The invention relates to an electrical connector having a housing formed to prevent incorrect insertion of a contact therein.
Traditionally, an electrical connector is assembled by inserting a contact into a contact receiving opening provided in a housing. When the contact is incorrectly or inversely inserted into the housing, particularly in the case of a substantially square contact, failure of engagement of the electrical connector with a mating connector is likely to occur. In order to prevent incorrect insertion, the contact and/or the housing have been formed with irregularities that only allow the contact to be inserted into the housing in the correct direction.
For example, Japanese Patent Publication No. 10-144379 teaches a housing having a step disposed on an inner wall of a contact receiving opening and a contact with a projection that abuts the step when it is inversely inserted into the housing. In addition, Japanese Patent Publication No. 2004-103349 teaches a connector having a housing with a projection provided in the contact receiving opening and a contact with a recess that avoids abutting the projection when correctly inserted in the contact receiving opening. The electrical connector also includes a stabilizer, which has been conventionally used to prevent incorrect insertion of the contact.
The recent trend toward smaller more high density electrical connectors requires that smaller contacts be developed having dimensions smaller than a diameter of a wire connected to the contact. The contact is configured to have a diameter as wide as the diameter of the wire at an end closest to a contact insertion end and a smaller diameter at an end opposite from the contact insertion end.
Because the contact insertion end must be large enough to accommodate the larger end of the contact, it is difficult to provide irregularities on the contact and the housing adjacent to the contact insertion end to prevent incorrect insertion of the contact. For example, since a gap will exist between the contact and the housing, a projection on the contact can easily advance into the housing without having to align with a recess in the housing, thus allowing incorrect insertion.
In order to solve this problem, it has been proposed that a front edge of the projection of the contact be engaged with a recess of the housing in order to further prevent incorrect insertion. However, the front edge of a small projection may easily scrape by an inner wall of the housing, allowing incorrect insertion. Further, even when the contact is inserted correctly, it is difficult to have the contact smoothly transition between the differently dimensioned areas within the housing. This is especially difficult when the electrical connector is connected to a wire having a cross section of about 0.22 to 0.5 mm.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide an electrical connector that allows a contact to be smoothly inserted into the contact receiving opening when the contact receiving opening has varying dimensions and prevents incorrect insertion of the contact.
This and other objects are achieved by an electrical connector comprising a housing having a contact receiving opening with a contact receiving end. The contact receiving opening includes a first area and a second area. The first area is arranged at the contact receiving end and has a height larger than a height of the second area. The housing has a projection extending into the contact receiving opening and a first bevelled surface opposing the projection. The first bevelled surface is arranged closer to the contact receiving end than the projection.
This and other objects are further achieved by an electrical connector comprising a contact having a wire connection member and a mating contact receiving end. The mating contact receiving end includes an abutment edge and an inclined portion. A housing has a contact receiving opening with a contact receiving end. The housing has a projection extending into the contact receiving opening and a first bevelled surface opposing the projection. The first bevelled surface is arranged closer to the contact receiving end than the projection. The inclined portion engages the first bevelled surface to bias the abutment edge into the projection when the contact is incorrectly inserted into the contact receiving opening.
As shown in
The method of inserting the contact 10 into the electrical connector according to the first embodiment will now be explained with reference to
Row (a) shows the contact 10 inversely inserted halfway into the contact receiving opening 21 of the housing 20. In this position, the inclined portion 13 of the contact 10 interferes with the first bevelled surface 212 of the contact receiving opening 21. The contact 10 is therefore subjected to a force perpendicular to a direction of insertion. As shown in row (b), when the contact 10 is inserted further, the abutment edge 12 abuts the projection 211 so that the contact 10 can not be inserted further into the contact receiving opening 21. Incorrect insertion of the contact 10 into the contact receiving opening 21 is therefore prevented.
Row (e) shows the contact 10 inversely inserted halfway into the contact receiving opening 21 of the housing 20 at a slight inclination with the mating contact receiving end 11 tilted upward. The inclined portion 13 of the contact 10 interferes with the first bevelled surface 212 of the contact receiving opening 21. The contact 10 is therefore subjected to a force perpendicular to a direction of insertion. When the contact 10 is inserted further, the abutment edge 12 abuts the projection 211 so that the contact 10 can not be inserted further into the contact receiving opening 21. Thus, even if the contact 10 is inserted at an inclination, the abutment edge 12 of the contact 10 still abuts the projection 211 to prevent incorrect insertion of the contact 10.
Row (c) shows the contact 10 correctly inserted halfway into the contact receiving opening 21 of the housing 20. The inclined portion 13 of the contact 10 interferes with the second bevelled surface 213 provided in the contact receiving opening 21, so that the contact 10 is lifted in a direction opposite from the projection 211. The contact 10 is therefore lifted over and by the projection 211 even though there is a difference in the height H1 of the first area 21b and the height H2 of the second area 21c. The contact 10 can therefore be fully inserted into the housing 20.
Row (d) shows the contact 10 correctly inserted halfway into the contact receiving opening 21 of the housing 20 at a slight inclination. As best shown in
When the contact 10 is completely inserted into a final position in the contact receiving opening 21 of the housing 20, the engagement member 214 engages behind the first engaging section 14 of the contact 10 to prevent the contact 10 from being removed from the contact receiving opening 21.
The method of inserting the contact 10 into the electrical connector according to the second embodiment will now be explained with reference to
When the contact 10 is completely inserted into the final position, the engagement member 214 of the housing 20 engages behind the first engaging section 14 of the contact 10 to prevent the contact 10 from being removed from the contact receiving opening 21. The second engagement member 23 is received in the engagement member receiving opening 24 from the state shown in
When the contact 10 is correctly inserted into the contact receiving opening 21 of the housing 20, the abutment edge 17a of the notch 17 and the inclined portion 13 function in the same manner as the abutment edge 12 and the inclined portion 13 described in the first and the second embodiments. Further description thereof will therefore be omitted.
In the electrical connector according to the embodiments described herein, the projection 211 and the first bevelled surface 212 provided on the contact receiving opening 21 and the inclined portion 13 and the abutment edge 12 provided on the contact 10. Thus, when the contact 10 is inversely inserted, the first bevelled surface 212 of the housing 20 interferes with the inclined portion 13 of the contact 10, so that a linear or planer abutment edge 12 of the mating contact receiving end 11 of the contact 10 abuts the projection 211 to prevent wrongful insertion of the contact 10. In addition, when the contact 10 is correctly inserted, the abutment edge 12 of the contact 10 is guided by the first bevelled surface 212 of the housing 20, so that the inclined portion 13 of the contact 10 can avoid abutting the projection 211 of the housing 20 and can be guided by the projection 211. Thus, the contact 10 is smoothly inserted into the final position in the housing 20.
Additionally, the second bevelled surface 213 interferes with the inclined portion 13 to bias the contact 10 away from the projection 211. Thus, the contact 10 can be smoothly inserted into the housing 20 even when the contact receiving opening 21 has a larger dimension near the contact insertion end 21a.
The foregoing illustrates some of the possibilities for practicing the invention. Many other embodiments are possible within the scope and spirit of the invention. For example, although the inclined portion 13 and the first and second bevelled surfaces 212, 213 are illustrated as being inclined or tapered, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that these elements may be of any configuration, such as, a circular arc, a combination of a taper and a circular arc, etc. It is, therefore, intended that the foregoing description be regarded as illustrative rather than limiting, and that the scope of the invention is given by the appended claims together with their full range of equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-253160 | Aug 2004 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5190477 | Akeda | Mar 1993 | A |
5226839 | Koumatsu et al. | Jul 1993 | A |
5378170 | Abe et al. | Jan 1995 | A |
5626499 | Yagi et al. | May 1997 | A |
5993268 | Yamaguchi | Nov 1999 | A |
6068524 | Koumatsu | May 2000 | A |
6375501 | Kojima | Apr 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 977 318 | Feb 2000 | EP |
10-144379 | May 1998 | JP |
2004-103349 | Apr 2004 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060046553 A1 | Mar 2006 | US |