The invention relates to a contact element for a connecting terminal, particularly a circuit board connecting terminal, and to a connecting terminal and to a plug link.
As understood in this document, a connecting terminal generally has several poles, to each of which a connecting lead can be attached in order to further transmit an electrical signal, specifically by clamping the lead to a contact element and fixing it in position there. As a rule, the electrical signal is then received from the contact element by one or more permanent or detachable electrical connections. Each pole of a connecting terminal thus corresponds to a clamping element, and the entire connecting terminal is constructed of a plurality of such clamping elements.
When connecting terminals are used to connect more than one connecting lead, and when circuit board connecting terminals, in particular, are used to connect a plurality of leads to circuit boards, it is often the case that two or more clamping elements must be electrically connected to each other in the connecting terminal. This is usually achieved by inserting a lead component that is bent into the shape of a U, or a stamped or punched part that has a U-shape, into the clamping point, where it is clamped into position. However, a problematic aspect of this procedure rests in the fact that an additional connecting lead must be attached to least one of the connected clamping points, which means that two elements must be clamped into position at this point. The result is that a secure contact for the two elements cannot be absolutely guaranteed, e.g., because the diameter of the U-shaped lead component or stamping may diverge from that of the connecting lead. Spring clamps, which are widely employed because of their unusually robust, economical, and easily handled clamping mechanism have proved to be particularly susceptible in this regard.
DE 10 2004 013 757 shows a way of circumventing this problem by installing separate electrical contacts when clamping elements of this kind must be linked together. Installation must be performed in advance, however. Moreover, the connection cannot be undone once it is made, and assembly costs consequently rise.
The goal of the invention, therefore, is to provide a contact element for a connecting terminal, particularly a circuit board connecting terminal, as well as to provide a connecting terminal itself and a plug link for the connecting terminal, such that the poles of the connecting terminal can be connected in a manner that flexible, well-adapted to the market, and cost-effective.
The invention achieves this goal with a contact element for a connecting terminal with the features of patent claim 1, with a connecting terminal with the features of patent claim 8, and with a plug link for a connecting terminal with the features of patent claim 13. Advantageous embodiments and elaborations of the invention are indicated in the secondary claims.
The basic idea of the invention is to design the contact element for a connecting terminal as a bent punched part, into which are integrated at least an initial clamping means for fixing a plug link in place and a second clamping means for fixing a connecting pin in place. “Integrated” is understood to mean specifically that the first and the second clamping means are integral parts of the bent punched part and that the corresponding sections of the bent punched part are provided by suitable mechanical pre-stressing, when necessary.
In this way, a separate clamping contact is provided for a plug link, by means of which different contact elements can be shorted with each other, while an optimal clamping effect for the pin and electrical conductors is simultaneously guaranteed at all the clamping contacts.
The multi-functional contact element elaborated by the invention can be produced simply and economically in a single step, namely by producing the bent punched part.
The bent punched part has an advantageous cage-like structure, which makes it possible, e.g., to close a flow of power that is introduced into the contact element by an additional clamping spring, which is positioned as a separate part in the contact element.
Contact elements have proven to be particularly suited when at least the first clamping means is flat, since this permits a particularly compact, space-saving design. It has proven to be particularly useful if the first clamping means has at least one leg, which clamps into position a contact finger that belongs to a plug link and that is inserted between the clamping leg and a wall or a second clamping leg.
An embodiment of the first clamping means which ensures a particularly secure clamping connection specifies that at least one clamping leg has a structural feature, e.g., an indentation or a bulge, that engages with a matching bulge or indentation belonging to a contact finger. Clamping means of this kind can be very simply provided by punching out the appropriate shape from strips of sheet metal.
A wide range of application for a single design of the contact element is provided if the second clamping means is so designed that the connecting pin can be inserted from three different spatial directions.
The contact element can be further improved if it also has a contact surface for testing, such as to permit the signal applied to this structural component to be tested.
The connecting terminal according to the invention, and the circuit board connecting terminal, in particular, has at least two clamping elements, each of which has an insulating housing and a contact element (as also specified by the invention), which is positioned inside the insulating housing.
It is particularly advantageous if the insulating housing of at least two of the clamping elements, specifically the clamping elements which are connected together in electrically conductive fashion, has a lead-insertion hole, a plug-link insertion hole that is separated from the lead-insertion hole, and at least one other hole for producing a plug contact with a pin or a multi-pin connector. This ensures that for each plug contact that is provided there can be an individual clamping point that is adapted to the special demands of the given plug contact.
It has also proved to be advantageous if the insulating housing has at least one locking device with click-in means which allow the insulating housing to be secured to a housing or circuit board.
For a variable electrical connection, which permits subsequent modification and which involves at least two clamping elements belonging to this kind of connecting terminal, a plug link is particularly suited—specifically, a plug link which, when inserted, is clamped by the first clamping means of the given contact element.
The plug link for a contact element according to the invention advantageously has a front part and at least two contact fingers. The plug link is particularly easy to handle when the front part is at least partially angled. In order to remove the plug link without danger, for all voltages applied to the contact element at a given moment, it very useful if the front part is at least partially covered with an insulation. The insulting cover may be an applied plastic or an injection-molded part.
A particularly secure seat for the plug link can be provided if at least one of the contact fingers has a bulge or indentation, so that a locking effect is provided with the assigned clamping means, and specifically when said clamping means has a corresponding indentation or bulge.
It also contributes to the secure seat if at least one of the contact fingers has an opening, since in this way the rims of the contact fingers will yield elastically in relation to each other and thereby provide a better contact.
It is expedient if the plug link is also designed as a bent punched part, and if it has a U-shape when the link is a bipolar one and a comb-shape when the link is a multi-polar one.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is next described in detail on the basis of the figures. Shown are:
Unless otherwise noted, identical reference numerals are used for identical components in all of the figures.
Each clamping element 101 has an insulating housing 1, which as a rule is made of an electrically insulating material; it also has a lead-insertion hole 4, a plug-link insertion hole 5, and a pressing component 2, which is also generally produced from an electrically insulating material and runs through the insulating housing 1.
The insulating housing 1 also has at least one locking device 6, which engages with a circuit board or the wall of a housing. On its side the connecting terminal 100 is sealed with a lateral wall 102.
The bent punched part that forms the cage-like structure of the contact element 8 shown in
At the border of the left rim of the base plate 401 there is a stamped out area 402 that produces the first clamping means 13, which here takes the form of clamping legs, with recesses 14 provided in its interior.
Running from the right part of the front rim of the base plate 401, basically parallel to the y-axis, there is a first material strip 408, which extends further to the right across the right rim of the base plate 401 and which is bent upwards around an axis running basically parallel to the y-axis. The part of the first material strip 408 that borders the base plate 401 serves to laterally stabilize the elastic spring (not shown in
Bent forward from the upper rear wall 403, which runs basically parallel to the y-axis, is a top plate 405, which extends along the x-axis basically parallel to the base plate 401. The lead (not shown) comes to rest on the side of the top plate 405 that faces the base plate 401 when said lead is inserted and is positioned by a clamping spring 7, which is shown only in
In the left lower area of the back wall 403, a third material strip 407 is bent forward so that it runs parallel to the x-direction and so that the front rim of the base plate 401, the front rim of the third material strip 407, and the front rim of the top plate 405 lie on a single plane; at the same time, the left rim of the base plate 401, the left rim of the third material strip 407, and the left rim of the top plate 405 lie on a single plane. The material strip 407 serves to secure the clamping spring 7 (not depicted) when the contact element 8 is pushed in too far to the right.
In the right upper area of the back wall 403 a fourth material strip 409 is bent forward so that it runs parallel to the x-direction and so that the front rim of said fourth material strip 409 and of the top plate 405 lie on a single plane [sic]. The fourth material strip 409 serves as a support for the testing contact surface 16, which is bent away from, and to the right of, said fourth material strip 409 on the latter's front rim, so that the testing contact surface 16 rests basically parallel to the top plate 405 and lies on the same plane as the latter, or slightly below it.
The fifth material strip 414, already mentioned, extends, at first diagonally, from the right lower area of the back wall 403 and to the right. Along the y-coordinate of the left boundary line of the first clamping area 410 of the first material strip 408, the fifth material strip 414 passes into a rectangular second clamping area 415, which is parallel to the first clamping area and of equal size. This second clamping area 415 is surrounded in the remaining three directions by surfaces 416, 417, 418, which run diagonally and backwards. Surfaces 411 and 416, 412 and 417, and 413 and 418 each form a common insertion aid for inserting a connecting pin 21 (not shown) into the second clamping means 15 formed by material strips 408 and 414, and specifically for inserting said connecting pin 21 between the clamping area 410 and 415.
Again with reference to
A plug link 3 is inserted into the two adjacent plug-link insertion holes 5 belonging to two adjacent clamping elements 101, and the two clamping elements 101 are then joined together in electrically conductive fashion by this plug-link 3. It is understood that the plug link 3 can also be designed so that more than two clamping elements 101 are connected in conductive fashion or that two non-adjacent clamping elements 101 are joined together.
The basic principle according to which terminal leads are connected through use of the connecting terminal can easily be understood from
The contact element 8 is made of an electrically conductive material. Electrical signals fed by a connecting lead inserted into the clamping element 101 will therefore disperse through the contact element 8, specifically into the contact spring for the plug contact. Using holes 10, 11 and/or 12, a plug contact can be produced with the second clamping means 15, which is designed as a contact spring, and from three different directions, simply by inserting an electrically conductive connecting pin into the contact spring.
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