This application is the National Stage of PCT/DE2015/100335 filed on Aug. 12, 2015, which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 of German Application No. 10 2014 112 010.8 filed on Aug. 21, 2014 and German Application No. 10 2014 118 688.5 filed on Dec. 15, 2014, the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference. The international application under PCT article 21(2) was not published in English.
The invention relates to a contact element for plug connectors having plug contacts arranged on the plug side and a crimp connection arranged on the cable side. The invention further relates to a plug connector having at least one such contact element arranged in a plug connector housing.
A plug connector of this type emerges from DE 20 2010 011 545 U1. This plug connector has contact elements having crimp connections arranged on the cable connection side, said crimp connections being provided in each case with a primary locking element and a secondary locking element. Every contact elements serves as a spring contact and is, in addition, provided to contact an individual cable by crimping and to fix it in the contact element. Each of these contact elements is arranged in a plug connector housing, wherein the contact elements are located one alongside the other. Such plug connectors are used, for example, in automobile manufacture. They serve to contact individual cables in a plug connector to several contact elements that are located one alongside the other or one above the other. Contacting of individual cables in a common plug connector is necessary in automobile manufacture because outlets for individual cables from a common cable harness are required at different points.
Especially in automobile manufacture, such plug connectors are exposed to high loads, for example vibrating loads and suchlike. Crimp connections withstand these loads very well. Because of the installation space that crimp connections occupy, it is, however, not easily possible to construct these connectors very compactly. The spacing of the contact elements in the plug connector housing is essentially determined by the measurements/diameter of the crimp connections.
The contact elements according to the invention as described herein and the plug connector according to the invention, in which such contact elements are arranged in a plug connector housing, having the features described herein enable, in comparison, a very compact installation in a very advantageous manner and a further decrease in size of such plug connectors and thus an increase in the number of contact elements to be arranged in such a plug connector and thus an increase in the number of contact elements that can be arranged in such a plug connector and thus an increase in the number of cables to contact, which end in the plug connector. Furthermore, a two-row implementation of such a plug system is only possible through this.
According to the invention it is here provided that the plug contacts and the crimp connection are offset axially parallel to each other and that the at least one primary locking element has two locking springs which act transversely relative to the plugging direction and are arranged to be mirror-symmetrical relative to a plugging means plane and that the at least one secondary locking element has at least one secondary locking indent that is arranged in the contact element to be transverse relative to the plugging direction and mirror-symmetrical relative to a plugging means plane. By the axially parallel offset arrangement of the plug contact and the crimp connection and the primary locking element and secondary locking element that are arranged to be mirror-symmetrical relative to the plug means plane working together, it is possible to position the plug contacts respectively rotated by 180° relative to one another one alongside the other in the plug. As a result of this, a two-row arrangement of the plug contacts in a plug connector is possible. In this case, the plug contacts are on one plane and two such planes of adjacent plug contacts are located one above the other. The plug contacts and thus the crimp connections are in one plane rotated by 180° relative to the other plane.
According to an advantageous embodiment of a plug connector according to the invention, it is provided that the plug contacts in the plug connector are positioned, in each case alternating with 180° rotation relative to one another, one alongside the other wherein the crimp connections respectively lying on top of one another and below one another can overlap in the mounted state transversely (perpendicularly) relative to the plugging direction. This enables the plug contacts to be arranged in one row, wherein the plug contacts can lie substantially closer to one another than in plugs known from the prior art, since the crimp connections are no longer “mutually disturbed” as it were because of their alternating arrangement in the plug connector housing, since they are in each case offset relative to one another and can be so close to one another that the crimp connections slightly overlap on different planes. It is also only possible with this arrangement to form such plug systems in a two-row design. This is made possible by the possibility of mounting plug connectors in positions rotated by 180°.
Further advantageous developments and embodiments of the contact element according to the invention and the plug connector according to the invention are also described herein.
Thus it is advantageously provided that the plug contacts and the crimping connection are offset relative to one another by a measure of length that substantially corresponds at least to the largest measurement perpendicular to the plugging direction or to the diameter of the crimping connection. In this way, the slightly overlapping arrangement of the contact elements arranged in planes offset to one another as described above is very advantageously possible.
Every contact element also very advantageously has a crimp-arresting element on the cable connection side following the crimp connection, said crimp-arresting element coming to rest in an indent that is mirror-inverted relative to it in the plug connector housing after mounting the contact element in the plug connector housing by exerting pretension. In this way, the contact element is fixed in the plug connector housing and it is thus achieved that even considerable vibrating loads, like the ones that can occur in vehicles, do not lead to a break, for example, of the transition region between the contact elements and the crimp region or to contact corrosion of a copper conductor in the crimp connection that has an insulating effect.
It is thus very advantageously provided that the crimp-arresting element is arranged on the lower edge of the crimp connection. On the lower edge here means lying substantially on the plane of opened crimp wings.
The plug contacts formed as spring contacts are arranged on a U-bracket arranged on the plug contact side, they taper inwards, are formed springily and point in the direction of the cable connection side. This formation provides a simple and effective reception of blade contact elements, and indeed in such a way that an actuation of the primary lock is also simultaneously implemented in the manner that will be subsequently described in more detail.
The locking springs preferably have blade contact support surfaces on their side facing towards the plugging means plane. These serve to effectively prevent the locking springs from unlatching from the openings provided in the plug connector housing, since the blade contact support surfaces abut the blade contact elements and do not allow any movement of the locking springs in the direction of the plugging means plane in the plugged state of the blade contact elements.
The secondary locking cams provided in the housing preferably have an excess length relative to the secondary locking indents such that, when the locking cams engage with the secondary locking indents, this causes the locking cams to wedge in the secondary locking indents. By the cams completely engaging in the secondary locking indents, the contact element is secured in the plug connector housing.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are depicted in the drawings and are described in more detail in the description below.
Here are shown:
A contact element labelled as a whole with 100 has a contact region 110, a locking region 120 and a crimp region 130. The contact region 110 substantially consists of a U-shaped, bent bracket 111, on which plug contacts 112 that taper inwards in plugging direction, are formed springily and point in the direction of the cable close side, i.e. of the crimp region 130, are arranged. These plug contacts 112 arranged on the plug side serve to receive a blade contact element 310 (see
The locking region 120 following the contact region 110 has primary locking elements and secondary locking elements. The primary locking elements are two locking springs 122 that act transversely relative to the plugging direction R and are arranged mirror-symmetrically relative to a plugging means plane E, which extends perpendicularly from a plugging base part of the bracket 113 in the middle between the plug contacts 112, said locking springs engaging with corresponding indents 260 in a plug connector housing in the mounted state and being held there by their spring effect (see
These locking springs 122 form the primary lock. A secondary lock is connected to this on the side of the locking region 120 facing towards the crimp region 130, said secondary lock being formed by secondary locking indents 124 among other things. These secondary locking indents 124 are also arranged to be mirror-symmetrical relative to plane E.
Because of the mirror-symmetrical arrangement of both the locking springs 122 of the primary locking element and of the secondary locking indents 124 of the secondary locking element, it is possible to also use the contact element rotated by 180° without installation changes. In this case, the upper and lower locking springs 122 and the upper and lower secondary locking indents 124 change their positions. The U-bracket 111 is similarly rotated by 180° such that, in
Such contact elements are arranged in a plug connector, which is labelled as a whole as 200. For this, openings 230 adjusted to the contact elements 100 are provided in a plug connector housing 210, which serve for the reception and positioning of the contact elements 100 (see
After a blade contact element or blade contact 310 has been pushed into the spring contact element 100, as is schematically depicted in
A further secondary locking element 340 is provided in the form of secondary locking cams 342, which engage with the secondary locking indents 124. It also applies here that the contact elements 100 can be alternatingly arranged in two different positions rotated by 180° because of the mirror-symmetrical arrangement of the secondary locking indents 124 in terms of plane E, wherein one and the same secondary locking element 340 engages with the secondary locking cams 342, once with the one (upper) secondary locking indents and another time with the other (lower) secondary locking indents 124, which are arranged mirror-symmetrically relative to plane E. The secondary locking cams 342 have a small excess length in comparison to the secondary locking indents 124. By doing so, a pre-tensioned fixing of the contact element 100 in the plug connector housing 200 is possible in the plugged state.
As emerges from
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2014 112 010 | Aug 2014 | DE | national |
10 2014 118 688 | Dec 2014 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/DE2015/100335 | 8/12/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2016/026483 | 2/25/2016 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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20 2010 011 545 | Nov 2010 | DE |
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Entry |
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International Search Report of PCT/DE2015/100335, dated Oct. 30, 2015. |
German Office Action dated Aug. 11, 2015 in German Application No. 10 2014 118 688.5 with English translation of relevant parts. |
German Office Action dated Oct. 11, 2016 in German Application No. 10 2014 118 688.5 with English translation of relevant parts. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170271783 A1 | Sep 2017 | US |