The invention relates to a device for connecting the wires of one or more windings that make up the fixed part of an electrical machine and are known as “winding wires” and wires connected to an external source of electrical power, known as “supply wires”. Hereinafter, a winding constituting the fixed part of an electrical machine will be termed the fixed winding. The invention also relates to a method for implementing the device.
The invention finds a particular although not exclusive use in connecting the winding wires of the stator of an electric motor to the stator supply wires. The invention can be implemented for connection to supply wires of any fixed part of an electrical machine such as, for example, the winding of a transformer or the stator of a generator.
In general, the winding wires and the supply wires are of different kinds. More specifically, the winding wires are generally single-strand wires covered with insulation, such as enamel for example. These winding wires are commonly known as “enameled wires”. The supply wires may be multi-strand wires and may be coated with a flexible sheath, such as a braided polyester sheath for example. The winding wires and the supply wires may have different cross sections. Furthermore, several winding wires may be connected to one and the same supply wire and vice versa. In order to make this connection, electrical connections are made between the two types of wire. These connections need to be insensitive to external forces such as vibrations amongst other things. In order to ensure their mechanical integrity, these connections are mechanically secured to the stator.
Several embodiments have been used to connect the winding wires and the supply wires.
A first embodiment has been to provide non-removable means of connection connecting the supply wires and the winding wires, such as soldering or crimping a conducting sleeve onto the stripped ends of the supply wires and of the winding wires. The connection thus made is then insulated, for example using an insulating sleeve, then fixed to or into the stator winding, for example by means of a lacing around the winding.
This first embodiment has several disadvantages. For example: when the windings have to be shaped by pressing in order to observe dimensions defined by a technical specification, it can happen that, during this operation, the connection punctures the insulation under the effect of the pressure and damages the winding wire or the supply wire. Another disadvantage occurs when the windings have to be impregnated with lacquer, and when the supply wires are coated with a flexible sheath. The lacquer can diffuse into the flexible sheath through a capillary effect, and, when it dries, give it a rigidity that is detrimental to assembly. Furthermore, the volume represented by the supply wires and the connections occupy some of the “active” volume consisting of the windings themselves, and this may present disadvantages in terms of stator size. In addition, in the case of large-sized motors provided with very stiff wires, it is difficult to make the connections. This may give rise to occupational injuries such as tendonitis amongst the operators making these connections.
Another embodiment has been to use a removable connector formed of two elements that plug together. One of these elements is usually a socket secured to the stator and connected to the winding wires. The other element is usually a plug connected to the supply wires. The connector may comprise crimped or self-stripping pins connected to the winding and supply wires. Connection is made when the two elements are plugged together.
This second embodiment also exhibits several disadvantages. For example: the choice of connectors, particularly the choice of pins, is connected with the cross sections of the winding and supply wires, which cross sections in order to be able to be connected cannot differ too greatly. In other words, one and the same connector can be used only for winding or supply wires the cross sections of which lie within a specific and generally somewhat narrow range.
Furthermore, in certain applications, it is necessary to position the supply wires very accurately in space. The removable connectors, purchased commercially, generally do not provide positioning means suited to a stator.
Furthermore, when such a connector is installed inside a piece of equipment which is difficult to access, it is difficult for an operator to plug the two elements together because of the absence of guidance of one element with respect to the other.
In addition, amongst windings and connections, the winding wires, generally single-strand wires, emerge from the winding and are therefore delicate. The two embodiments described hereinabove provide neither mechanical protection nor electrical insulation for the winding wires.
It is the object of the invention to alleviate the disadvantages of the embodiments described above. To this end, the subject of the invention is a device for connecting an end of at least one winding wire of a fixed winding and an end of at least one supply wire supplying power to the winding, the device comprising non-removable electrical-connection means for connecting the end of at least one winding wire and the end of at least one supply wire, characterized in that it further comprises a storage case for storing the connecting means.
Another subject of the invention is a method implementing the device described above, the method consisting in: storing the connecting means in the storage case, then closing the storage case.
The invention will be better understood and other advantages will become apparent from reading the detailed description of one embodiment, given by way of example, the description being illustrated by the attached drawing in which:
a depicts a storage case before it is fitted on the stator and means intended to be indexed in the position of the storage case with respect to a stator;
b depicts the storage case depicted in
To make the description easier to understand, the same elements will bear the same references in the various figures.
The stator 1 comprises a bundle of laminations 3, windings 2, from which the ends 4 of wires forming the windings 2 emerge. The ends 4 of winding wires are connected to ends 8 of supply wires. In
Non-removable electrical-connection means 7 clearly visible in
More specifically, the sleeve 7 is formed of a tube a few millimeters long made of a soft metal and in which the stripped ends 4 and 8 of the winding and supply wires that are to be connected are positioned. The sleeve 7 is then deformed using crimping pliers until the stripped ends 4 and 8 are pinched together in order to ensure that they make good electrical contact with one another.
The sleeve 7 is placed in a cavity 9 of the storage case 10. The storage case 10 is made of an insulating material so that it electrically insulates the sleeve 7. Unlike one of the embodiments described above, in which embodiment a conducting sleeve, covered with an insulating sleeve, is placed in the lead-out of a winding, the fact of making the storage case 10 from an insulating material makes it possible to dispense with this insulating sleeve covering the sleeve 7, the conducting material of which can remain bare, that is to say not electrically insulated.
The use of a crimped sleeve 7 is not the only alternative to the electrical connection of the winding wires and the supply wires. It is, for example, possible to solder at least one winding wire and at least one supply wire together.
Advantageously, the storage case 10 comprises a body 12 and a lid 13. The lid 13 holds the electrical-connection means 7 inside the body 12. The sleeve 7 is then immobilized in the storage case 10 and only insulated parts of the winding and supply wires are visible outside the storage case 10.
In the embodiment variant depicted in
In another embodiment variant depicted in
The embodiment variant depicted in
In the embodiment depicted in the various figures, the storage case 10 comprises three cavities 9. It is, of course, possible to produce a storage case according to the invention comprising a different number of cavities 9, according to the number of separate connections to be made.
The orientation of the opening of the compartments 9 is chosen according to the ease of access to the interior of the electric motor comprising the storage case 10.
Advantageously, the storage case 10 is formed of a single mechanical component produced by molding. The storage case 10 is depicted in section in
To make the lid 13 easier to close with respect to the body 12, the case 10 has an articulation 15 articulating the lid 13 with respect to the body 12. The articulation 15 makes it easier to fit the sleeves 7 in the cavities 9. An operator can thus hold the cables 8 in one hand in order to keep the sleeves 7 in the cavities 9, and close the lid 13 with the other hand, by pivoting the lid 13 about the articulation 15.
More specifically, the articulation 15 comprises a first part 151 belonging to the body 12 and a second part 152 belonging to the lid 13.
The pivoting of the articulation 15 is illustrated by means of
Advantageously, the case 10 comprises means for locking the lid 13 with respect to the body 12. In a preferred configuration of the invention, the locking means comprise a clip 40 formed of two complementing parts 41 and 42 belonging one to the body 12 and one to the lid 13, respectively, as depicted in
Advantageously, the storage case 10 comprises means for positioning it with respect to the bundle of laminations. For this, the body 12 comprises, for example, as depicted in
b depicts the storage case 10 in position with respect to the bundle of laminations 3. It can be held in the position thus defined by an adhesive suited to the material of the contacting parts, that is to say to the material of the storage case 10 and to the material of the laminations that form the bundle 3. The adhesive needs also to be suited to the environmental conditions to which the electric motor is subjected.
Advantageously, the connecting device comprises retaining means 21 for holding the winding wire or wires pressed against the stator winding 2. More specifically, the retaining means 21 form a single mechanical component with the storage case 10. In the example depicted in the various figures, the retaining means 21 are formed of a tab made as one piece with the lid 13 of the storage case 10. The tab 21 has a more or less planar shape hugging the shape of the stator winding 2. The ends 4 of the winding wires emerging from the stator winding 2 are held between the winding 2 and the tab 21.
The device described above is advantageously implemented as follows:
More specifically, the method consists in:
The storage case 10 may be fixed to a bundle of laminations of the stator winding 2 before the connecting means 7 are stored or after the storage case 10 has been closed, depending on the ease of access to the inside of the electric motor.
Advantageously, the ends 4 and 8 are connected using the connecting means 7 before the connecting means 7 are stored in the storage case 10. This is achieved, for example, by crimping or soldering the ends 4 and 8 before storing the connecting means 7 in the storage case 10.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03 05906 | May 2003 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/50791 | 5/13/2004 | WO | 11/21/2006 |