1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electrical connector, and more particularly to an electrical connector having a grounding path to a printed circuit board on which the connector is mounted.
2. Description of Related Art
U.S. Pat. No. 6,811,439 discloses a thin connector comprising an elongated, rectangular insulative housing, a plurality of electrical terminals, a metal plate, and a shell. The housing includes an upper wall and a lower wall, which cooperate to define a longitudinal mating opening for accommodating a mating part of a mating connector. The electrical terminals are arranged in a row and each has a contact beam projecting into the mating opening along the upper wall and a solder tail to be soldered to a printed circuit board (PCB). The metal plate is attached to the lower wall and has a plurality of elastic tongues extending therefrom and projecting into the mating cavity for abutting against the mating connector being plugged in to provide an elastic force thereon opposite to that provided by the contact beams of the terminals for equilibrium purpose. The shell is attached to a periphery of the housing therefore to surround the housing.
The metal plate further comprises a pair of grounding legs bended to be soldered onto the PCB as well as the solder tails of the terminals. As the connector is soldered onto the PCB by a Surface Mounting Technology (SMT), it is required that the solder tails of the terminals and the grounding legs of the metal plate which are together to be surface soldered to the PCB perform a good coplanarity, or else neither facility nor reliability of soldering operation can't be ensured. However, since the terminals and the metal plate are formed from different metal sheets and are assembled on the housing separately, it is difficult to ensure a wonderful coplanarity between said solder tails and said grounding legs.
Thus it is desired to provide an electrical connector in which both a grounding path thereof and solder tails of terminals thereof are reliably soldered to a PCB with facility, and in which the grounding path and the solder tails of terminals together to be soldered to the PCB perform a good coplanarity.
An object of the present invention is to provide an electrical connector in which both a grounding path thereof and solder tails of terminals thereof are reliably soldered to a printed circuit board (PCB) with facility.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an electrical connector in which a grounding path and solder tails of terminals together to be surface soldered to a PCB perform a good coplanarity.
In order to achieve above-mentioned objects, an electrical connector of the present invention includes a longitudinal housing defining a mating slot; a plurality of signal terminals loaded in the housing and arranged in a row along a longitudinal direction of the housing, each signal terminal having a solder tail to be soldered to a PCB and a contact portion extending into the mating slot; at least a grounding terminal arranged in the same row of the signal terminals and having a solder tail coplanar with the solder tails of the signal terminals; a conductor means loaded in the housing and partly extending into the mating slot to oppositely facing the contact portions of the signal terminals; and a shell surrounding the housing and electrically connected to the conductor means and the grounding terminals.
Other objects, advantages and novel features of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of the present embodiment when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Reference will now be made to the drawing figures to describe the preferred embodiment of the present invention in detail.
Referring to
Concerning the terminals 31, 32, 40, the signal terminals 31 and the grounding terminals 32 are punched from one and the same metal sheet and thus are arranged in a row wherein that two terminals positioned in longitudinal ends of the row are the grounding terminals 32 and the others are the signal terminals 31. Preliminary, the whole row of terminals, including the signal terminals 31 and the grounding terminals 32, is an integral one that linked by a tailing (not shown) of the metal sheet from which the terminals are punched. Then the whole row of terminals is assembled to the housing 10 along a back-to-front direction, thereby the signal terminals 31 and the grounding terminals 32 are respectively and correspondingly inserted into the upper channels 113 and the side upper channels 114. Lastly, the tailing is cut from the terminals 31, 32 and thus the terminals 31, 32 are separated from each other. Alike, the elastic terminals 40 formed from another metal sheet are assembled to the housing 10 to be correspondingly accommodated in the lower channels 123 and thus arranged in a second row that oppose to the row of the signal terminals 31 and the grounding terminals 32.
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As the signal terminals 31 and the grounding terminals 32 are formed from one and the same metal sheet and are assembled to the housing 10 in a row as a whole, the solder tails 302 thereof can perform a wonderful coplanarity and therefore all of them can be reliably soldered to the PCB.
However, the disclosure is illustrative only, changes may be made in detail, especially in matter of shape, size, and arrangement of parts within the principles of the invention. For example, the elastic terminals 40 would be replaced by a metal plate with elastic tongues thereon similar to that is mentioned above in the section of Description of Related Art. Such a replacement will produce little influence on the benefit of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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93219490 U | Dec 2004 | TW | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3587029 | Knowles | Jun 1971 | A |
4842529 | Frantz et al. | Jun 1989 | A |
6039583 | Korsunsky et al. | Mar 2000 | A |
6074223 | Huang | Jun 2000 | A |
6338652 | Ko | Jan 2002 | B1 |
6811439 | Shin-Ting | Nov 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060121782 A1 | Jun 2006 | US |