1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to crimping an electrical connector onto an electrical conductor and, more particularly, to a crimp die adapted to form a crimp overlap indicia.
2. Brief Description of Prior Developments
Many electrical conductor transmission or distribution splice electrical connectors have substantial overall length in order to help carry very high mechanical and electrical loads. These connectors are often crimped with mechanical or hydraulic crimping tools, and employ the common practice of recommending that crimps ‘overlap’. This overlapping process is important for a number of reasons; namely, that the outside surface of the crimped connection is flat without any sharp edges to prevent corona discharge, and also so that the force per unit area applied to the connection is consistent along the entire length of the crimped connection, resulting in consistent conductor strand loading along the entire length of the connection. Further, many of these connectors are designed with a taper at each end, again to prevent corona discharge, but also so that the transition of mechanical stresses from the un-crimped conductor to the fully crimped conductor inside the barrel of the connector is gradually transitioned. This prevents stress concentrations on individual strands which, when exposed to high tensile loads, may fail prematurely if the stress is not transitioned appropriately.
It is common practice for manufacturers of crimp dies, crimp tools, and electrical connectors to design connector installation tools of various output forces, in order that they may be used in particular markets or used in particular applications. Tools which are designed with ‘low’ output forces, such as about 12-15 tons of output force to the connector, would utilize crimp dies that have a given geometry (such as crimp groove radius, relief angle, and break edge radius) that are common to many types of die platforms, with the exception that the ‘width’ of the die is small to compensate for the relatively low tonnage of the crimping tool. Likewise, a tool which is designed with a ‘high’ output force, such as 60 tons for example, often employ the same crimp groove geometry except that the plow-width is substantially greater, because the tool output is so much greater. Sometimes there is even a direct relationship between output force and plow width. An example may be that a crimp die for a 60 ton tool will have a plow width of 2 inches, and a die with the same crimp groove geometry for a 15 ton tool will have a plow width of 0.5 inch. This 4:1 ratio (as an example) allows different tools to be used on the same connector, resulting in a nearly identical crimp dimension, regardless of the output force of the tool.
Often times, as previously stated, care is given to insure that the user ‘overlap’ crimps by stamping into the given connector the statement ‘OVERLAP CRIMPS’ by the manufacturer of the connector. However, there is no mention given to the amount that these crimps should be overlapped, nor is there a current means to suggest or instruct the user how to consistently overlap these crimps to optimize the force imparted on the connector during the installation process; besides the common practice of ‘eye-balling’ it. Connectors could be pre-marked, but markings are very often obliterated during the crimping process, rendering the pre-marking useless.
There is a need for a system which can provide a user a means for positioning a crimp die on an electrical connector for forming repeatable, consistent overlapping crimps on the electrical connector; thereby optimizing the overlapping crimp process.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, an electrical connector crimp die is provided including a main body and an indicia forming section. The main body has a connector contacting surface between opposite ends of the main body. The indicia forming section is on the connector contacting surface. When the crimp die forms a crimp on an electrical connector, the indicia forming section is adapted to form an alignment indicia on the electrical connector for subsequent alignment of the die with the crimp to form a subsequent overlapping crimp.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, an electrical connector crimp die is provided comprising a main body and a first alignment indicia forming section. The main body has a connector contacting surface between opposite ends of the main body. The first alignment indicia forming section is on the connector contacting surface. The first alignment indicia forming section comprises at least one recess and/or projection on the connector contacting surface adapted to form a first alignment marking on an electrical connector when a first crimp is formed on the electrical connector by the crimp die. The first alignment indicia forming section is adapted to form the alignment marking generally parallel to, and spaced from, a first one of the ends of the main body. When the crimp die forms the first crimp on the electrical connector, the alignment marking is adapted to be used by a user to align the crimp die on the electrical connector to form a subsequent crimp which overlaps the first crimp.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, a method of crimping an electrical connector onto an electrical conductor is provided comprising forming a first crimp on the electrical connector by a crimp die; forming an alignment indicia on the electrical connector by the crimp die during the forming of the first crimp, wherein the alignment indicia is spaced inwardly from an end edge of the first crimp; after forming the first crimp, aligning a portion of the crimp die with the alignment indicia; and forming a second subsequent crimp on the electrical connector which at least partially overlaps the first crimp.
The foregoing aspects and other features of the invention are explained in the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
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The crimp die 26 is a one-piece member made of metal. The die 26 is used with another die to form a die set. The die set is mounted in the pair of seats 22, 24. When the ram 18 is moved towards the anvil section 20, the die set is able to crimp an electrical connector onto one or more electrical conductors between the dies. FIG. 3 shows an example of a splice electrical connector 28 which can be crimped by the crimp die 26 onto two electrical conductors to splice the conductors together.
The crimp die 26 comprises a main body with a connector contacting surface 30. In this embodiment the surface 30 comprises multiple surfaces 40, 41, 42 which are angled relative to each other to form a connector receiving area or channel 32 between opposite ends 34, 36 of the main body. In an alternate embodiment the channel could have a curved concave surface. In another alternate embodiment, the connector contact surface provided by the die could have a convex shape. The die 26 also comprises an indicia forming section 38 on the connector contacting surface 30. Referring also to
In the embodiment shown, the recesses 44 are aligned in a line generally parallel to the end 34 and spaced from the end 34 by a distance 46. In an alternate embodiment the recesses 44 might be slightly offset. In another embodiment the indicia forming section might not have a general line configuration. For example, the indicia forming section might merely comprise two dimple type of holes equally spaced from the end 34, or a triangular shape with a flat side facing and parallel to the end 34. These are only some examples. Those skilled in the art can devise alternatives to accomplish the marking or indicia function of the indicia forming section as understood after reading this disclosure. The grooves 44 could be milled as pockets. Preferably, the pockets will create a slight positive impression on the crimp allowing easy alignment of the impression with the edge of the die set for the next crimp. The locator could also be a scribed line, positive bump, or any other geometry.
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For the splice electrical connector 28 shown in
Testing has indicated that in some cases, crimp dies with thinner crimping profiles or “plow-widths” have performed to higher values of pullout than their wider die counterparts. The reasoning appears to be that the thinner die profiles do a better job of creating an even stress distribution across the tapered portion of the connector, because the thinner plow width allows for more even compression of the tapered zone of the connector. Further, the thinner plow width creates more contact points between the inside diameter of the connector and the outside strands of the installed conductor. Thus, using multiple smaller width, overlapping crimps may produce better overall connection than using a wider width crimp.
The invention provides a means for the installer of crimped connections to create very consistent overlapped crimps by using crimp dies which, in the preferred embodiment, have indicia on their surface that presses a witness line on the crimped connector; resulting in a very clear means of accurately locating the connector for the subsequent crimp. This ‘line’ pressed into the connector would then be aligned with the edge of the crimp die, accurately and consistently locating the crimp die relative to the connector for subsequent crimps. The number of crimps that are placed on the connector in this ‘marked overlap’ scenario is dependent on the length of the connector, the width of the die, the location of the indicia on the die set, and the extrusion characteristics of the electrical connector and the conductor that are being installed. The benefit of this invention is that, with appropriately located indicia on die sets, an optimum overlapping crimp process can be developed for electrical connections that does not currently exist.
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One basic idea is an electrical connector crimp die with a recessed, embossed, or raised portion. The recessed/raised portion leaves a mark on the crimped electrical connector, which permits accurate, overlapping, sequential alignment of the crimp die along the crimp length of the electrical connector. A recess can create a raised portion on a surface of the electrical connector. The formed raised portion can physically fit inside one of the recesses in the die when the die is moved along the crimp length. Conversely, a raised portion of the die will create a recess in the surface of the electrical connector. The raised portion can then fit inside the recess to allow proper alignment. The raised/recessed portions also provide a visual indication of where the last crimp terminated.
As noted above, it can be desirable to overlap crimps when crimping an electrical connector to a conductor. The problem in the past was that there was no system or method to make the overlapping crimps at consistence locations relative to each other. The common practice of ‘eye-balling’ it or roughly estimating the overlap distance was inaccurate and resulted in non-consistent crimps from one connector to another. Thus, the quality of the overlapping crimps was variable. The advantage provided by the invention is the ability to produce consistent quality crimped connections by helping to eliminate variations in overlapping crimps. The overlap distance of crimps is kept uniform. Therefore, a consistently repeatable quality product can be produced.
It should be understood that the foregoing description is only illustrative of the invention. Various alternatives and modifications can be devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the invention. Accordingly, the invention is intended to embrace all such alternatives, modifications and variances which fall within the scope of the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080022749 A1 | Jan 2008 | US |