The invention relates to a compliant pin provided with recesses for receiving shavings formed when the compliant pin is press-fit into a compliant pin receiving aperture in a circuit board and an electrical connector using the same.
Compliant pins are slightly elastically deformable in a radial direction. When press-fit portions of the compliant pins are pressed into compliant pin receiving apertures of a circuit board, because the compliant pin receiving apertures have slightly smaller diameters than the compliant pins, the compliant pins are fixed to the circuit board due to elastic deformation. Favorable electrical connections can thereby be established without soldering.
Inner surfaces of the compliant pin receiving apertures are generally plated with a material, such as copper. The compliant pins are generally plated across their entire surfaces with a material, such as tin. Because the plating of the compliant pins is usually softer than the plating of the compliant pin receiving apertures, shavings of the plating of the compliant pins are generally generated during press-fitting of the compliant pins into the compliant pin receiving apertures due to frictional contact between the compliant pins and the compliant pin receiving apertures. The shavings may be scattered on the circuit board and therefore there is a possibility that the scattered shavings will short printed circuits on the circuit board or electronic components provided thereon.
Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 6(1994)-013735 discloses a technique for solving the above-mentioned problem. In this technique, a plastic film is laminated on both sides of a circuit board, and the compliant pin is then press-fitted into compliant pin receiving apertures of the circuit board. When the compliant pin is press-fit, the compliant pin penetrates the plastic film, and the plastic film surrounds the compliant pin in a state of close contact. The shavings generated during insertion are thereby sealed within the compliant pin receiving apertures of the circuit board and scattering of the shavings on the circuit board is prevented.
In another known technique, a damp proofing coating for protecting electronic components is provided on both sides of a circuit board into which compliant pins are press-fit. During press-fitting, the shavings are coated along with the electronic components so that there is no possibility that the shavings will scatter. However, the coating is not necessarily administered for all circuit boards.
Both of these techniques have the disadvantage that they require an addition component and an additional manufacturing step. In the technique disclosed in Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 6(1994)-013735, the plastic film for laminating the circuit board is a separate component and a laminating step is required. In the other technique, additional coating materials and a coating step is required. Thus, the costs of manufacturing are increased and the manufacturing process is more difficult in the above-mentioned techniques.
It is an object of the invention to provide a compliant pin that is press-fit into a compliant pin receiving aperture of a circuit board wherein the amount of shavings that scatter on the circuit board is reduced without increasing the number of components or manufacturing steps and an electrical connector using the same. It is further an object of the invention to provide a compliant pin that is press-fit into a compliant pin receiving aperture of a circuit board wherein shavings generated from the press-fitting are miniaturized so that shorting among circuits on the circuit board and among electronic devices in prevented and an electrical connector using the same.
This and other objects are achieved by a compliant pin comprising a contact portion, an end portion, and a press-fit portion. The press-fit portion is arranged between the contact portion and the end portion. The press-fit portion is deformable in a radial direction. The press-fit portion has a first tapered surface with a first end and a second end. The first tapered surface has recesses for receiving shavings generated when the compliant pin is press-fit.
This and other objects are further achieved by an electrical connector assembly comprising an electrical connector and at least one compliant pin. The compliant pin including a press-fit portion arranged between a contact portion and an end portion. The press-fit portion is deformable in a radial direction. The press-fit portion has a first tapered surface with a first end and a second end. The first tapered surface has recesses for receiving shavings generated when the compliant pin is press-fit into a compliant pin receiving aperture.
The thickness of the first and second plating materials may be, for example, 08 μm to 1.5 μm. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, however, that the first and second plating materials may be any metal that has conductive properties and is corrosion resistant, such as gold.
As shown in
The press-fit portion 2 includes projecting portions 2a, as shown in
The exterior surfaces 20, the first tapered surface 22, and the second tapered surfaces 24 have substantially arcuate outer surfaces 26. The arcuate outer surfaces 26 consist of first, second, and third arcuate outer surfaces 26a, 26b, 26c, respectively. The arcuate outer surfaces 26 are formed toward an outside of the sheared surfaces 12 and have a substantially arcuate configuration that conform to an arc of compliant pin receiving aperture 102 in a circuit board 100, as shown in
Between the first end 22a and the second end 22b of the first tapered surface 22 are recesses 28. As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
A method of press-fitting the compliant pin 1 into the compliant pin receiving aperture 102 of the circuit board 100 will now be described. As shown in
As the compliant pin 1 is inserted further, the first tapered surface 22 serve as guide surfaces. The plating of the first tapered surface 22 peels-off along the central axis 10 and shavings of the plating before the second recess 28b are received in the second recess 28b. The plating between the second recess 28b and the first recess 28a also peel-off during further insertion. These peeled-off shavings are received in the first recess 28a. Because the recesses 28 are formed diagonally with respect to the central axis 10 of the compliant pin 1 and are inclined away from the sheared surfaces 12, the recesses 28 do not engage and/or score the edges 102a of the compliant pin receiving apertures 102, when the compliant pin 1 is pressed therein. The arcuate outer surfaces 26 secure the compliant pin 1 in the compliant pin receiving apertures 102, and the shavings from the plating are housed within the recesses 28.
Because the shavings are mostly generated at the first tapered surface 22, in order to prevent the shavings from scattering, it is necessary to provide the first recess 28a at least at the second ends 22b of the first tapered surface 22. Thus, the relatively large shavings generated from the first ends 22a to the second ends 22b of the first tapered surface 22 are housed in the first recess 28a. The second recess 28b are formed between the first recess 28a and the first ends 22a of the taper surfaces 22, so that the peeled-off shavings are divided by length into those having lengths between the first ends 22a of the taper surfaces 22 to the recess 28b and those having lengths between the second recess 28b and the first recess 28a. The shavings are thereby miniaturized and become easier to house within the recesses 28. In addition, by miniaturizing the shavings, even in the case where the shavings become scattered outside of the compliant pin receiving aperture 102, the possibility that the shavings will cause short circuits and the like is reduced. Further, by the presence of the second recess 28b, the contact surface area between the first tapered surface 22 and the compliant pin receiving aperture 102 decreases thereby reducing the amount of shavings generated.
The foregoing illustrates some of the possibilities for practicing the invention. Many other embodiments are possible within the scope and spirit of the invention. For example, the shape and size of the connector 120, as well as the number of the compliant pins 1 accommodated therein can be varied. Additionally, in the above described embodiment, the plating of the compliant pin 1 peels-off because the plating is softer than that of the compliant pin receiving aperture 102. In addition or alternatively, the plating of the compliant pin receiving aperture 102 can peel-off and be received within the recesses 28. It is, therefore, intended that the foregoing description be regarded as illustrative rather than limiting, and that the scope of the invention is given by the appended claims together with their full range of equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2004-235286 | Aug 2004 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4186982 | Cobaugh et al. | Feb 1980 | A |
4606589 | Elsbree et al. | Aug 1986 | A |
4748841 | Mezger et al. | Jun 1988 | A |
5944563 | Nagafuji | Aug 1999 | A |
5980271 | MacDougall et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
6325643 | Ohtsuki et al. | Dec 2001 | B1 |
20010021610 | Otsuki et al. | Sep 2001 | A1 |
20040259428 | Bleicher | Dec 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
6-13735 | Jan 1994 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060035535 A1 | Feb 2006 | US |