This invention relates to a cable termination, in particular a termination for a subsea cable and a method of terminating a cable.
Subsea, or underwater, connectors are designed to operate beneath the surface of the water. Typically, a subsea connector comprises two parts, generally known as plug and receptacle. The receptacle may include one or more conductor pins and the plug may include corresponding plug sockets for the receptacle conductor pins. The connection may be made topside (dry-mate), or subsea (wet-mate) and the specific design is adapted according to whether the connector is a wet-mate or dry-mate connector. Subsea connectors have various applications including power connectors which supply power to subsea equipment, or control and instrumentation connectors which exchange data between different pieces of subsea equipment, or between subsea equipment and topside devices.
In subsea connectors one of the critical regions is the termination of the subsea cable to the connector in a cable gland. To ensure a reliable connection to the cable, it is important that the cable is held in place correctly and with minimal electrical resistance. Furthermore, it is important that any external pulling or twisting forces acting on the cable cannot cause the cable to move, or to be pulled out of the gland.
Difficulties with clamping the cable result from the general construction of the cables. Cables often comprise a core, typically a metal, such as copper, with several layers of rubber, plastic and metal to form the cable insulation, earth screen and protective outer jacket. The core must be fitted to the connector in the cable gland such that there is both an effective electrical connection to allow proper operation of the cable and an effective mechanical connection to prevent the cable parting from the connector. For controls and instrumentation type connectors, this typically involves soldering the cable core to the connector, meaning that manufacturing the connections is a skilled and time-consuming operation. Soldered joints are difficult to make within the confines of the backends of control connectors because the interface is densely packed and deeply recessed. Cables add obstruction and clutter and joint making requires considerable operator skill to attain quality and repeatability. It is also desirable that the joint produced can be recycled and achieving this is another highly skilled task. Furthermore, there are health and safety concerns associated with manufacturing soldered joints and problems with contamination due to the flux removal process.
However, further improvements are desirable.
In accordance with a first aspect of the present invention, a subsea connector cable termination system for terminating a cable comprising a cable core and a cable sheath; the termination system comprising a crimp component, the crimp component comprising a crimp body and further comprising two or more integral conductive resilient members adapted to be mounted radially outwardly of the cable core wherein the termination system further comprises a retainer, or wherein one of the crimp body, or the conductive resilient members, are adapted to latch the crimp body to a housing.
The resilient members make electrical contact with the crimp body and are retained, when installed, by the housing maintaining the electrical contact.
A subsea connector cable termination system for terminating a cable may comprise a cable core and a cable sheath; the termination system comprising a sleeve, the sleeve further comprising two or more integral conductive resilient members adapted to be mounted radially outwardly of the cable core wherein the termination system further comprises a retainer, or wherein the conductive resilient members, are adapted to latch the sleeve to a housing.
For data connectors, which may use optical fibres, rather than electrical conductors, a sleeve fitted outside the optical fibre cable core is used, rather than a crimp.
The crimp component may comprise a conductive crimp component or the sleeve comprises a cylindrical sleeve, in particular for an optical fibre.
The conductive crimp component, or the cylindrical sleeve mounted to an optical fibre, may comprise a threaded outer surface.
The threaded outer surface of the conductive crimp component or the cylindrical sleeve mounted to the optical fibre may be axially offset with respect to an external thread of the retainer.
The cable core may comprise one of an electrical conductor, or a data transmission medium.
The electrical conductor or data transmission medium may comprise one of a copper core, stranded wires, twisted pair wires, a waveguide, or an optical fibre.
The retainer may comprise a threaded inner surface.
The conductive resilient member may comprise a leaf spring.
The retainer may further comprise an external thread.
The system may further comprise the housing, wherein the housing comprises an internal thread, corresponding to the threaded outer surface.
In accordance with a second aspect of the present invention, a method of terminating a cable to a connector in a subsea cable connection system comprises exposing a section of cable core at one end of the cable by removing a section of insulation; fitting a crimp component or sleeve around the circumference of the cable core; crimping the crimp component to the cable core or fixing the sleeve around the cable core; fitting a conductive leaf spring to a groove in a first section of the crimp component remote from the cable sleeve, or in the sleeve; applying a retainer to the crimp body in a second section adjacent to the cable sleeve, or providing a latch in the crimp body, in the sleeve, or in the conductive resilient members; and fitting a housing over the first section in contact with the retainer, or latch.
The crimp component is the means by which the cable core is attached to a connector conductor, providing both mechanical and electrical joints to cable, when the cable comprises an electrically conductor core, such as a metal. The latch in the crimp body, or conductive resilient members, latches into back of connector, without the need for a separate retainer to be applied.
A method of terminating a cable to a connector in a subsea cable connection system may comprise exposing a section of cable core at one end of the cable; fitting a crimp component around the circumference of the cable core; crimping the crimp component to the cable core; wherein the crimp component comprises a conductive resilient member, in particular, one or more integral conductive leaf springs; wherein the leaf springs provide electrical contact and latch the crimp component to a housing circumferentially outward of the crimp.
The retainer may comprise an external thread and the housing comprises a corresponding internal thread.
An example of a cable termination and associated method in accordance with the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
For subsea applications, it is important that a reliable electrical connection is made between the cable and the connector in the cable gland, so that the connector is able to withstand the forces applied due to the water pressure at depth, or rough handling during installation or maintenance, whilst facilitating low electrical resistance. Various different approaches have been proposed. GB2566063 describes a solderless joint in which a wire or conductor is held in place on a conical body by a retainer. Further improvements are desirable. The present invention provides a number of embodiments which simplify both the structure of the connector and the assembly process.
There are many ways of joining a cable to a connector in the cable gland, for example, clamping, soldering, conductive glue, or shrink fitting. The present invention uses crimping to reduce complexity and avoid the need for heating or similar treatment.
From
There are a number of benefits and advantages provided by the design of the present invention. The crimp component may be removed if required, without causing any damage to the internals of the spring housing, grenade and overall connector. The design is relatively simple compared to existing terminations, so there are time and cost savings, as far less preparation work is required. The assembled termination is compact and uses the minimal space, as well as the shape helping to avoid partial discharge or low inception voltages.
The threaded design allows the crimp component to be removed from the termination area of the spring housing at any time. The terminating operation is relatively quick and straightforward compared to either soldering or other types of solderless terminations, saving time and costs.
A number of alterative embodiments of a cable termination are illustrated in
In
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The present invention is particularly applicable for subsea electrical connectors, for example data and power, or separate data or power connectors. An electrical connector comprises a plug part and a receptacle part. The back end of each of these may be formed with a universal back end, so that cable connections into a plug, or cable connections into a receptacle, use the same crimp element.
The shuttle pin in the plug front end moves in response to receptacle pins (not shown) entering the openings 38 at the end of the plug front end 34, remote from the plug back end 33, as the plug part 35 and receptacle part (not shown) are connected. Seals 39, for example, O-ring seals, between an outer diameter of the plug front end and an inner diameter of the plug body housing 36, seal against water ingress onto the data cables 40 and/or power cables 41 in the plug back end. A fixing, such as a circlip 42 between the plug front end 34 and plug back end 33, may be used to hold the back end and front end in place within the plug body 36. A similar fixing may be used on the equivalent part of the receptacle.
As can be seen in
With the design so described, a reliable electrical bridge between the receptacle pins in the front end of the plug body and the cable cores is achieved without the need for soldering or other types of fixing that add cost and complication.
A subsea connector cable termination system for terminating a cable may comprise a cable core and a cable sheath; the termination system comprising a mount, a conductive resilient member mounted radially outwardly of the cable core and of the mount; and a retainer. The mount may comprise a conductive crimp component or cylindrical sleeve. The cable core may comprise one of an electrical conductor, or a data transmission medium. The electrical conductor or data transmission medium may comprise one of a copper core, stranded wires, twisted pair wires, a waveguide, or an optical fibre. The retainer may comprise a threaded inner surface. The conductive crimp component or the cylindrical sleeve mounted to the optical fibre comprise a correspondingly threaded outer surface. The conductive resilient member may comprise a leaf spring. The retainer may further comprise an external thread. The system may further comprise a housing, wherein the housing comprises a corresponding internal thread. The threaded outer surface of the conductive crimp component or the cylindrical sleeve mounted to the optical fibre may be axially offset with respect to the external thread of the retainer.
A method of terminating a cable to a connector in a subsea cable connection system may comprise exposing a section of cable core at one end of the cable; fitting a crimp component or mount around the circumference of the cable core; crimping the crimp component to the cable core or fixing the mount to the cable core; fitting a conductive leaf spring to a groove in a first section of the crimp component remote from the cable sleeve; applying a retainer to the crimp body in a second section adjacent to the cable sleeve; and fitting a housing over the first section in contact with the retainer. The retainer may comprise an external thread and the housing comprises a corresponding internal thread.
It should be noted that the term “comprising” does not exclude other elements or steps and “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality. Also, elements described in association with different embodiments may be combined. It should also be noted that reference signs in the claims should not be construed as limiting the scope of the claims. Although the invention is illustrated and described in detail by the preferred embodiments, the invention is not limited by the examples disclosed, and other variations can be derived therefrom by a person skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2013422.7 | Aug 2020 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2021/073248 | 8/23/2021 | WO |