The present invention relates to electrical connectors, and more particularly to an electrical connector having integrated terminal carriers, each terminal carrier carrying a plurality of terminals which have been ultrasonically welded to their respective wires through the insulation jackets thereof.
Ultrasonic welders are known in the art, as exemplified by U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,772,100, 4,867,370 and 3,053,124. This class of devices utilizes ultrasonic energy to join metals, particularly nonferrous metals used in the electrical arts, as for example the splicing of wires and the attachment of a wire to a terminal. Ultrasonic welding is not actually “welding” in the sense that there is no application of heat as is used in conventional welding, wherein metals are heated to the point of melting into each other. In the case of ultrasonic welding, a mechanical vibration is applied to the metals, typically in the preferred frequencies of 20 kHz or 40 kHz.
The frequency and the amplitude of the vibration cause the metals to mutually gall at their contact surfaces. This galling results in contaminants, such as for example surface oxidation, to be displaced. The galling further causes the contact surfaces to be polished. As galling continues, the contact surfaces become intimate, whereupon atomic and molecular bonding occurs therebetween, thereby bonding the metals together with a weld-like efficacy (ergo, the term “ultrasonic welding”).
A number of considerations determine the efficacy of the metal-to-metal surface bond, the major considerations being the amplitude of the vibration, the applied force and the time of application. These variables collectively define the efficacy of bonding between the contacting metal surfaces. The applied power (P) is defined by the amplitude (X) of vibration times the force (F) applied normal to the metal surfaces (P=FX), and the applied energy (E) is defined by the applied power (P) times the time (t) of application (E=Pt). These variables are predetermined to achieve the most efficacious bond based upon the metals and the particular application.
To provide reliable and predictable bonds by ultrasonic welding, ultrasonic welders include power supplies and actuators controlled by a microprocessor. An example thereof is the “Ultraweld® 40” ultrasonic welder of AMTECH® (American Technology, Inc.) of Milford, Conn. This class of commercially available ultrasonic welders include: a power supply, a transducer where electrical energy is converted into mechanical vibration, an amplitude booster where the mechanical vibrations are amplified, and an output tool in the form of a horn which tunes the vibrations to a tip. The tip is aligned with a stationary anvil, and the ultrasonic welder includes one or more actuators which allow for movement of the tip relative to the anvil. Preferably, the tip and the anvil are knurled so as to grip the metals placed therebetween.
In operation of a conventional ultrasonic welder, a wire is stripped of its insulation jacket at an end section, and the stripped end section is then placed adjacent a top surface of a base of a terminal to which it is to be bonded. The operator places the stripped section of wire and terminal into the ultrasonic welder, such that the a bottom surface of the base rests upon the anvil and the stripped section of the wire is aligned with the tip. The operator then causes the sonic welder to automatically sequence.
A typical sequence for bonding a wire to a terminal may go as follows: the tip descends onto the stripped section of wire and applies a compressive force between it and the anvil (compressing the stripped section of wire onto the base of the terminal), the location of the tip relative to the anvil is sensed, and if within tolerances, the transducer is actuated so as to apply ultrasonic vibration to the tip for a preset time. Finally, the tip is retracted away from the stripped section of wire. The result is a bond of the stripped section of wire relative to the top surface of the base of the terminal in an area defined generally by the tip area.
While ultrasonic welding methodologies have advanced considerably in recent years. One advance is applying ultrasonic welding processes to insulation jacketed wires without firstly stripping them. A preferred acronym therefor is “UWTI” (Ultrasonic Welding Through Insulation).
As described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/993,797, filed Nov. 24, 2001, and commonly owned by the assignee of the present application, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference, an insulation jacketed wire (multi-strand or single strand) with its insulation jacket thereon and intact is placed upon a top surface of a base of a terminal to which it is to be bonded and the staking wings of the terminal are stacked down onto the insulation jacketed wire. The operator places the insulation jacketed wire and terminal into a conventional ultrasonic welder, such that the bottom surface of the base rests upon the anvil and the insulation jacketed wire is aligned with the tip. The operator then causes the sonic welder to automatically sequence to weld the wire to the terminal through the insulation of the wire. Considerations include, there must be a displacement volume for the melted insulation jacket to go to; the insulation jacket must be of a composition which melts when heated so that it will flowably displace, as for example thermoplastics; and the thinner the insulation jacket the better, particularly in terms of accommodating insulation jacket dissipation mass.
Examples of the method of UWTI were presented in the disclosure of application Ser. No. 09/993,797, as follows.
Three insulation jacketed wires were tested as indicated by Table I. Insulation jacketed wires having I.D. numbers 1 and 2 are a seven strand copper wire with an ultra thin wall PVC insulation jacket 0.25 mm thick. Insulation jacketed wire having I.D. number 3 is composed a solid core copper wire with an ultra thin wall PVC insulation jacket 0.25 mm thick. In each case the terminal was of a copper alloy. The ultrasonic welder was an “Ultraweld® 40” ultrasonic welder of AMTECH® (American Technology, Inc.) of Milford, Conn. operating at 40 kHz, having anvil and tip cross-sections of 2.1 mm by 2.1 mm. In each example an excellent ultrasonic bond was achieved between the wire and the terminal, in terms both of strength and electrical conductivity.
Advantages of the UWTI technology include improved electrical stability between the wire and the terminal, ability to construct multiple wiring subassemblies of complex wiring assemblies, and ability to utilize small gauge wires (smaller than 26 gauge, as for example 22 gauge and smaller) because the delicate wires are not subject to a stripping step which tends to damage them.
What remains needed in the art is to somehow incorporate UWTI technology into an electrical connector.
The present invention is an electrical connector utilizing a plurality of terminals to which wires have been ultrasonically welded, most preferably via UWTI technology, wherein the terminals are aligned for the welding process and also aligned in the connector via one or more terminal carriers.
The electrical connector includes a connector body featuring a central cavity communicating with adjoining side and rear openings of the connector body. A slide is slidably interfaced with the connector body for selectively closing the side opening. Each terminal is characterized by a blade and integral stem, wherein the blade provides an electrical contact with a corresponding terminal of an electrical connector configured for mating with the electrical connector according to the present invention, and the stem provides an ultrasonic welder wire weld surface and a wire stake down. Each terminal carrier (there may be more or less than two) is generally of a planar shape having a relatively thin thickness as compared to its area. The area is defined by a carrier body having a plurality of integrally formed terminal seats, each terminal seat being defined by a blade receptacle, a blade position assurance feature, and a vestibule. Each vestibule has an aperture through which an anvil of an ultrasonic welder passes during the ultrasonic welding process.
An operational scenario is as follows. The terminals are seated into their respective terminal seat, and then the wire or wires for each terminal are placed onto the stem of the respective terminal and then staked down. The ultrasonic welding (preferably UWTI) process is then implemented, wherein the anvil thereof passes through the aperture of the vestibule so that it is able to sonically and pressurably co-act with the tip of the ultrasonic welding apparatus to thereby effect an ultrasonic weld of the wire(s) to the respective terminals, preferably through the insulation thereof.
Next, the terminal carrier is slid into the side opening of the electrical connector such that the wires project out from the connector through the rear opening. The slide is then slid onto the connector to thereby close-off the side opening and trap the terminal carrier in the connector. In a preferred variant, two terminal carriers are utilized in superposed relation to each other.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an electrical connector having a plurality of aligned terminals, wherein wires have been ultrasonically welded to the terminals, particularly ultrasonically welded through the insulation thereof.
This and additional objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become clearer from the following specification of a preferred embodiment.
Referring now to the Drawing,
The connector body 102 is preferably composed of a plastic material and has a central cavity 112 which communicates with mutually adjoining and mutually communicating side and rear openings 114, 116. The cavity floor 112F of the central cavity 112 has a transverse indexing slot 118 formed therein which extends to the side opening 114, and the cavity roof 112R of the central cavity has a transverse indexing boss 120 protruding therefrom. A front wall 122 has a plurality of pin holes 124 which are tapered at the front side 122F for receiving therethrough pin terminals 105 of an electrical connector 115 structured for mating with the electrical connector 100 (see FIG. 21). A side access port 126 is provided in the connector body 102 opposite the side opening 114. The port wall 128 of the access port 126 has a protruding detent 125, wherein a relief slot 135 is formed in the connector body adjacent the port wall to permit resilient flexing of the port wall with respect to operation of the detent (discussed hereinbelow). The connector body 102 has preferably additional features such as a resilient connector position assurance member 130 for interfacing with the mating electrical connector 115 and a guide surface 132 for guidably interfacing with a reciprocably shaped structure of the mating electrical connector.
At the side opening 114, the connector body has an upper connector body track 134 formed opposite the cavity roof 112R and has a lower connector body track 136 formed opposite the cavity floor 112F. The upper and lower connector body tracks 134, 136 include a guide rail 138, a lock rail 140 and a groove 142 formed therebetween, wherein the guide rails are protrudingly displaced relative to the front wall 122.
The slide 104 has a thin planar configuration. An upper slide track 144 is located at an upper edge of the slide 104, and a lower slide track 146 is formed at a lower edge of the slide. Each of the upper and lower slide tracks 144, 146 are characterized by a guide lip 148, a lock lip 150 and a slot 152 formed therebetween. A tongue 154 projects from a forward end 104F of the slide 104 and runs the length of the slide. Adjacent the forward end 104F is a pair of elongated holes 156, one on either side of the tongue 154.
As shown at
Turning attention now to the terminal carriers 106a, 106b, as shown at
The terminal 108 which seats respectively in each of the terminal seats 110 is shown at
With simultaneous reference to
Now as shown at
A difference between the two terminal carriers 106a, 106b is that terminal carrier 106b has a location boss 190 which, when the terminal carriers are superposed (see FIG. 22), extends into a relief slot 192 of terminal carrier 162a formed between the blade seats thereof. When superposed, indexing occurs by the carrier boss 165 of terminal carrier 160b inserts into the carrier slot 175 of terminal carrier 160a. With the terminal carriers 106a, 106b superposed, they are then inserted into the central cavity 126 through the side opening 114 (see
To disassemble the electrical connector 100, the slide 104 is slid off the connector body 102 and the terminal carriers 106a, 106b are slid out of the central cavity 112 via side opening 114 by pushing thereupon at the access port 126.
In summation, there are a number of advantages of the electrical connector 100 which, among many others, are worthy of note.
In general, automated and/or manual wiring harness sub-assemblies are made possible, wherein large complex harnesses can be broken down into simple sub-assemblies with a few manual plugs. Further, synchronous sub-assembly design and processing can be performed, which are adaptable to standard configurations of existing connections.
The utilization of UTWI technology allows for the assembly of wire harnesses with wire smaller than 22 gauge (ie., 26 gauge or even smaller), resulting in reduced bundle size, reduced mass, and reduced cost, and further eliminates wire stripping and the potential cut strands stripping produces. Also, connection to ultra-thin wall cable is possible.
With regard to the terminal carriers, the superposed stacking of the terminal carriers with integrated terminal position assurance, allows high density 2.54×2.54×N row terminal packaging. Further, large cable/center lines can be accommodated (up to 18 gauge wire on 2.54 terminal centers. And, the broad multiple gauge capability and 2.54 center line design covers 26 to 18 gauge ultra thin wall cable. The removability of the terminal carriers and the flexible arms of the terminal position assurance feature facilitates repair without damage. The terminal position assurance feature allows manual or automated plug and unplug.
With regard to the terminal, the thick stock tuning fork terminal blade configuration has lower bulk resistance than thinner stock ‘formed’ terminals commonly used. The ‘blanked’ contact with flats is more accurate and stable than ‘formed’ contacts commonly used, resulting in more consistent contact and pin terminal engagement force. The thin stock bypass insulation crimp provides for maximum range of wire gauge capability. The short progression of the terminal allows multiple terminals to be formed in a single die stroke, and the carrier-through-terminal body configuration reduces material usage and cost. The open contact design facilitates post-stamp plating. The central cavity and terminal carrier index features to prevent incorrect stacking and insertion of the terminal carriers.
To those skilled in the art to which this invention appertains, the above described preferred embodiment may be subject to change or modification. For example, while a pair of terminal carriers has been shown and described, the number of terminal carriers may be more or less than two, as for non-limiting example, four). Such change or modification can be carried out without departing from the scope of the invention, which is intended to be limited only by the scope of the appended claims.
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