Electrical connectors are known in the art which are meant to terminate multistranded insulated conductors, such as those used to transmit electrical power (e.g. battery cables) or communication signals (e.g. speaker wires). Persons skilled in this art, when designing such connectors, have several objectives or design criteria, some of which can come into conflict with others. These objectives include (a) ease of manufacture, (b) cost of manufacture, (c) tightness and permanence of connection, and (d) ease of assembly by the user.
The assignee of the present invention has provided several types of such electrical connectors. One type of connector employs a collar which grips the conductor, where the conductor is threaded through the collar and a cap. The collar and conductor are secured in place to a connector housing by the cap. Representative of this type of connector are the ones illustrated and described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,704,814, 5,934,943 and 5,934,937, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/330,381 filed Jun. 11, 1999, all assigned to the assignee hereof, the specifications of which being fully incorporated by reference herein. Nonetheless, further improvements can be made in producing an electrical connector that better meet the above design criteria.
An electrical connector according to the invention has a housing with a bore. A collar is provided with first and second axial ends and a sloped surface extending between them. The external diameter of the collar at its first end is smaller at than an interior diameter of the bore opening, while the external diameter of the collar at its second end is larger than the bore opening interior diameter. An interior diameter of the collar is sized to receive an end of an elongated conductor to which the connector is to be coupled. Means, such as a cap, are provided for affixing the collar and the conductor in the bore of the housing. Preferably this cap is affixable to an external surface of the housing by means such as threads, snap rings or a bayonet (push and turn) connection. As the collar is urged into the housing bore, the collar clamps on the external surface of the conductor.
In an alternative embodiment of the present invention, the electrical connector has a housing with a bore and a collar. At least one sidewall defining the bore has a surface which is parallel to the bore axis. The collar has an external diameter at its first end which is smaller than the internal diameter and a sloped surface which extends from the first end to a second end. An interior diameter of the collar is sized to receive the end of an elongated conductor therethrough. A means such as a cap is provided to affix the collar and the conductor in the bore of the housing. As the collar is urged into the housing bore, the sloped surface interacts with the housing bore sidewall to axially inwardly compress the collar onto the conductor, thereby affixing the conductor to the housing.
In one version of either of the above embodiments, the housing bore has a bottom and a conductive prong which extends toward the bore opening. This prong is provided to pierce the end of a multistranded conductor. Preferably, the housing has a second axial end opposed to the bore end, at least a central portion of the second end being in conductive communication with the prong. This second end can take the form of a pin connector, a banana plug, a spade, a battery terminal or a second bore for receiving a second elongated conductor, which may be of a different size than the first conductor.
While the housing, cap and collar can be made entirely of metal, it is preferred to make the cap and collar out of insulative material, and a peripheral portion of the housing as well. Preferably this insulative material is a molded plastic, by which the connector may be produced more easily and at less cost.
The electrical connectors of the present invention are easy to manufacture yet provide secure electrical connections to conductors, particularly insulated multistranded conductors. A firm connection is made by coacting a frustoconical or frustopyramidal collar, on the one hand, with a cylinder or prismatic bore, on the other. Cylindrical bores are easier to machine than, for example, ones with conical or sloping surfaces. Likewise, forming many of the components of molded plastic saves manufacturing expense.
Further aspects of the invention and their advantages can be discerned in the following detailed description, in which like characters denote like parts and in which:
Referring first to
As seen in
The bore 112 can take shapes other than the orthogonal cylinder shown; it can, for example, take on a prismatic shape. It is preferred that the sidewalls 138 of the bore be completely formed by one or more surfaces which are parallel to the bore axis, such that the cross section of the bore is the same at the opening as it is at its bottom. For ease in manufacture, and particularly where the housing 102 is made of steel, brass or another metal (as is the embodiment shown in
That portion 120 of the housing 102 which includes the bore 112 has, in this embodiment, external threads 122. In other embodiments, the threads 122 can be replaced with other means of affixing the cap 106 to the external surface of the housing 102, such as snap rings and grooves (see
End portion 120 of the housing 102 adjoins a central portion 124, which in the illustrated embodiment has an enlarged diameter and which is knurled on its outer surface 126. The diameter enlargement and the knurled surface adapt this housing 102 to be manually assembled to cap 106 without tools. As the diameter of central portion increases, the moment arm from its surface to the axis A likewise increases, allowing a human hand which grasps it to resist more torque than would otherwise be the case. Alternatively, the outer surface 126 can have one or more pairs of wrench-engaging surfaces (such as a hex shape) for assembly by a tool.
On the other axial end of central portion 124 is a connector element portion 128. In the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment shown in
The collar 104 as shown in
Preferably, the collar 104 is segmented into a plurality (here, four) fingers or leaves 136. The large end 132 is unsegmented, while the small end 130 is segmented. This aids in the compressibility of the small end 130 around conductor 108 as it is urged inwardly by the sidewall 138 of bore 112. While the collar 104 can be manufactured of any of a number of resilient materials such as steel or other metal, it is preferred that collar 104 be molded of plastic.
In the illustrated embodiment, the collar 104 (and the conductor then within it) are affixed to the housing 102 by a cap 106. The cap 106 has a general interior surface 142 with a diameter larger than that of collar diameter d3. The larger end 132 of the collar 104 is adapted to be seated against the bottom or end wall 144 of the cap 106. In the middle of end wall 144 is an opening 146 having a diameter d4 which is substantially smaller than that of collar exterior diameter d3, but the same as or larger than an external diameter d5 of the conductor 108. In the embodiment illustrated in
The function of cap 106 is to affix conductor 108 and collar 104 to the housing 102. In the illustrated embodiment, this is done by sizing cap 106 so that it will fit over end portion 120 of housing 102, and by providing threads on the internal cylindrical surface 142. These female threads threadedly engage with male threads 122 on housing end portion 120. The internal threads may be replaced in other embodiments with snap grooves (see
The cap 206 can be made entirely of plastic, as shown. Cap 206 fits over portion 254 of the housing 202. In place of threads, the embodiment shown in
In summary, embodiments of a novel electrical connector have been shown and described in which a collar is so dimensioned that it has an interference engagement with a housing bore, squeezing the collar inward as it is urged axially into the bore, to thereby firmly grip the conductor to which connection is made. The present invention offers economies in manufacture in that the housing does not have to be made with conical or other noncylindrical bore surfaces, and in that much of the connector does not have to be machined from metal. At the same time, the connector of the invention offers a firm and permanent connection to the conductor which it terminates, which connection can easily be effected by the end-user without tools.
While an illustrated embodiment of the present invention has been described and illustrated in the appended drawings, the present invention is not limited thereto but only by the scope and spirit of the appended claims.
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