Magnet wire is a single strand wire is typically used whenever a coil is built, and in a variety of other applications. Typically it is covered by a relatively thin film of insulation, which serves to insulate the wire from adjacent wires. Magnet wire can be very thin, ranging in diameter to 0.010″, if not even thinner.
Lead wire is used to convey larger amounts of electricity over longer distances, such as from a power source to a coil. A lead wire is typically a multi-strand conductor for flexibility and is covered by a relatively thick layer of insulation. A standard configuration for lead wire is 10 conductor strands, each measuring 0.010″ diameter, and covered by insulation. The entire lead wire typically has a diameter of about 0.100″.
Bare wire is among the most basic of wires. It is merely a single strand conductor with no insulation surrounding it. Bare wire is also used as the lead wire to electronic components. It can also be very thin.
Many methods are known to connect wires together. Among these are splicing by solder, splicing by clip; splicing by mechanical clamp, etc. Other known methods employ indirect connection, whereby an intermediary conductive piece is introduced between, and connected to, each wire.
Particular examples of the intermediate piece employment can be seen in coils where the plastic bobbin upon which the coil is wound has built-in pockets for receiving insulation displacing connectors.
Insulation displacing connectors avoid the necessity of pre-stripping the insulation from the conductors. Instead, the insulation is cut and moved away sufficiently from the connector so that electrical contact is made between the connector and the internal wire conductor. This is often done in one simple stroke.
Products supplied by Tyco International called “Magmate,” “Siameze” and “Leadloc” are examples of applications of connecting magnet wire to lead wire.
However, these products are designed so that they connect to the magnet wire either before of after connecting to the lead wire. This means that there are multiple operations. Also, the “Leadloc” product contains more than one part. It uses an additional component to retain the lead wire.
Also, products such as these are limited in how well they make a mechanical and electrical connection with a wire. They are further limited in this area by the diameter of the wire being connected. The smaller the wire, the lower the probability that an effective, gas tight connection will be made.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an electrical connector that will establish an effective, gas tight electrical connection between the connector and a wire.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an electrical connector that can connect two or more wires in one operation.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an electrical connector that connects at least two wires and is configured to retain and entrap said wires without need for an additional retaining component.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a method for producing an electrical connector that will establish a effective, gas tight electrical connection between the connector and a smaller diameter wire that is superior to connector produced using only die stamping methods.
It is still another object of the present invention to provide an electrical connector that will adequately and consistently displace the insulation surrounding the wire to provide an effective, gas tight electrical connection between the connector and a wire.
It is yet still another object of the present invention to provide an electrical connector that will aid in the retention of the wire to the connector.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an electrical connector that will aid in the retention of the connector to an outside mounting medium.
It is yet a further object of the present invention to provide an electrical connector that will resist deformation and overinsertion into an outside mounting medium.
It is also former an object of the present invention to provide a method for minimizing swelling caused by rounding slot walls in an electrical connector of a small dimension using a radius.
The present invention provides an electrical connector for connecting two or more wires together electrically, where the wire slots are oriented in a direction substantially parallel to each other. This facilitates the use of only one operation to connect all wires. This significantly improves productivity by reducing the number of operations required to connect wires together, and significantly reduces the cost and amount of capital equipment required for such connection process. The present invention also naturally traps a terminated wire in its slot, thereby eliminating the need for an additional wire termination or a wire staple. This provides a substantial cost reduction. The slots of the present invention can be configured to connect magnet wire to magnet wire, lead wire to lead wire, component lead to magnet wire, component lead to lead wire or other combinations. Also, the present invention contemplate in one embodiment could more than two slots for connecting additional items in a simultaneous manner.
The connector of the present invention can be made as part of a continuous strip of material. Indentations can be made to facilitate a scrapless separation of each connector from said strip during application, thereby eliminating the problems of scrap piece control and removal.
Further, the present invention also comprises a method for minimizing swelling, and resulting connector distortion, caused by rounding slot walls of the electrical connector to facilitate easy wire insertion and eliminate potentially destructive sharp ends.
The present invention also provides specific blade and cavity configurations that allow for the displacement of insulating material from a connected wire, to provide an effective, gas tight mechanical and electrical connection, prevent inadvertent wire removal and prevent distortion of the connector.
The present invention also further provides a method of manipulating blades to achieve an effective, gas tight mechanical and electrical connection based upon a spring load; and to allow the slots to accept wire of smaller diameter than has been heretofore economically practicable.
The present invention still further provides electrical connectors adapted for attachment to a printed circuit board.
a and 7b are front views of a prior art electrical connector applied to a single stand magnet wire and multi-strand lead wire.
a and 8b are front views of an embodiment of the present invention applied to a single strand magnet wire and multi-strand lead wire.
Electrical connector 100 is preferably a planar piece of conductive material, usually metal. Now referring to
At the same time, lead wire slot 140, via blades 150, cuts and spreads the insulation of lead wire 145 and allows penetration, a gas tight contact and squeeze of the outer strands of lead wire 145 conductor. Cavity 160 provides an area where the displaced insulation from lead wire 145 can collect when the lead wire is inserted into slot 140. This configuration reduces the force that bunched up insulation would place on lead wire 145 to move toward the open end of slot 140, helping to prevent inadvertent removal of the lead wire 145 from slot 140. This configuration also reduces the force that bunched up insulation would place on connector 100 itself, which could contribute to distortion of the configuration of connector 100.
In a preferred embodiment, connector 100 further comprises wedges 170 and 180. In this embodiment, wedges 170 and 180 are oriented between the ends 198 and 199 of connector 100 toward the end 199 adjacent to slots 110 and 140. Wedges 170 and 180 provide mechanical catches or stops to prevent overinsertion of connector 100 into its mounting medium, preventing deformation of end 199 of the connector 100 adjacent to slots 110 and 140. Wedges 170 and 180 also provide added stability to the remainder of connector 100, acting to prevent slippage and inadvertent removal of connector 100 by mechanically catching the mounting medium and adding surface area that is in contact with the mounting medium, increasing friction between the medium and the connector.
Now referring to
Now referring to
For very low volume, such as prototype or pilot production, the individual connector 100 can be neatly applied using the following preferred embodiment of the present invention. Each connector 100 in strip 1100 is simply snapped off at indentation 1250 and applied using hand pliers positioning and hand press technique.
Referring to
Slot 240 is configured to accommodate a magnet wire that is insulated. Blades 250 protrude from the lateral edges of slot 240 towards its closed end. Blades 250 are configured such that they approach each other and a centerline of slot 240, between the lateral edges 201 of connector 200. Blades 250 are manipulated into this configuration by the method described below. Blades 250 are initially stamped in a position remote of each other. They are manipulated toward blade lateral edges 252 of each other such that they become unloaded springs, at rest adjacent to each other. When magnet wire 222 is inserted between blade lateral edges 252, as illustrated in
Each lateral edge 201 of connector 200 preferably further contains an indentation 270. The indentation 270 in a preferred embodiment further comprises hook 280. Indentation 270 and hook 280 provide an area for engaging connector 200 with a mounting medium, such as a plastic housing or a plastic bracket mounted on a printed circuit board such as those known in the art. Hook 280 provides two advantages in the mounting function. It provides a mechanical catch or stop to prevent overinsertion of connector 200 into its mounting medium, preventing deformation of the end of the connector adjacent to slot 240. Hook 280 also engages the mounting medium, especially where the mounting medium is constructed of plastic or another malleable material. This engagement stabilizes the lateral edge 201 of the connector, further preventing deformation of connector 200.
Connector 200 further preferably comprises wedges 290. In this embodiment, wedges 290 are aligned from the centerline of connector 200, between ends 298 and 299, toward end 299 adjacent to slot 240. Wedge 290 provides a mechanical catch or stop to prevent overinsertion of connector 200 into its mounting medium, preventing deformation of the end 299 of connector 200 adjacent to slot 240. Wedge 290 also provides added stability to the remainder of connector 200 and further acts to prevent slippage and inadvertent removal of connector 200 by mechanically catching the mounting medium and adding surface area that is in contact with the mounting medium, increasing friction between the medium and the connector.
Now referring to
Referring to FIGS. 4 and 8(a), a preferred embodiment of a method placing magnet wire 750 and lead wire 720 into connector 200 is disclosed. Magnet wire 720 and lead wire 750 are held in place, substantially parallel to each other and spaced apart a distance greater than the length of lateral edge 201 of connector 200. Connector 200 is aligned along the shared centerline of both slots 210 and 240, such that slot 240 is facing magnet wire 750 and slot 210 is facing lead wire 720. Magnet wire 750 and lead wire 720 are then simply pushed together onto connector 200 until magnet wire 750 is positioned snugly in slot 240 and lead wire 720 is positioned snugly in slot 210 such that the insulation of magnet wire 750 and lead wire 720 is removed and both wires are in electrical contact with connector 200.
a,
7
b,
8
a and 8b illustrate some of the advantages provided by the present invention over the prior art.
Regarding single strand magnet wire 750,
a and 8b illustrate an embodiment of the present invention configured to connect lead multi-strand lead wire and single strand magnet wire.
b shows the connection between the connector and the magnet wire 750, via blades 250. Thanks to the manipulation of blades 250 using the methods described below, the connection between blades 250, via blade lateral edges 252, and magnet wire 750 is a more effective, gas tight and precise mechanical and electrical connection based upon a spring load, especially when smaller diameter wire is used, than has been heretofore economically practicable.
Referring back to
Now referring to
Method of Manipulating Blade
Traditionally, electrical connectors in the art of the present invention have been manufactured by die stamping them from a sheet of conductive material.
As shown in
According to one preferred embodiment a method is provided is provided wherein connector 300 is positioned about tool 400, with tool 400 positioned within cavity 320. Tool 400 is mounted on a movable base 410. Tool 400 is then moved against blade 310 by movable base 410. Movable base continues to move tool 400 and blade 310 until blade 310 is manipulated into the desired position. Connector 400 is then removed from tool 400. The process may be repeated on further blades of the connector. Movable base 400 may move in any desired direction, including arching, linear (see
This method can be applied to the blades of any electrical connector where extremely small close tolerances are necessary to facilitate proper connection to wires of very small diameters. This includes blades 120 of connector 100, using cavity 130; and blades 250 of connector 200 using cavities 260.
In the following, the patent claims will be given, and the various details of the invention can show variation within the scope of the inventive idea defined in the claims and differ even to a considerable extent from the details stated above by way of example only. As such, the examples provided above are not meant to be exclusive and many other variations of the present invention would be obvious to those skilled in the art, and are contemplated to be within the scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/413,362, filed Sep. 25, 2002.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4169646 | Stape et al. | Oct 1979 | A |
4350405 | Yapoudjian et al. | Sep 1982 | A |
5727967 | Chen | Mar 1998 | A |
5759061 | Jensen et al. | Jun 1998 | A |
5853703 | Cerami et al. | Dec 1998 | A |
5889032 | Lohray et al. | Mar 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040097125 A1 | May 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60413362 | Sep 2002 | US |