connector shell to coincide with the fixed dimensions of the integrally formed grounding member. Similar to the grounding disc disclosed in the '191 Patent, the integrally formed grounding member is neither adjustable, nor readily adaptable to alternative contact arrangements.
Thus, a need still exists, after connector assembly, for a device and technique to ground the one or more connector contacts without disassembling the electrical connector, using a simple, robust, adaptable, cost effective and easily installed electrical grounding device.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to selectively ground one or more electrical contacts of an assembled electrical connector without disassembling the electrical connector and without requiring special modification of the connector.
Another object of the present invention is to selectively ground one or more electrical contacts of an assembled connector either before or after electrical wires are connected to the contacts.
Yet another object of the present invention is to selectively ground contacts of electrical connectors having different contact arrangements but equivalent connector inner rear portion configurations using a grounding assembly of the present invention.
A further object of the present invention is to selectively ground contacts of different connectors having different inner rear portion configurations, including, for example, standardized (i.e., off-the-shelf), circular, rectangular, oval, and other more complicated configurations.
An even further object of the present invention is to selectively ground contacts of a connector without interfering with a mating interface between the connector and a mating connector.
Another object of the present invention is to simply, quickly, and cost effectively selectively ground contacts of an electrical connector.
Yet another object of the present invention is to selectively ground contacts of a connector using a grounding assembly having an improved robustness relative to prior art grounding devices.
Another object of the present invention is to selectively ground contacts of a connector, and to modify the selective grounding of such contacts, using conveniently available, standardized tools, such as a screwdriver.
In accordance with the principles of the present invention, an assembly for selectively grounding one or more electrical contacts of a connector includes an elongate, continuously formed, electrically conductive ground insert configured to be inserted into and fixed within a connector rear portion. The ground insert includes a resilient outer periphery shaped to match an interior periphery of an inner wall of the connector rear portion. The outer periphery is sized and arranged to resiliently and frictionally engage the rear portion inner wall to thereby fix and electrically connect the ground insert to the inner wall. The ground insert includes an inner periphery defining a perimeter around and spaced from all of a plurality of contact back portions partially housed within the connector rear portion. The same ground insert can advantageously be used with different connectors having different contact arrangements but the same rear portion interior shape and size because the different contact arrangements do not interfere with the ground insert. The ground insert, including a rigid metal frame and a resilient metal conductor retained by the frame, is simple, yet robust, in construction. An alternative arrangement of the ground insert includes a split configuration of the ground insert having substantially identical halves that together form the above described ground insert inner and outer peripheries. The split configuration advantageously permits a user to install the ground insert into a rear portion after wires are connected to the contact back portions.
The assembly also includes a simple and sturdy, electrically conductive, grounding bridge or leg having first and second spaced ends respectively fastenable to the ground insert and a contact back portion to establish an electrical connection between the contact and the rear portion through the grounding leg and the ground insert. The first end of the grounding leg is fastened to the ground insert using a simple fastening device, such as a screw, which is conveniently installed/removed using a screwdriver. The first end of the grounding leg includes an elongate hole for receiving the screw, and to automatically compensate for variations in the separation between the contact back portion and the rear portion inner wall. An opening in the rear portion provides convenient access to the rear portion interior and to the contact back portions to enable easy initial installation, retrofits, and removal of the assembly by a user of the assembly, without disassembly of the connector itself.
The foregoing objects are also achieved by an assembly for selectively grounding at least one electrical contact of an electrical connector to a rear portion of the connector, the connector including a plurality of electrical contact back portions at least partially housed within the rear portion and accessible through an opening in the rear portion. The assembly comprises an electrically conductive ground insert including an outer periphery sized and shaped to engage an inner wall of the rear portion to thereby fasten and electrically connect the ground insert to the rear portion. The assembly also includes an electrically conductive grounding leg having first and second spaced ends adapted and arranged to be respectively fastened to the ground insert and a back portion of the at least one electrical contact to thereby provide an electrical ground path between the electrical contact and the rear portion of the connector. A fastener is used to fasten the first end of the grounding leg to the ground insert while the ground insert is fastened to the connector rear portion.
The foregoing objects are also achieved by an assembly comprising an electrically conductive ground insert that includes an annular frame having a cylindrically shaped inner wall defining a circumferential perimeter around and spaced from a plurality of contact back portions. The frame defines a circumferentially extending outer channel and a side slot, and includes an upper rim accessible through the rear portion opening while the ground insert is within the rear portion. The upper rim includes at least one aperture. The assembly also includes a circumferentially extending resilient fastener which includes a retained portion and a resilient skirt contiguous with the retained portion. The retained portion is compressively retained within the channel and entrapped within the channel by the frame, and the resilient skirt extends through and beyond the side slot of the frame to form a resilient, circumferentially extending, outer periphery of the ground insert. The resilient outer periphery is adapted and arranged to resiliently engage the inner wall of the connector to thereby fix and electrically connect the ground insert to the rear portion inner wall. The assembly also includes an electrically conductive grounding leg having an elongate body and including a first end and a second end spaced from the first end. The first end includes an elongate through aperture, and the second end includes an apertured spring grip mechanism for resiliently engaging and electrically contacting a contact back portion of the at least one contact. The assembly also includes a threaded fastener for fastening the grounding leg to the ground insert to complete an electrical grounding path between the contact back portion and the rear portion through the grounding leg. The elongate through aperture of the grounding leg is sized to receive the fastener, and the at least one aperture of the ground insert is sized to receive the threaded fastener such that the threaded fastener threadingly engages the ground insert to thereby fasten the first end of the grounding leg to the ground insert.
The foregoing objects are also achieved by an a connector and grounding assembly comprising a connector that includes a connector housing. The connector housing includes a connector rear portion having an inner wall defining a rear portion interior and an opening into the rear portion interior. The connector also includes an insulating support fixed to and within the connector housing and a plurality of electrical contacts fixed in position by the insulating support. Each of the electrical contacts includes a contact back portion, commonly referred to as a contact wire bucket, extending away from the insulating support and into the rear portion interior, and the contact back portions are positioned in spaced parallel relation to each other and the connector rear portion inner wall. The assembly also includes an electrical contact grounding assembly including an electrically conductive ground insert having an outer periphery sized and shaped to engage the rear portion inner wall to thereby fasten and electrically connect the ground insert to the rear portion. The contact grounding assembly also includes an electrically conductive grounding leg having first and second spaced ends adapted and arranged to be respectively fastened to the ground insert and a back portion of one of the electrical contacts to thereby provide an electrical ground path between the one of the electrical contacts and the rear portion of the connector. The contact grounding assembly also includes a fastener for fastening the first end of the grounding leg to the ground insert while the ground insert is fastened to the connector rear portion.
The foregoing objects are also achieved by a method of selectively grounding at least one electrical contact of an electrical connector. The method includes fixing an electrically conductive ground insert to an inner wall of the rear portion of the connector to electrically connect the ground insert to the rear portion and establish an outer perimeter around and spaced from the plurality of contact back portions. The method also includes the steps of fastening a first end of an electrically conductive grounding leg to a fastening site of the ground insert using a fastener, and coupling a second end of the grounding leg to the contact back portion to thereby establish an electrical grounding path between the contact back portion and the rear portion through the grounding leg and the ground insert.
Still other objects and advantages of the present invention will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description, wherein the preferred embodiment of the invention is shown and described, simply by way of illustration of the best mode contemplated of carrying out the invention. As will be realized, the invention is capable of other and different embodiments, and its several details are capable of modifications in various obvious respects, all without departing from the invention. Accordingly, the drawings and description thereof are to be regarded as illustrative in nature, and not as restrictive.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The present invention is illustrated by way of example, and not by limitation, in the figures of the accompanying drawings, wherein elements having the same reference numeral designations represent like elements throughout and wherein:
FIG. 1A
is an exploded perspective view of a known, standardized connector and an embodiment of a selective grounding assembly in accordance with the present invention, wherein the grounding assembly is depicted in a disassembled configuration and prior to being installed within a rear portion of the connector;
FIG. 1B
is a perspective view of the connector of FIG.
1
A and the grounding assembly of
FIG. 1A
, wherein the grounding assembly is depicted in an assembled configuration and operatively installed within the rear portion of the connector to ground a contact of the connector;
FIG. 1C
is a partial cross-sectional view of the connector and the selective grounding assembly of
FIG. 1B
taken along the line
1
C—
1
C;
FIG. 2
is a side elevational view of a frame component of an embodiment of a ground insert of the grounding assembly of
FIG. 1A
;
FIG. 3A
is side view of a resilient fastener of the ground insert of
FIG. 1A
;
FIG. 3B
is a top view of the resilient fastener of
FIG. 3A
;
FIG. 4A
is a perspective view of a first embodiment of the grounding leg of the selective grounding assembly of
FIG. 1A
;
FIG. 4B
is a side view of the grounding leg of
FIG. 4A
;
FIG. 4C
is a side view of a spring grip mechanism of the grounding leg of
FIG. 4A
;
FIG. 5A
is a top view of a second embodiment of a grounding leg of the selective grounding assembly in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 5B
is a side view of the grounding leg of
FIG. 5A
;
FIG. 6A
is a perspective view wherein a contact back portion of the connector of
FIG. 1A
, a wire, and the grounding leg of
FIG. 4A
threaded onto the wire, are depicted, before the wire is connected to the contact back portion;
FIG. 6B
is similar to
FIG. 6A
, with the exception that the wire is depicted connected to the contact back portion and the spring grip mechanism of the grounding leg is depicted coupled to the contact back portion;
FIG. 7A
is an exploded perspective view of a known connector having wires connected to the contact back portions of contacts installed in the connector, and an alternative arrangement of the ground insert in accordance with the present invention, wherein the ground insert is depicted prior to being installed within the connector; and
FIG. 7B
is a plan view of the connector and ground insert of
FIG. 7A
, wherein the ground insert is depicted operatively installed within the connector.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
With reference to
FIG. 1A
, a selective grounding assembly
20
constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention, is depicted. For convenience, terms such as “above”, “below”, “right” and “left”, as used herein, are to be construed in the relative sense. The selective grounding assembly
20
is depicted before its installation into an exemplary electrical connector
22
. Before the present invention is described, a brief description of the known electrical connector
22
is provided. The electrical connector
22
is a commonly known, standardized type of electrical connector including a cylindrically shaped front shell
24
and a cylindrically shaped metal rear portion
26
. It is to be understood that a cylindrically shaped connector is described herein for convenience and any configuration including square, rectangular, oval, and cylindrical can be used with the present invention. Known electrical connector
22
includes an insulating support
28
housed within rear portion
26
and fixed to an inner cylindrically shaped wall
30
of rear portion
26
. An axially (i.e., vertically) directed guide slit or groove
32
is formed in an outer surface of front shell
24
and serves as a mating guide for a front shell portion of a mating connector (not shown). Also, a circumferentially extending external flange
34
is formed on the outer surface of front shell
24
for stopping the front shell portion of the mating connector and compressing a seal between the mating connectors.
Connector
22
includes a plurality of elongate contacts
36
extending in an axial, i.e., vertical, direction X through electrically insulating support
28
, and in parallel spaced relation to each other and rear portion inner wall
30
. Contacts
36
extend through and are fixed in position by insulating support
28
. Contacts
36
include respective front ends or portions
38
extending into an inner space or volume
40
defined by front shell
24
. Contact front portions
38
include either contact insertion pins or receiving sockets (not shown) for respectively engaging opposing sockets or pins of the mating connector, as is known. It is to be understood that connector
22
can include any number of electrical contacts
36
depending on the application of the connector, and moreover, that such contacts may be positioned in alternative patterns as desired within the connector.
Contacts
36
include respective back portions or wire buckets
42
extending into a rear portion interior
44
defined by inner wall
30
of rear portion
26
. An upper peripheral edge
46
of inner wall
30
defines an access way or opening
48
through which the interior
44
and contact back portions
42
are readily accessible. In this manner, contact back portions
42
are at least partially housed within rear portion
26
. Each of the contact back portions
42
forms a wire receiving receptacle as is well known, such as a solder well or crimp receptacle, for receiving a conductor wire (not shown). Such wires are connected to back portions
42
by soldering or crimping the wires to the receiving receptacles, in a known manner.
Now, grounding assembly
20
of the present invention is described. Unique grounding assembly
20
is conveniently, quickly, and easily applied to connector
22
to selectively ground one or more of the contacts
36
, as will be described in detail below. The phrase “selectively ground” should be taken to mean that a user of grounding assembly
20
selects at least one of the contacts
36
to be grounded, and then applies grounding assembly
20
to connector
22
to thereby ground the at least one selected contact.
The construction of grounding assembly
20
is simple and cost effective, yet sturdy and highly reliable. Grounding assembly
20
is advantageously useable with connector rear portion
26
, regardless of the number and spatial arrangement of electrical contacts
36
within connector
22
, so long as the electrical contacts are suitably spaced from inner wall
30
, as will be described below. Grounding assembly
20
includes an annular, electrically conductive ground insert
70
, an elongate, electrically conductive grounding leg
74
, and a fastener
76
for securely fastening grounding leg
74
to ground insert
70
.
Ground insert
70
is configured to be inserted into and securely retained by rear portion
26
of connector
22
. Ground insert
70
is depicted in
FIGS. 1B and 1C
as occupying an operatively inserted position within rear portion interior
44
to thereby ground a selected one of the contacts of connector
22
, as will be more fully described later. To ground a selected one of the contacts
36
with selective grounding assembly
20
, ground insert
70
is inserted into rear portion
26
(as indicated by insertion alignment arrows IA in FIG.
1
A), and grounding leg
74
is fastened between ground insert
70
and a grounding contact back portion
78
corresponding to the selected one of the contacts
36
to be grounded, as depicted in
FIGS. 1B and 1C
. An electrical ground connection is established between grounding contact back portion
78
and rear portion
26
through selective grounding assembly
20
.
Selective grounding assembly
20
is now described in detail, still with reference to
FIGS. 1A-1C
. Ground insert
70
of selective grounding assembly
20
includes a rigid, annular frame
80
and a resilient fastener
82
retained by frame
80
. Resilient fastener
82
includes a circumferentially-extending series of parallel, spaced, resilient ridges
84
, each of which extends in a vertical direction. The series of ridges
84
collectively form a resilient, circumferentially extending, outer periphery or resilient skirt
86
of ground insert
70
, conforming in shape to a peripheral portion
88
(see
FIG. 1C
) of rear portion inner wall
30
. While ground insert
70
is removed or separated from rear portion
26
, as depicted in
FIG. 1A
, resilient skirt
86
defines an outer diameter of ground insert
70
that is only slightly larger than an inner diameter of rear portion
26
defined by rear portion inner wall
30
.
Accordingly, when ground insert
70
is inserted into or installed in rear portion
26
as depicted in
FIGS. 1B and 1C
, inner wall
30
of rear portion
26
compresses resilient skirt
86
inwardly against a resilient biasing force of the skirt
86
. As a result, skirt
86
resiliently and frictionally engages inner wall
30
to thereby securely fix ground insert
70
to and within rear portion
26
. Such contact between ground insert
70
and inner wall
30
of rear portion
26
provides an electrical contact path from ground insert
70
to rear portion
26
. It should be appreciated that frictional and electrical engagement between rear portion inner wall
30
and ground insert
70
is advantageously maximized in the present invention because ground insert
70
is constructed such that the outer periphery (i.e., resilient skirt
86
) of ground insert
70
has the same shape as inner wall
30
.
Annular frame
80
of ground insert
70
includes a rigid inner side wall
89
concentrically arranged with respect to resilient skirt
86
. The diameter of inner wall
89
is such that inner wall
89
forms a perimeter or border around and spaced from all of the contact back portions
42
, while ground insert
70
is inserted into rear portion
26
(as depicted in FIGS.
1
B and
1
C). An advantage of ground insert
70
over prior art devices, such as the disc in the '191 patent, is that ground insert
70
can be used with a given rear portion
26
regardless of the spatial arrangement of the contact back portions
42
housed by rear portion
26
.
Rigid, annular frame
80
of ground insert
70
is of unitary construction, and is made from an electrically conductive metal by any suitable method, such as die casting or machining from a block of metal stock. Annular frame
80
includes an upper annular rim
96
and an opposing lower annular rim
98
, axially spaced from upper annular rim
96
, both extending from wall
89
in an outward radial direction R, as depicted, for example, in FIG.
1
C. To enable ground insert
70
to be inserted into rear portion
26
, an outer diameter of annular frame
80
, defined by rims
96
,
98
is slightly less than the diameter of rear portion inner wall
30
. Lower annular rim
98
of annular frame
80
abuts or is flush against a periphery of insulating support
28
adjacent inner wall
30
(of rear portion
26
), while ground insert
70
is fully inserted within rear portion
26
.
A fastening site
100
provided in upper annular rim
96
includes a drilled, tapped hole, sized to receive a threaded portion
102
of fastener
76
. The drilled, tapped hole of fastening site
100
extends through upper rim
96
and into side wall
89
of annular frame
80
. Upper rim
96
and thus fastening site
100
are conveniently accessible through rear portion opening
48
while ground insert
70
is installed within rear portion
26
, as depicted in
FIGS. 1B and 1C
. Advantageously, the tapped hole is reusable and it should be understood that any type of reusable fastener can be used in the present invention.
With reference to
FIG. 2
, there is depicted a side elevational view of annular frame
80
, while frame
80
is separated from resilient fastener
82
, i.e., prior to assembly of ground insert
70
. With reference to
FIGS. 1C and 2
, rims
96
,
98
and wall
89
of annular frame
80
define a circumferentially extending, outer channel
106
for receiving and captively retaining a portion of resilient fastener
82
, as will be described more fully below. A free end or lip
96
a
of upper rim
96
and a free end or lip
98
a
of lower rim
98
form an opposing pair of dove-tail shaped lips for retaining resilient fastener
82
. A circumferentially extending, peripheral gap or slot
108
is formed between the spaced pair of lips
96
a
,
98
a
(best seen in FIG.
1
C). Peripheral slot
108
has a vertical height, i.e., separation between spaced lips
96
a
and
98
a
, that is less than a vertical height of channel
106
.
As previously mentioned, ground insert
70
also includes resilient fastener
82
. Resilient fastener
82
is retained by frame
80
and forms resilient skirt
86
, described above. With reference to
FIGS. 3A and 3B
, there is depicted resilient fastener
82
while separated from frame
80
, i.e., prior to assembly of ground insert
70
. Before being formed into annular resilient fastener
82
, fastener
82
is formed from a resilient, generally flat, rectangularly shaped strip
109
of conductive metal, such as spring steel. Strip
109
includes ridges
84
spaced along a full length of strip
109
. Ridges
84
can be formed by known processes, such as by pressing or stamping dimples into an originally flat side of strip
109
.
Once formed into an annular shape and installed within channel
106
of annular frame
80
, fastener
82
has a vertical height and a length respectively sized relative to the vertical height and a circumferential length of channel
106
of annular frame
80
such that a periphery
110
(see
FIG. 3B
) of resilient fastener
82
is snugly received within and along substantially the full circumferential length of channel
106
, whereby periphery
110
of fastener
82
is entrapped or captively retained within channel
106
by opposing lips
96
a
,
98
a
, as depicted in FIG.
1
C. On the other hand, ridges
84
, having a vertical height slightly less than the vertical height of slot
108
, extend through and beyond gap
108
, to collectively form resilient skirt
86
, while fastener
82
is retained within channel
106
of frame
80
.
It is to be understood that other configurations and arrangements of annular frame
80
and resilient fastener
82
are possible without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. For example, resilient fastener
82
can include one or more circumferentially-extending ridges for engaging inner wall
30
, instead of vertical, spaced ridges
84
. Also, protruding ridges
84
can be produced by 1) stamping out sections of spring strip
109
, and
2
) inserting stamped strip
109
into channel
106
whereby ridges
84
are formed by bowed portions of the strip extending or bulging through side slot
108
. Additionally, the specific manner by which resilient fastener
82
is retained by frame
80
, e.g., the configuration of peripheral channel
106
formed by rims
96
,
98
and the retained portion (periphery
110
) of fastener
82
, can be provided in alternative interlocking configurations, as needed.
With reference again to
FIG. 1A
, grounding assembly
20
includes grounding leg
74
. Grounding leg
74
has a generally elongate body
120
including a first end
122
configured to be fastened to ground insert
70
, and a second end
124
configured to engage a contact back portion. First end
122
includes an elongate through aperture
126
for receiving threaded portion
102
of fastener
76
, used to fasten first end
122
to fastening site
100
of ground insert
70
. Second end
124
includes a spring grip mechanism
130
, which includes a plurality of resilient tines
132
, for gripping a contact back portion (e.g., grounding contact back portion
78
).
Through aperture
126
and spring grip mechanism
130
of grounding leg
74
are spaced a predetermined distance from each other to respectively coincide with fastening site
100
of ground insert
70
and grounding contact back portion
78
, while grounding leg
74
is operatively positioned to ground grounding contact back portion
78
, as depicted in
FIGS. 1B and 1C
. Elongate through aperture
126
conveniently permits adjustable positioning of grounding leg
74
, and specifically first end
122
, relative to fastening site
100
to thereby accommodate variations in the distance between the rear portion inner wall
30
and grounding contact back portion
78
.
As depicted in
FIGS. 1B and 1C
, to complete an electrical path between rear portion
26
and grounding contact back portion
78
, first end
122
of grounding leg
74
is fastened to ground insert
70
by fastener
76
, while tines
132
of spring grip mechanism
130
grip an outer periphery of grounding contact back portion
78
. The electrical path is thus established between grounding contact back portion
78
and rear portion
26
through connected grounding leg
74
and ground insert
70
. The electrical path becomes an electrical ground path while the connector rear portion is itself grounded by any mechanism (not shown). In
FIGS. 1B and 1C
, grounding contact back portion
78
is depicted as being crimp-connected to an electrical wire
134
. Wire
134
includes an insulating jacket
136
and an inner conductor
138
. Insulation is stripped from conductor
138
to permit an electrical connection between grounding contact back portion
78
and conductor
138
, as is known. Accordingly, installing grounding assembly
20
as depicted in
FIGS. 1B and 1C
electrically grounds both grounding contact back portion
78
and conductor
138
connected grounding contact to back portion
78
.
While only a single contact is depicted grounded in
FIGS. 1B and 1C
, it is to be understood that any number of contacts can be grounded as desired using grounding assembly
20
, by providing a fastening site
100
and a grounding leg
74
for each contact to be grounded.
Grounding leg
74
is now described in further detail, with particular reference to
FIGS. 4A
,
4
B and
4
C. Grounding leg
74
, depicted in an assembled configuration in
FIG. 4A
, includes two separable components, namely 1) elongate body
120
, depicted in
FIG. 4B
, and 2) spring grip mechanism
130
, depicted in
FIGS. 4A and 4C
. With reference to
FIGS. 4A and 4B
, elongate body
120
is made from an electrically conductive metal by any known method, such as die casting or machining from a block of metal stock. First end
122
of body
120
includes a recessed ledge portion
150
sized and shaped to rest flush against upper rim
96
and inner wall
89
or frame
80
(see FIG.
1
C).
Second end
124
of body
120
includes a through aperture
152
for receiving spring grip mechanism
130
. Spring grip mechanism
130
is sized and shaped to be inserted into through aperture
152
and to frictionally engage a wall
156
of elongate body
120
defining through aperture
152
. To assemble grounding leg
74
, spring grip mechanism
130
is press fit into through aperture
152
and held in place by friction between a periphery of spring grip mechanism
130
and wall
156
.
Spring grip mechanism
130
includes the plurality of resilient spring fingers or tines
132
extending from an upper periphery of through aperture
152
toward a central axis
160
of through aperture
152
. Resilient tines
132
bend under the force of a contact back portion being inserted through through-aperture
152
and spring grip mechanism
130
to thereby make a sliding, removable, yet positive electrical connection with the contact back portion (see, for example, FIG.
1
C).
In
FIGS. 5A
an
5
B, there is depicted an alternative arrangement of a grounding leg
170
. Unlike grounding leg
74
, grounding leg
170
is of unitary or integral construction, and is formed using a metal stamping process. Grounding leg
170
includes an elongate body
172
, an elongate through aperture
174
and a spring grip mechanism
176
spaced from the elongate through aperture, all of the foregoing elements being formed by the metal stamping process. Body
172
and elongate aperture
174
can be provided in an extended configuration, whereby body
172
is clipped to an appropriate length to ground a selected contact at the time grounding assembly
20
is installed.
As mentioned previously, grounding assembly
20
includes fastener
76
for fastening grounding leg
74
to fastening site
100
of ground insert
70
. Fastener
76
can be any threaded fastener, such as a screw, having threaded lower portion
102
sized to threadingly engage annular frame
80
at fastening site
100
. A head portion
176
of fastener
76
includes a standardized recess, such as a slot or “Phillips” style recess, as is known, for engaging the tip end of a corresponding standardized tool, such as a slotted or Phillips head screw driver. This enables grounding leg
74
to be conveniently fastened to or removed from ground insert
70
using fastener
76
and the standardized tool.
A method of selectively grounding a contact of connector
22
using selective grounding assembly
20
is now described. The method assumes an initial connector configuration as depicted in
FIG. 1A
, wherein
1) contacts
36
are already installed or fixed in insulator
28
and contact back portions
42
are solder buckets, and
2) no wires are connected to contact back portions
42
of connector
22
.
A contact back portion, e.g., grounding contact back portion
78
, is identified as corresponding to the selected one of the contacts
36
to be grounded. Next, a user installs assembly
20
by first inserting or press fitting ground insert
70
into rear portion interior
44
. The user gains access into interior
44
through rear portion opening or access way
48
. The user presses ground insert
70
into the fully installed position within rear portion
26
, as depicted in
FIGS. 1B and 1C
, with fastening site
100
positioned relative to grounding contact back portion
78
so that grounding leg
74
can be fastened between fastening site
100
and grounding contact back portion
78
.
The next step of the installation process is described with reference to
FIG. 6A
, wherein electrical wire
134
is depicted prior to being connected to grounding contact back portion
78
. Prior to connecting conductor
138
of wire
134
to grounding contact back portion
78
, wire
134
is pushed through spring grip mechanism
130
of grounding leg
74
, as depicted in FIG.
6
A. It should be appreciated that the user may be unable to thread spring grip mechanism
130
over insulating jacket
136
as depicted in
FIG. 6A
because spring grip mechanism
130
may be too small to accommodate a relatively large diameter of wire
134
at insulating jacket
136
. In such circumstances, the user threads spring grip mechanism
130
on to conductor
138
and up to, but not over, insulating jacket
136
.
The next steps of the installation process are described with reference to
FIG. 6B
, wherein conductor
138
of wire
134
is depicted connected grounding to contact back portion
78
. After threading grounding leg
74
onto wire
134
and connecting conductor
138
to grounding contact back portion
78
, the user slides grounding leg
74
toward and over grounding contact back portion
78
, thus bringing resiliently biased tines
132
into contact with grounding contact back portion
78
, as described above, and as depicted in
FIGS. 1B
,
1
C and
6
B. Next, the user fastens first end
122
of grounding leg
74
to fastening site
100
using fastener
76
and a standardized tool, such as screw driver. Elongate aperture
126
of grounding leg
74
automatically accommodates variations in the separation between grounding contact back portion
78
and fastening site
100
.
The above method is slightly different if contact back portions
42
are crimp-style wire buckets instead of solder buckets. In this case, contacts
36
are initially separate from connector
22
. The user first threads grounding leg
74
on to wire
134
, and then crimp connects grounding contact back portion
78
to conductor
138
. Next the user installs the contact corresponding to grounding contact back portion
78
into insulator
28
, and then slips spring grip mechanism
130
over and into contact grounding with contact back portion
78
.
Disassembling an installed grounding assembly
20
is straightforward in comparison to, for example, disassembling the prior art grounding devices disclosed in the '191 and '323 patents, discussed above, because connector
22
need not be disassembled and no special equipment is needed. Instead, in the present invention, fastener
76
is conveniently removed using, for example, a screw driver. After removing fastener
76
, grounding leg
74
is removed from grounding contact back portion
78
of connector
22
, for example, by clipping grounding leg
74
with a wire cutter, or by removing a soldered wire. Ground insert
70
can then be pulled from respective rear portion
26
or
220
to thereby separate the ground insert from the respective rear portion.
The installation method described above with reference to contact back portions having solder buckets is simplified by installing ground insert
70
into rear portion
26
before wires are connected to contact back portions
42
. Specifically, ground insert
70
forms a closed ring that would otherwise have to be threaded past or over wires connected to back portion
42
. However, it is often necessary to selectively ground contacts in a connector having contact back portions previously connected to wires. Accordingly, there is depicted in
FIGS. 7A and 7B
, an alternative arrangement of a ground insert
200
. Ground insert
200
is particularly suited for selectively grounding at least one contact of a. connector
202
having back portions
204
previously connected respectively to wires
206
. Connector
202
is the same as connector
22
described earlier, with the exception that wires
206
are connected to contact back portions
204
of connector
202
, before beginning the selective grounding process.
Ground insert
200
has a split ring configuration that would be formed, essentially, by cutting previously described ground insert
70
into a pair of nearly identical semi-circular ground insert portions. With reference to
FIGS. 7A and 7B
, ground insert
200
includes a semi-circular, right or first ground insert
200
a
, and a nearly identical, semi-circular, left or second ground insert
200
b
. In
FIGS. 7A and 7B
, like components of right and left ground inserts
200
a
,
200
b
are designated with like numerals containing the respective further (suffix) designations “a” or “b”.
Right ground insert
200
a
includes a metal frame
206
a
, an inner wall
208
a
, upper and lower spaced rims
210
a,
211
a, a resilient fastener
212
a
retained between the upper and lower rims, and a fastening site
214
formed at upper rim
210
a
. The foregoing components of right ground insert
210
a
are constructed and arranged substantially as described with reference to correspondingly named components of ground insert
70
, previously described, with the exception that the elements of ground insert
200
a
form an elongate, semi-circular or semi-annular ground insert, instead of an annular ground insert. Also unlike ground insert
70
, frame
206
a
of right ground insert
200
a
includes a pair of spaced free ends
216
a.
Left ground insert
200
b
has an identical configuration to right ground insert
200
a
, except left ground insert does not include a fastening site, as depicted. However, it is to be understood that fastening sites are provided wherever necessary along left and right inserts
200
a
,
200
b
to selectively ground one or more contact back portions
204
.
Right and left ground inserts
200
a
,
200
b
are sized to form a segmented annular ring, when inserted together into a rear portion
220
of connector
202
, as depicted in FIG.
7
B. While installed within rear portion
220
, opposing ends
216
a
of right ground insert
200
a
abut respectively opposing ends
216
b
of left ground insert
200
b
, to form diametrically opposing seams
222
and
224
. Right and left ground inserts
200
a
,
200
b
thus form a composite, annular insert frictionally and resiliently retained within rear portion
220
, in the same manner ground insert
70
is retained within rear portion
26
of connector
22
.
The method of selectively grounding a contact back portion, e.g., contact back portion
230
, of connector
202
includes installing ground insert
200
directly into connector rear portion
220
, e.g., one half at a time, while contact back portions
204
are connected to wires
206
. Also, the wire connected to contact back portion
230
must be disconnected, e.g., unsoldered, from the contact back portion so that grounding leg
74
can be threaded onto the wire, as previously described. The remaining steps of the method are the same as those previously described.
Since connector rear portions come in many different sizes and shapes, such as square, rectangular, oval, and cylindrical (e.g., rear portion
26
) shapes, it is to be understood that alternative corresponding shapes of the ground insert of the present invention are envisioned in addition to the exemplary annular shape of ground inserts
70
and
200
. For each of the alternatively shaped ground inserts, it is important that the:
1) outer periphery of the ground insert (e.g., resilient skirt
86
) conforms to the shape (e.g., square, rectangle, etc.) of the rear portion inner periphery (e.g., inner wall
30
); and
2) inner wall of the ground insert (e.g., wall
89
of frame
80
) establishes a perimeter around and spaced from all of the connector contacts, as described above.
An assembly for and method of selectively grounding one or more contacts of a connector has been described. The simple, cost effective, yet robust assembly includes a ground insert, a grounding leg and a fastener, as described above. Using the assembly of the present invention, one or more contacts of the connector are advantageously grounded without disassembling the connector. Also, an assembly in accordance with present invention, configured for use with a given rear portion, can be used with that rear portion regardless of the contact arrangement within the rear portion.
It will be readily seen by one of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention fulfills all of the objects set forth above. After reading the foregoing specification, one of ordinary skill will be able to affect various changes, substitutions of equivalents and various other aspects of the invention as broadly disclosed herein. It is therefore intended that the protection granted hereon be limited only by the definition contained in the appended claims and equivalents thereof.
Claims
- 1. An assembly for selectively grounding at least one electrical contact of an electrical connector to a rear portion of the connector, the connector including a plurality of electrical contact back portions at least partially housed within the rear portion and accessible through an opening in the rear portion, said assembly comprising:an electrically conductive ground insert including an outer periphery being sized and shaped to engage an inner wall of the rear portion to thereby fasten and electrically connect the ground insert to the rear portion; an electrically conductive grounding leg having first and second spaced ends being adapted and arranged to be respectively fastened to the ground insert and a back portion of the at least one electrical contact to thereby provide an electrical ground path between the electrical contact and the rear portion of the connector; and a fastener for fastening the first end of the grounding leg to the ground insert while the ground insert is fastened to the connector rear portion; wherein the ground insert includes an inner periphery being sized and shaped to define a perimeter around and spaced from the plurality of electrical contact back portions; wherein the ground insert includes a fastening site, the first and second spaced ends of the grounding leg being spaced by a predetermined distance to respectively coincide with the fastening site of the ground insert and the back portion of the at least one contact while the grounding leg is operatively positioned to ground the at least one contact; and wherein the first end of the grounding leg includes an elongate through aperture for receiving the fastener and to enable adjustable positioning of the first end of the grounding leg relative to the fastening site of the ground insert to thereby accommodate variations in a distance between the rear portion inner wall and the contact back portion of the at least one contact.
- 2. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the ground insert includes an upper surface accessible through the rear portion opening while the ground insert is fixed within the rear portion, the fastening site coinciding with the upper surface of the ground insert.
- 3. The assembly of claim 2, wherein the fastener is a screw and the fastening site includes an aperture formed in the upper surface of the ground insert and sized to receive a threaded end of the screw.
- 4. An assembly for selectively grounding at least one electrical contact of an electrical connector to a rear portion of the connector, the connector including a plurality of electrical contact back portions at least partially housed within the rear portion and accessible through an opening in the rear portion, said assembly comprising:an electrically conductive ground insert including an outer periphery being sized and shaped to engage an inner wall of the rear portion to thereby fasten and electrically connect the ground insert to the rear portion; an electrically conductive grounding leg having first and second spaced ends being adapted and arranged to be respectively fastened to the ground insert and a back portion of the at least one electrical contact to thereby provide an electrical ground path between the electrical contact and the rear portion of the connector; and a fastener for fastening the first end of the grounding leg to the ground insert while the ground insert is fastened to the connector rear portion; wherein the ground insert includes an inner periphery being sized and shaped to define a perimeter around and spaced from the plurality of electrical contact back portions; wherein the ground insert includes a fastening site, the first and second spaced ends of the grounding leg being spaced by a predetermined distance to respectively coincide with the fastening site of the ground insert and the back portion of the at least one contact while the grounding leg is operatively positioned to around the at least one contact; and wherein the ground insert is split into a pair of substantially identical opposing segments, the opposing segments together forming the inner and outer peripheries of the ground insert while the opposing segments are fixed within the rear portion in abutting relation to each other.
- 5. An assembly for selectively grounding at least one electrical contact of an electrical connector to a rear portion of the connector, the connector including a plurality of electrical contact back portions at least partially housed within the rear portion and accessible through an opening in the rear portion, said assembly comprising:an electrically conductive ground insert including an outer periphery being sized and shaped to engage an inner wall of the rear portion to thereby fasten and electrically connect the ground insert to the rear portion; an electrically conductive grounding leg having first and second spaced ends being adapted and arranged to be respectively fastened to the ground insert and a back portion of the at least one electrical contact to thereby provide an electrical ground path between the electrical contact and the rear portion of the connector; and a fastener for fastening the first end of the grounding leg to the ground insert while the ground insert is fastened to the connector rear portion; wherein the ground insert includes an inner periphery being sized and shaped to define a perimeter around and spaced from the plurality of electrical contact back portions; wherein the ground insert includes a fastening site, the first and second spaced ends of the grounding leg being spaced by a predetermined distance to respectively coincide with the fastening site of the ground insert and the back portion of the at least one contact while the grounding leg is operatively positioned to ground the at least one contact; and wherein the ground insert includes a resilient fastener, the resilient fastener including a resilient skirt forming the outer periphery of the ground insert, the resilient skirt having a shape conforming to the periphery of the inner wall of the rear portion, the resilient skirt resiliently and frictionally engaging the periphery of the inner wall of the rear portion while the ground insert is inserted into the rear portion to thereby fasten and electrically connect the ground insert to the inner wall.
- 6. The assembly of claim 5, wherein the ground insert includes a rigid frame having a wall forming the inner periphery of the ground insert.
- 7. The assembly of claim 6, wherein the rigid frame includes an outer periphery sized and shaped to establish a slight clearance gap between the rigid frame and the rear portion inner wall while the ground insert is fixed within the rear portion.
- 8. The assembly of claim 6, wherein the resilient fastener includes a retained portion contiguous the resilient skirt, the retained portion of the resilient fastener being captively retained by the rigid frame of the ground insert.
- 9. The assembly of claim 8, wherein the rigid frame includes a peripheral channel and a peripheral slot adjacent the outer periphery of the rigid frame, the retained portion of the resilient fastener being received by and retained within the peripheral channel, and the resilient skirt extending through and beyond the side slot.
- 10. The assembly of claim 9, wherein the rigid frame includes upper and lower spaced rims depending respectively from opposing ends of the wall of the rigid frame, the spaced rims and the wall of the rigid frame forming the peripheral channel for receiving the retained portion of the resilient fastener.
- 11. The assembly of claim 10, wherein the upper and lower spaced rims of the rigid frame respectively include free ends terminating in opposing spaced lips to define the peripheral slot between the spaced lips, the retained portion of the resilient fastener and the peripheral slot being sized and shaped so that the retained portion of the resilient fastener is captively retained within the peripheral channel by the opposing spaced lips.
- 12. The assembly of claim 9, wherein the resilient skirt includes parallel spaced ridges extending along a length of the resilient fastener, the parallel spaced ridges extending through and beyond the peripheral slot of the rigid frame.
- 13. An assembly for selectively grounding at least one contact of a connector to a rear portion of the connector, the rear portion of the connector including a cylindrically shaped inner wall and a plurality of contact back portions at least partially housed by the rear portion and accessible through an opening in the rear portion, said assembly comprising:(a) an electrically conductive ground insert, including an annular frame having a cylindrically shaped inner wall defining a circumferential perimeter around and spaced from the plurality of contact back portions, the frame defining a circumferentially extending outer channel and a side slot of the frame, the frame including an upper rim accessible through the rear portion opening while the ground insert is within the rear portion, the upper rim including at least one aperture, a circumferentially extending resilient fastener including a retained portion and a resilient skirt contiguous with the retained portion, the retained portion being compressively retained within the channel and entrapped within the channel by the frame, the resilient skirt extending through and beyond the side slot of the frame to form a resilient, circumferentially extending, outer periphery of the ground insert, the resilient outer periphery being adapted and arranged to resiliently engage the inner wall of the connector to thereby fix and electrically connect the ground insert to the rear portion inner wall; (b) an electrically conductive grounding leg having an elongate body and including a first end and a second end spaced from the first end, the first end including an elongate through aperture, the second end including an apertured spring grip mechanism for resiliently engaging and electrically contacting a contact back portion of the at least one contact; and (c) a threaded fastener for fastening the grounding leg to the ground insert to complete an electrical grounding path between the contact back portion and the rear portion through the grounding leg, the elongate through aperture of the grounding leg sized to receive the fastener, the at least one aperture of the ground insert being sized to receive the threaded fastener such that the threaded fastener threadingly engages the ground insert to thereby fasten the first end of the grounding leg to the ground insert.
- 14. A connector and grounding assembly, comprising:a connector, including a connector housing including a connector rear portion, the connector rear portion having an inner wall defining a rear portion interior and an opening into the rear portion interior, an insulating support fixed to and within the connector housing, a plurality of electrical contacts fixed in position by the insulating support, each of the electrical contacts including a contact back portion extending away from the insulating support and into the rear portion interior, the contact back portions being positioned in spaced parallel relation to each other and the connector rear portion inner wall; and an electrical contact grounding assembly including an electrically conductive ground insert having an outer periphery sized and shaped to engage the rear portion inner wall to thereby fasten and electrically connect the ground insert to the rear portion, an electrically conductive grounding leg having first and second spaced ends being adapted and arranged to be respectively fastened to the ground insert and a back portion of one of the electrical contacts to thereby provide an electrical ground path between the one of the electrical contacts and the rear portion of the connector, and a fastener for fastening the first end of the grounding leg to the ground insert while the ground insert is fastened to the connector rear portion.
- 15. The assembly of claim 14, wherein the ground insert includes an inner periphery being sized and shaped to define a perimeter around and spaced from all of the electrical contact back portions.
- 16. The assembly of claim 15, wherein the ground insert is continuously formed along the inner and outer peripheries of the ground insert.
- 17. The assembly of claim 14, wherein the ground insert is split into a pair of substantially identical opposing segments, the opposing segments together forming the inner and outer peripheries of the ground insert while the opposing segments are fixed within the rear portion in abutting relation to each other.
- 18. A method of selectively grounding at least one electrical contact of an electrical connector, the connector including a plurality of electrical contact back portions at least partially housed within a rear portion of the connector and accessible through an opening in the connector rear portion, comprising:fixing an electrically conductive ground insert to an inner wall of the rear portion of the connector to electrically connect the ground insert to the rear portion and establish an outer perimeter around and spaced from the plurality of contact back portions; and fastening a first end of an electrically conductive grounding leg to a fastening site of the ground insert using a fastener, and coupling a second end of the grounding leg to the contact back portion to thereby establish an electrical grounding path between the contact back portion and the rear portion through the grounding leg and the ground insert.
- 19. The method of claim 18, wherein said fastening step includes the step of automatically accommodating variations in a distance between the rear portion inner wall and the contact back portion using an elongate through aperture, formed in the first end of the grounding leg, for receiving the fastener.
- 20. The method of claim 18, further comprising, in sequence,threading an end of an electrical wire through a spring grip mechanism formed in the second end of the grounding leg; connecting the end of the electrical wire to the contact back portion; and coupling the spring grip mechanism to the contact back portion.
- 21. The method of claim 20, wherein said fixing step includes fixing first and second substantially identical halves of the ground insert to the inner wall in abutting relation to each other while electrical wires are connected to at least one of the contact back portions.
US Referenced Citations (21)