Communication wall receptacles generally have one or more jacks that receive first communication cables having plugs that couple into the jacks. The first communication cables are typically located within a first room. The communication wall receptacles are typically mounted on the room side of a wall using a wall plate. The wall plate is usually sealed to the wall using a gasket when the communication wall receptacle is used in an industrial setting where potential contaminants exist in the environment on the room side of the wall. The jacks of the communication wall receptacles are generally coupled to second communication cables located in an area bounded by the side of the wall opposite the room such as behind the wall or in an adjacent room. By their nature, the wall receptacles breach the wall to which they are mounted. At times this breach can be undesirable.
For instance, vapors, liquid and particulate matter from the room can penetrate behind the wall or into the adjacent room, or vice versa, through any space between the communication wall receptacle and the wall plate. This can degrade the electrical connections of the plugs and jacks within the communication wall receptacle. To prevent such undesirable penetration, a gasket can be used to provide a fluid tight seal between the communication wall receptacle and the wall plate. To protect against such penetration when the communication wall receptacle is not in use, a cap is used to cover the receptacle. When the receptacle is engaged by a cable in the room, the cap can be retained to the receptacle by a strap. Often, one end of the strap is formed integral with the gasket used between the communication wall receptacle and the wall plate, hence simultaneously serving to provide the desired seal between the communication wall receptacle and the wall plate, and also to conveniently attach the strap to the receptacle and thereby retain the receptacle cap. Unfortunately, accidents happen in which the strap portion of such an integrated gasket/strap is unintentionally pulled on with sufficient force to break the seal the gasket portion creates between the receptacle and the wall plate, and thereby allow undesirable penetration of vapors, liquid and particulate matter past the receptacle. If sufficient force is applied the seal may be permanently broken; even lesser forces may create momentary leakages which with time can have a very deleterious effect. Either way, the integrity of the communication wall receptacle is adversely impacted.
As will be discussed in greater detail herein, a receptacle system includes elements that keep a receptacle cap secure through use of an enhanced retaining strap with its associated wall plate when the receptacle cap has been unscrewed. The enhanced retaining strap is a separate individual component and is separably coupled to the receptacle so that if it is pulled with sufficient force the strap will break free from the rest of the receptacle system before associated elements such as gaskets are damaged or loosened.
A combined system 100 including a room cable 102 and a receptacle system 104 is shown in
The receptacle system 104 includes a jack 116 coupled to a receptacle 122 mounted to a wall plate 118 from a behind wall side 117 of the wall plate. The receptacle 122 is attached to the wall plate 118 by positioning the receptacle in an aperture of the wall plate with a flange 126 of the receptacle to a room side surface 129 of the wall plate with a threaded rearwardly extending portion of the receptacle projecting rearwardly through the aperture to the behind the wall side 117 of the wall plate. A nut 120 located on the behind wall side 117 of the wall plate 118 is screwed onto the threaded rearwardly extending portion of the receptacle 122. A gasket 128 is positioned between the flange 126 and the room side surface 129 of the wall plate 118 to provide a fluid-tight seal between the receptacle 122 and the wall plate 118.
The jack 116 is positioned within an interior through passage of the receptacle 122 and is mechanically attached to the receptacle in a conventional manner using spring tabs. A cable (not shown) attached to the jack 116 would extend rearward from the jack. The receptacle 122 includes a room side engagement portion 124 through which the receptacle passage extends and within which the second plug 110 is positioned to engage with the jack 116. The engagement portion 124 further receives the insertion portion 114 within the receptacle passage and is configured so that the cable cap 112 can be removably screwed onto the engagement portion.
The receptacle system 104 includes a receptacle cap 130 that is retained by a strap 132. The strap 132 is coupled at a first end portion 134 to the flange 126 of the receptacle 122 and at a second end portion 140 to the receptacle cap 130, as further shown in
The strap 132 is sufficiently flexible to be bent as needed to allow the receptacle cap 130 to be screwedly coupled to the engagement portion 124 when the room cable 102 is not coupled to the receptacle system 104, as shown in
The flange 126 on the room side of the receptacle 122 has an extended portion 146 with a first surface 147 as shown in
The elongate aperture 149 of the first end portion 134 of the strap 132 extends laterally, as shown in
The rounded aperture 151 of the second end portion 140 of the strap 132 is sized to allow free turning of the receptacle cap 130 relative to the strap to screw the cap onto and off of the engagement portion 124 to engage and disengage the cap with the receptacle 122. The stud 142 has a head portion large enough to trap the second end portion 140 of the strap 132 between the head portion and the cap 130.
An area, shown in
From the foregoing it will be appreciated that, although specific embodiments of the invention have been described herein for purposes of illustration, various modifications may be made without deviating from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is not limited except as by the appended claims.
This application claims priority benefit of provisional application Ser. No. 60/695,401 filed Jun. 30, 2005.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2985334 | Slater | May 1961 | A |
3288910 | Zerwes | Nov 1966 | A |
5408046 | Vandeventer | Apr 1995 | A |
5747739 | Moeller | May 1998 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070012474 A1 | Jan 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60695401 | Jun 2005 | US |