Connector assembly having pivoting wire carrier with position detents

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6254421
  • Patent Number
    6,254,421
  • Date Filed
    Monday, April 26, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, July 3, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
Connector assembly (10) includes a wire carrier section 14 pivotably mounted to a housing (12) and adapted to be mounted directly to a circuit board without separate fasteners to terminate a discrete wire (180) to a contact (24) that is electrically connected to the board. A wire end (182) is inserted into a respective passageway (16,18) of the wire carrier 14, and the wire carrier section (14) is pivoted toward housing (12) pressing the wire into a slot of an IDC section (26) of the contact. The compact profile occupies minimal board real estate.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




This relates to the field of electrical connectors and more particularly to connectors for terminating a discrete wire conductor to a contact.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




In U.S. Pat. No. 5,667,402 is disclosed an electrical connector module that facilitates termination of one or more conductor wires to respective terminals of the module, especially for electrical connection of tip and ring wires to a network interface device module, in telephone. The module includes a pair of wire carriers at respective wire termination sections of a housing, each wire carrier having two wire-receiving passageways. Each wire carrier is affixed to the housing at a pivot section enabling pivoting of the wire carrier between wire insertion positions and wire termination positions. A contact is associated with each wire and is mounted to the housing such that it extends outwardly to be received into a slot of the wire carrier when the carrier is pivoted to the wire termination position, the slot intersecting the wire-receiving passageway. A wire is inserted into each passageway of the carrier, and the carrier is then pivoted to the termination position urging the wires into slots of insulation displacement sections of the respective contacts held by the housing.




It is desired to provide a wire carrier that is mountable to a circuit board to enable termination of at least one wire to a respective contact mounted to the circuit board.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention provides a wire carrier assembly that is mountable to a circuit board and includes a housing and a wire carrier section pivotably mounted thereto. The housing includes preferably a single board-mounting section that extends into a mounting hole of the circuit board in a force fit, thus occupying minimal circuit board real estate allowing close side-by-side spacing of several such modules, if desired. A stop section limits pivoting upwardly and also secures the wire carrier to the housing in cooperation with a pair of stop members of the housing; a pair of first detents secures the wire carrier in its wire-receiving position; the first and second detents ride over the stop members of the housing when the carrier is pivoted to its wire-terminating position, and the second detents secure the carrier in the second position.











An embodiment of the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings.




BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is an isometric view of the assembly of the present invention;





FIGS. 2 and 3

are side elevation views of the assembly of

FIG. 1

illustrating the wire-receiving and wire-terminating positions of the pivotable wire carrier section, respectively;





FIG. 4

is a plan view of the assembly of

FIGS. 1

to


3


in the wire-receiving position;





FIG. 5

is an isometric view of another embodiment of the assembly having a short wire carrier section;





FIG. 6

is an isometric view of the assembly of

FIG. 5

with the wire carrier section and a pair of contacts exploded from the housing;





FIG. 7

is an isometric view of the assembly of

FIGS. 5 and 6

from below;





FIGS. 8 and 9

are cross-sectional views of the assembly of

FIGS. 5

to


7


receiving a wire and terminating the wire, respectively; and





FIG. 10

is a front view illustrating the side-by-side placement of two assemblies in abutting relationship.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION




Connector assembly


10


of

FIGS. 1

to


4


includes an insulative housing


12


and a wire carrier section


14


that is pivotably mounted to housing


12


. Wire carrier section


14


is shown to include a pair of wire-receiving passageways


16


,


18


extending rearwardly from a wire-receiving face


20


, and also includes a manually engageable tab


22


to facilitate pivoting of the wire carrier section between wire-receiving position (

FIGS. 1 and 2

) and a wire-terminating position (FIG.


3


). A pair of contacts


24


are affixed in housing


12


(see

FIGS. 2 and 3

) for termination to respective wires, with wire-terminating sections


26


projecting upwardly from housing


12


into corresponding slots (see

FIGS. 8 and 9

) of wire carrier section


14


and intersecting respective passageways


16


,


18


. Wire-terminating sections


26


are of the insulation displacement (IDC) type, defining a wire-receiving IDC slot between a pair of upstanding beams that includes an entrance adjacent upper portions of the beams, with the passageway passing above the entrance when the wire carrier is in the open position. The beams will penetrate the wire insulation as the wire disposed in the passageway, is urged downwardly into and past the entrance to the wire-receiving slot and compressively engage the conductor of the wire for electrical connection therewith, when the wire carrier section is pivoted to the wire-terminating or second position.




Housing


12


includes preferably a pair of projections


28


,


30


at opposed sides of front face


32


that extend upwardly to rearwardly extending stop members


34


. Wire carrier section


14


is shown to include depending wall


36


adjacent projections


28


,


30


concluding in a corresponding stop section


38


that will abut stop members


34


of projections


28


,


30


of the housing to define the uppermost pivot position of the wire carrier, that is, the wire-receiving or first position. Wire carrier section


14


further includes first and second detents


40


,


42


vertically aligned with stop section


38


and projections


28


,


30


. First or open position detent


40


is closely spaced from stop section


38


and is engageable with stop member


34


of the housing projection when the wire carrier section is in its wire-receiving position, thus holding the wire carrier section in that position by resisting inadvertent pivoting, as shown in

FIGS. 1 and 2

. First detent


40


will ride over stop member


34


during pivoting of the wire carrier section to its second or wire-terminating position. Second or clasp position detent


42


also rides over stop member


34


and seats therebeneath when wire carrier section


14


has been fully pivoted to its second or wire-terminating position, thus securing it in that position as seen in FIG.


3


.




A board-mounting projection or peg


44


is seen in

FIGS. 2 and 3

to depend from board-mounting face


46


of housing


12


for securing the assembly to a circuit board (not shown) when force-fitted into a corresponding mounting hole of the board. Contacts


24


are seen to include pin sections


48


that depend from board-mounting face


46


to be electrically connected with corresponding circuits of the circuit board when inserted into plated through-holes thereof, as is conventional.

FIG. 3

illustrates that top surface


50


of wire carrier section


14


is flush with the top surface of housing


12


, the top ends of projections


28


,


30


and tab


22


when in the wire-terminating or second position. Forward section


52


projects forwardly between and beyond projections


28


,


30


and is shown to be substantially elongate in the embodiment of

FIGS. 1

to


4


to protrude beyond front face


32


of the housing.




In the embodiment of connector assembly


110


shown in

FIGS. 5

to


10


, forward section


152


of wire carrier section


114


is foreshortened and protrudes only slightly between projections


128


,


130


and beyond front face


132


of housing


112


to minimize the overall length of the connector when compactness is necessary. Otherwise, assembly


110


is identical to assembly


10


of

FIGS. 1

to


4


.





FIG. 6

shows wire carrier section


114


exploded above housing


112


, with contacts


124


also exploded above the housing. Contact-receiving slots


154


are adapted to receive contacts


124


thereinto in a force fit during assembly, with board-connecting pin sections


148


to pass through the bottoms of the slots to project beyond board-mounting face


146


of the housing (

FIGS. 7

to


10


). Wire carrier section


114


includes a pivot bar


160


along its rearward end that is seatable between side walls


162


of housing


112


and under ledge


164


that defines the housing's cooperating pivot section, with the carrier section being assembled to the housing by urging stop member


138


beneath stop members


134


of projections


128


,


130


. In

FIG. 7

is seen the board-mounting face of connector


110


, with board-mounting peg


144


shown to include several, preferably four, deformable ribs that establish a force fit with the board-mounting hole having a diameter slightly less than the major dimension of peg


144


, as is known.





FIGS. 8 and 9

illustrate the termination of a representative wire


180


to connector assembly


110


. Wire end


182


is first inserted into passageway


116


until abutted against rear wall


166


of housing


112


, thus intersecting IDC-receiving slot


168


midway along the passageway and being assuredly positioned above IDC section


126


of contact


124


. Then wire carrier section


114


is pivoted to the second or wire-terminating position as seen in

FIG. 9

, with the top of the passageway pressing wire


180


into the IDC section for assured mechanical and electrical connection with contact


124


.





FIG. 10

is illustrative of the compact design of connector assembly


110


. Using only a single board-mounting peg


144


, minimal real estate of the circuit board is thus used, allowing several connector assemblies


110


,


110


to be positioned adjacent each other, side-by-side in a row.




Modifications and variations may occur to the specific embodiment disclosed herein, that are within the spirit of the invention and the scope of the claims.



Claims
  • 1. A connector assembly for termination to an insulated wire, comprising:an insulative housing; at least one wire carrier pivotably mounted to said housing at a termination location; a terminal mounted in said housing and including an IDC section defined by a pair of beam portions having an IDC slot therebetween extending upwardly to an entrance to said IDC slot at upper portions of said beam portions; said wire carrier having a pivot section at a rear end thereof disposed within a complementary pivot section of said housing, and further having a wire-receiving passageway thereinto from a front face that passes above said entrance to said IDC slot of said terminal when said wire carrier is in a first or open position, and said wire carrier being pivotable to a second or closed position, thereby urging a wire disposed along said wire-receiving passageway into said IDC slot; wherein said wire carrier includes a stop section that cooperates with a pair of stop members of said housing to limit upward pivoting movement to define said first or open position of said wire carrier; and wherein said wire carrier includes a pair of closed position detents cooperable with respective said stop members of said housing to secure said wire carrier in said closed position, said closed position detents adapted to ride over said stop members when said wire carrier is pivoted to said closed position.
  • 2. The connector assembly as set forth in claim 1 wherein said wire carrier includes a manually engageable tab protruding forwardly of said front face and thereabove, facilitating manual engagement for pivoting said wire carrier between said open and closed positions.
  • 3. The connector assembly as set forth in claim 1 wherein said board-mounting projection includes a plurality of deformable ribs that establish a force fit with said board-mounting hole having a diameter slightly less than said board-mounting projection.
  • 4. The connector assembly as set forth in claim 1 wherein said stop members of said housing are defined on upstanding legs positioned laterally from opposed sides of said wire carrier and rearwardly from said front face thereof.
  • 5. The connector assembly as set forth in claim 1 wherein said wire carrier includes a pair of open position detents cooperable with respective said stop members of said housing to secure said wire carrier in said open position, said open position detents adapted to ride over said stop members when said wire carrier is pivoted to said open position.
  • 6. The connector assembly as set forth in claim 1 wherein said housing defines a board-mounting face, and said terminal includes a contact section exposed along said board-mounting face of said housing for establishing an electrical connection to a circuit board upon mounting said housing thereto.
  • 7. The connector assembly as set forth in claim 1 wherein said housing defines a board-mounting face, and said housing includes a board-mounting projection depending from said board-mounting face to enter a mounting hole of said circuit board in a force-fit.
Parent Case Info

This application claims benefit of provisional application Ser. No. 60/090,969 filed Jun. 29, 1998.

US Referenced Citations (6)
Number Name Date Kind
4341430 Crawford Jul 1982
5171160 Beins et al. Dec 1992
5613877 Patel et al. Mar 1997
5667402 Denovich et al. Sep 1997
5681182 Reichle Oct 1997
5785548 Capper et al. Jul 1998
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60/090969 Jun 1998 US