Information
-
Patent Grant
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6203370
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Patent Number
6,203,370
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Date Filed
Wednesday, February 3, 199926 years ago
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Date Issued
Tuesday, March 20, 200123 years ago
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Inventors
-
-
Examiners
- Nguyen; Khiem
- Hyeon; Hae Moon
Agents
- Lariviere, Grubman & Payne, LLP
-
CPC
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US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 439 589
- 439 668
- 439 669
- 439 578
- 439 583
- 439 905
- 439 461
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International Classifications
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Abstract
An electrical connector with a threaded shell which screws on to a threaded connector body, and including an O-ring disposed between the shell and body. The O-ring is made of an elastic material and is placed over the threaded portion and against a shoulder of the connector body so that when the shell is screwed onto the threaded portion of the connector body the O-ring is compressed between the end of the shell and the body shoulder, thereby providing increased friction between the shell and connector body to resist unscrewing of the shell from the body by vibrations and similar random forces.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to electrical connectors. More particularly, the present invention relates to electrical connectors with screw on shells.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In prior art electrical connectors, a shell is placed over an connector body to provide electrically insulative shielding or mechanical integrity around the connection between the connector body and an attached electrical wire.
Some prior art electrical connectors mold the shell onto the connector body. Some cylindrical prior art shells screw onto cylindrical connector bodies. Screw on shells allow for the splicing of an electrical connector at the end of a conducting wire. A problem with the prior art shells that screw onto connector bodies is that they can easily become loosened and become unscrewed from the connector bodies by vibrations or other actions.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a shell that is screwed onto an connector body that does not easily become unscrewed from the connector body when the electrical connector is subjected to vibrations or other forces.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, the foregoing object is accomplished by providing an O-ring between a screw on shell and an connector body.
Other features of the present invention are disclosed or apparent in the section entitled: “DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION.”
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
For fuller understanding of the present invention, reference is made to the accompanying drawings wherein:
FIG. 1
illustrates an exploded view of an electrical connector according to the invention.
FIG. 2
is a side view of an assembled electrical conductor illustrated in FIG.
1
.
Reference numbers refer to the same or equivalent parts of the present invention throughout the figures of the drawing.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
As briefly discussed above, and as shown in
FIG. 1
, an electrical connector
10
comprises a connector body
11
, an O-ring
12
, and a shell
13
. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the electrical connector is an RCA, a trademark of RCA connector (or jack). RCA connectors are often found in video and audio recording, storage, transcription and playback equipment. In this embodiment, the connector body
11
comprises a pin
16
on a plug side of the connector body
11
, an outer sleeve
17
surrounding the pin
16
and electrically insulated from the pin by an insulator (not shown and forms no part of the present invention) on the plug side of the connector body
11
. Threaded portion
18
of the connector body
11
, having a smaller overall diameter than the outer sleeve
17
, forms a shoulder
19
between the threaded portion
18
and the outer sleeve
17
, as shown. Thus the outer sleeve
17
forms a wider portion of the connector body
11
since the outer sleeve
17
has a wider outer diameter than the threaded portion
18
. A first receiver
21
is electrically connected to the pin
16
and is on a receiver side of the connector body
11
, which is the opposite side of the connector body
11
from the plug side. A second receiver
22
is electrically connected to the outer sleeve
17
and is on the receiver side of the connector body
11
. An end of the second receiver
22
away from the threaded portion
18
is formed into a crimp connector
23
.
The O-ring
12
is an elastomeric material such as rubber formed in the shape of an “O”. In the preferred embodiment, the inner diameter of the O-ring is approximately equal to the outer diameter of the threaded portion
18
, and smaller than the outer diameter of the outer sleeve
17
. In other embodiments, the inner diameter of the O-ring is less than the outer diameter of the threaded portion
18
and is stretched over the threaded portion
18
. The shell
13
has a cylindrical inside diameter with a first end and a second end. The first end of the shell
13
is open and is threaded with threads
25
, that mate with threads of the threaded portion
18
making the shell
13
threadably engagable with the threaded portion
18
. At the end of the first end of the shell
13
is an edge
20
of the shell
13
. The second end of the shell
13
is closed except for a small aperture
26
passing through the second end. In the preferred embodiment, the shell
13
is made of an insulative material such as hard plastic.
An electrical wire
31
is formed by an insulator
32
surrounding a first conductor
33
and a second conductor
34
.
In operation, the connector body
11
is inserted into the O-ring
12
. A first end of the wire
31
is passed through the aperture
26
of the shell
13
, and then through the crimp connector
23
of the second receiver
22
. The first conductor
33
is electrically and mechanically connected to the first receiver
21
, by crimping the first receiver
21
or soldering the first conductor
33
to the first receiver
21
, or by other mechanical means. The second conductor
34
is electrically and mechanically connected to the second receiver
22
by crimping the second receiver or soldering the second conductor
34
to the second receiver
22
or by other mechanical means. The crimp connector
23
is then crimped to mechanically connect the crimp connector
23
to the insulator
32
.
The threads
25
of the shell
13
are placed near the threaded portion
18
, so that the shell
13
covers the first receiver
21
and the second receiver
22
. The threads
25
of the shell are threadably engagable with the threaded portion
18
so that the shell
13
can be screwed onto the threaded portion
18
. As the shell
13
is screwed onto the threaded portion
18
, the O-ring
12
is compressed between the edge
20
of the shell
13
and the shoulder
19
of the connector body
11
.
FIG. 2
shows the assembled electrical connector
10
, comprising the connector body
11
, O-ring
12
, and shell
13
with the attached electrical wire
31
.
The O-ring
12
is elastic and has a higher force of friction than the shell
13
or the shoulder
19
of the metal connector body
11
. The elasticity of the O-ring
12
and the O-ring force of friction prevents the shell
13
from becoming unscrewed from the connector body
11
. With vibrations and other natural forces on the shell
13
the O-ring
12
prevents the shell
13
from loosening from the connector body
11
.
In other embodiments of the invention, the pin and outer sleeve RCA connector is replaced with other types of plugs. For example another embodiment would place a headphone plug at the connector end of the connector body. The connector body could have any plug which uses a screw on shell. In another embodiment, the receiver end could have only one receiver, which is electrically connected to a wire having only one conductor. In the specification and claims, the term “plug” includes any combination of pins, sleeves, jacks and sockets. In other embodiments the shell may be made of an electrical conductor, such as brass, for use on a co-axial cable. Other embodiments could have more than two conductors such as multi-conductor co-axial cable.
The present invention has been particularly shown and described with respect to certain preferred embodiments and features thereof. However, it should be readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that various changes and modifications in form and detail may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the inventions as set forth in the appended claims. The inventions illustratively disclosed herein may be practiced without any element which is specifically disclosed herein.
Claims
- 1. An electrical connector, comprising:a connector body having at least one pin at a first end, the pin electrically insulated from the connector body and having a receiver for receiving an electrical wire, and having an exterior surface of the first end defining a first diameter, the connector body having an outside threaded portion having an outer diameter less than the first diameter, the connector body having a shoulder between the exterior surface and the threaded portion; a flexible O-ring disposed over the threaded portion adjacent to the shoulder; and a shell having an inside threaded end having an edge for threadably engaging the outside threaded portion of the connector body, adjacent to the O-ring, whereby the O-ring is compressed between the shoulder of the connector body and the edge of the shell when the shell is screwed onto the threaded portion of the connector body, the O-ring thereby providing increased friction between the connector body and shell for resisting unscrewing forces.
- 2. The electrical connector, as recited in claim 1, wherein the connector body, comprises:a plug on a plug side of the connector body; and a receiver on a receiver side of the connector body, wherein the receiver is electrically connected to the plug and wherein the plug side and the receiver side are on opposite sides of the threaded portion.
- 3. The electrical connector, as recited in claim 2, wherein the connector body, further comprises a crimp connector on the receiver side of the connector body.
- 4. The electrical connector, as recited in claim 3, wherein the elastomeric material is rubber.
- 5. The electrical connector, as recited in claim 4, wherein the plug comprises:a pin electrically connected to the receiver; and a sleeve surrounding the pin.
- 6. A method for assembling an electrical connector, comprising the steps of:inserting a connector body having at least one pin on a first end, the pin electrically insulated from the connector body and having a receiver for receiving an electrical wire, and having a shoulder adjacent to a threaded portion into an elastic O-ring, placing a shell having an edge adjacent to a threaded portion of the connector body; screwing the shell onto the threaded portion of the connector body; and compressing the O-ring between the shell edge and the connector body shoulder, the O-ring thereby providing increased friction between the connector body and shell for resisting unscrewing forces.
- 7. The method, as recited in claim 6, further comprising the steps of:threading an electrical wire through an aperture in the shell; and electrically connecting the electrical wire to a receiver in the connector body.
US Referenced Citations (9)