The present invention relates to a cable clamp device for retaining an electrical cable in relation to a carrier outside the device.
The carrier outside the device is formed in particular by an electrical terminal block which is intended to enable the electrical connection of the end of an electrically conducting cable using the “screw-to-screw” technique.
Familiar cable clamp devices are of the type comprising:
Even if such devices are entirely satisfactory in terms of the actual electrical connection of the conducting cable, these devices nevertheless have the disadvantage that they do not hold the cable firmly in place, particularly if the diameter of the cable to be connected is large compared with the dimensions of the conducting stop.
The object of the present invention is to eliminate the aforementioned disadvantages by providing a cable clamp device in which the cable is maintained more firmly in position, but without increasing the number of parts which comprise the device.
To this end, according to the present invention, the cable clamp device of the aforementioned type is essentially characterized in that the contact surface of the stop is concave in shape, the concavity of which is turned in the direction of the base of the stirrup.
Thus, thanks to these measures, the contact surface of the conducting stop is intended to abut against the conducting cable at a plurality of points, not at a single point only, as in the prior art.
The contact surface preferably comprises an essentially flat central core and two sloping sides which extend from the central core and diverge from one another in the direction of the base of the stirrup.
The stirrup is advantageously implemented in a band of flat material with a predetermined width.
The width of the sloping sides is preferably less than the width of the band of the stirrup.
In a preferred implementation, the base of the stirrup comprises two openings respectively located perpendicular to the sloping sides, into which said sloping sides penetrate at least partially. Thus, the device also enables reduced-diameter cables to be firmly clamped.
Advantageously, the projection of the openings on a plane perpendicular to the legs of the stirrup and in a direction essentially parallel to the legs is essentially rectangular in shape, its length being less than the width of the band of the stirrup.
The electrically conducting stop again preferably comprises a connecting bar of an electrical terminal block.
In a preferred manner, the external carrier is formed by a body of insulating material which makes up the electrical terminal block.
The object of the present invention is furthermore an electrical terminal block comprising a body of insulating material which contains electrical connection openings, at least one cable clamp device according to any one of the aforementioned characteristics being inserted in at least one of the electrical connection openings.
In any event, the present invention will be readily understood with the aid of the description which follows, provided with reference to the attached schematic drawing, and representing, by way of non-limiting examples, two embodiments of the cable clamp device according to the present invention.
The cable clamp device 1 shown, according to a first embodiment shown in
The cable clamp device 1 comprises, in a manner known per se, a stirrup 2 which contains an electrically conducting stop 10. This stop 10 takes the shape, for example, of a section of the aforementioned connecting bar.
The stirrup 2 is formed from two legs 3 and 4 which extend more or less parallel with one another in a direction X—X, and a curved base 5 which connects the two legs 3, 4. Unlike the base 5, these two legs 3 and 4 have free ends and 7, respectively.
It will therefore be understood that the stirrup 2 is generally U-shaped. It is formed in a band of flat material with a predetermined width. The length of the legs 3 and 4 is greater than the width of the stirrup 2.
The electrically conducting stop 10 is located between the two legs 3 and 4 of the stirrup. This stop 10 is generally parallelepiped-shaped and has a first surface 11 which is turned towards the free ends and 7 of the legs 3, 4, and a second opposing surface 12 turned towards the curved base 5 of the stirrup 2. The second surface 12 is a surface which establishes electrical contact with the conducting cable 8 to establish an electrical connection with this cable when the stop is clamped against it in the base 5 of the stirrup.
To this end, the cable clamp device 1 normally comprises drive means (not shown) which produce the relative movement of the stirrup 2 in relation to the stop 10 in order to either move the base 5 closer in the direction of the stop and thereby clamp the cable in the base, or, conversely, to move the base 5 away from the stop 10, i.e. to cause the free ends 7 of the legs 3, 4 to move towards the stop 10 and thereby unclamp the cable 8.
These drive means comprise, for example, means with a screw nut which, through screwing of the nut, cause the movement of the stirrup 2 in the cable-clamping direction. The stirrup performs a reciprocating translational movement in the direction parallel to the axis X—X, perpendicular to the plane defined by the first surface 11 of the stop 10.
According to a first essential characteristic of the invention, the contact surface 12 of the stop 10 is concave in shape, the concavity of which is turned towards the base 5 of the stirrup 2. Thus, the cable 8 is brought into contact with this surface 12 at a plurality of points, thereby improving the retention of this cable.
The contact surface 12 preferably takes the shape of a channel which has a central core 15 which is essentially flat and parallel with the first surface 11, and two sloping sides 17 and 18 which extend from this core and diverge from one another in the direction of the base 5 of the stirrup. Thus, when clamping, the cable 8 may abut against one or both sloping sides and/or the central core according to the diameter of this cable.
The width of the sloping sides 17 and 18 is less than the width of the stirrup 2.
The cable 8 shown in
On the other hand, to immobilize a cable with a reduced diameter compared with the cable 8, the cable clamp device 20 according to a second embodiment shown in
The constituent parts similar or identical to the first embodiment shown in
The cable clamp device 20 differs from the device 1 by the fact that two openings 21 and 22 are disposed in the base 5 of the stirrup 2 and are respectively located to the sloping sides 17 and 18 of the contact surface 12 of the stop 10.
The dimensions of the openings 21 and 22 are adapted so that the sloping sides 17 and 18 penetrate at least partially through these openings when the base 5 is moved towards the stop 10 with the contact surface 12 within a predetermined distance of the base 5 (
Thus, the projection of the openings 21 and 22 in a plane perpendicular to the legs 3, 4 (or parallel to the first surface 11 of the stop) and in a direction essentially parallel to the axis X—X is essentially rectangular-shaped. The length of this rectangle is less than the width of the stirrup 2, as is most clearly evident in
A reduced-diameter cable 26 is retained in the base 5 of the stirrup (
In a terminal block equipped with a cable clamp device of this type, it is therefore possible to immobilize cables not only firmly, but also with a broad range of diameters, considerably less than the dimensions of the space defined by the position of the stirrup (
Obviously, the invention is not limited to the preferred embodiments described above as non-limiting examples; on the contrary, it includes all embodiment variants as defined by the claims set out below.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
03 13408 | Nov 2003 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2532427 | Smith | Dec 1950 | A |
2550001 | Button | Apr 1951 | A |
2938692 | Bosworth et al. | May 1960 | A |
2980378 | Barron | Apr 1961 | A |
3617612 | Patton | Nov 1971 | A |
4037810 | Pate | Jul 1977 | A |
4118838 | Schiefer et al. | Oct 1978 | A |
4405828 | Shook | Sep 1983 | A |
4516822 | Wolfel | May 1985 | A |
4775122 | McClymont | Oct 1988 | A |
5004437 | Walter et al. | Apr 1991 | A |
5713766 | Davies et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
6011218 | Burek et al. | Jan 2000 | A |
6126122 | Ismert | Oct 2000 | A |
6516498 | LaCoy et al. | Feb 2003 | B1 |
6641429 | Wu | Nov 2003 | B1 |
6657125 | Thompson et al. | Dec 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
101 46 119 | Dec 2002 | DE |
0 653 811 | May 1995 | EP |
2 698 492 | May 1994 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050155783 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |