1. Field of the invention
The present invention relates to an electrical connector with ground contacts thereof.
2. Description of Related Art
According to U.S. Pat. No. 6,027,353, a known connector for connecting battery units includes a socket and a header mating with each other. The header has multiple contacts projecting forwards from the insulating housing with fixed intervals along the longitudinal direction of the housing. A pair of contacts respectively at opposite ends of the header, which is wider and longer than the remainder, server as guiding posts and grounding terminals simultaneously. The connection of the grounding terminals is established before the remainder when the header and socket are engaged together, which provides an improved electrical safety.
However, the grounding terminals are formed without any supporting portion along its upper, bottom and front edges, which will result in breakage of the grounding terminals when the grounding terminal operates as a guiding post.
Therefore, an improved electrical connector is desired to overcome the disadvantages of the prior arts.
An object of the present invention is to provide an electrical connector with a grounding contact on a barrier.
In order to achieve above-mentioned object, an electrical connector assembly comprises a header and a socket. The header comprises an insulating housing defining at least one barrier unitarily extending upwards therefrom, a plurality of header contacts which are blade shaped, retained in the housing and arranged parallel to the at least one barrier, and at least one header grounding contact retained on one side of the barriers. The socket matable with the header comprises socket contacts and at least one socket grounding contact mated with corresponding header contact and header grounding contact, and insulating housing defining socket-contact-receiving recesses and socket-grounding-receiving recesses parallel to each other. When the header and the socket are mated with each other, the at least one barrier is inserted into corresponding socket-grounding-receiving recess, and the grounding contacts are electrically connected together before the header contacts and the socket contacts.
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
Referring to
Each socket contact 12 used to transmit power or signal, comprises retention section 121 retained in the housing, a pair of resilient arm section 122 and a leg section 123. The resilient arm section 122 are received in the remainder recess (socket-contact-receiving recesses 111), the leg section 123 extending out of the housing. Each socket grounding contact 13 of the pair comprises a blade shaped contact section 131 and a leg section 132 extending from the contact section. The socket grounding contacts 13 are received in the end recesses 1110 (socket-grounding-receiving recesses), wherein the blade shaped contact section 131 is abutting against an inside of the end recess 1110, in other word, against an inside surface of rib 112.
The insulating housing 21 of header 2 is rectangular and has a base portion 211 for mounting on a PCB and a pair of barriers 214 unitarily extending upwards from one surface of the base portion. The base portion 211 is mounting on a PCB by an end mounting portion 212 parallel extending outwards beyond the barriers. The barrier 214 has a groove 2142 on outer surface 2141 thereof, the groove opens outwards and extends through the base portion 211 along the extending direction of the barrier. Each of the header contacts 22 is of blade shape and comprises a retention section 222, a blade shaped contact section 221 and a leg section 223. The retention section 222 is retained in the contact-receiving passages 213 through the base portion and the contact section 221 extends upwards along the extending direction of barriers. The six contact sections 221 are arranged between the two barriers 214, and parallel spaced apart with a predetermined distance. Each barrier is thicker along an elongate direction of the housing, longer along the extending direction and wider along a third direction perpendicular to said two directions than each contact section 221 of the header contact, which is used to a guiding function. The header grounding contact 23 is of blade shape and comprises a retention section 232, a contact section 231 and a leg section 233. The contact section 231 has a contact projection 234 projecting outwards. As shown in
The socket 1 can be inserted into the header 2 by two forms. The header contacts 22 and the barriers 214 are inserted into the recesses 111 along the extending direction of the barriers, i.e. the front end of the contacts and barriers are inserted into the recesses from the front surface 113 of the socket 1. The barriers are first inserted into the socket-grounding-receiving recess 1110 for a guiding function and the header grounding contact 23 are electrically connected to the socket grounding contacts 13 before the contact 22, 12 resulting from the barrier 214 and header grounding contacts 23 extending beyond the front end 2200 of the header contact 22. Alternatively, The header contacts 22 and the barriers 214 are inserted into the recesses 111 along a second direction, i.e. the bottom edge perpendicular to the front end of the contacts and barriers are inserted into the recess from the top surface 114 of the socket 1. The groove 2142 is adjacent to the bottom edge of the contact so as to the header grounding contact 23 received in the groove 2142 extends downwards beyond the bottom edge 2201 of the contact 22, thereby the grounding contact 13, 23 are electrically connected before the contact 12, 22.
As best shown in
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.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5356300 | Whitaker | Oct 1994 | A |
6027353 | Kamagai | Feb 2000 | A |
6171126 | Hon Hai | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6461178 | Fu | Oct 2002 | B1 |
6551143 | Tanaka et al. | Apr 2003 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080045055 A1 | Feb 2008 | US |