The invention described and claimed hereinbelow is also described in PCT/EP2008/066230, filed on Nov. 26, 2008 and DE 101007061117.1, filed Dec. 19, 2007. This German Patent Application, whose subject matter is incorporated here by reference, provides the basis for a claim of priority of invention under 35 U.S.C. 119 (a)-(d).
In automatic vehicle transmissions, electronic control units that are installed inside the transmission housing are used to control the shift hydraulics. To prevent the transmission oil from entering this electronic control unit, the electronic control units are hermetically sealed e.g. by welding housing bases and housing covers to one another. The electrical contacts are customarily guided outwardly through glass sealing or glazed enclosures. The design of electronic control units of this type is substantially similar to that of metallic transistor housings but include a larger number of contact pins. Metallic pressed screens are applied to the outer end face of the contact pins to conduct the electrical signals. The former are customarily connected permanently to the contact pins using a bonding method such as laser welding. These pressed screens are coated with plastic to position the parts to be welded and to provide short-circuit-proof insulation.
DE 196 40 466 B4 relates to a metallic carrier part that includes electronic components applied to the component side and/or to printed circuit boards. The printed circuit boards are, in particular, hybrid circuits having connections that are inserted from the component side to the side of the carrier part opposite the component side using a plurality of lead pins sealed in glass passages. The lead pins are disposed on at least one metallic contact strip provided with passage openings. A lead pin sealed in a glass filling is disposed in each passage opening. The contact strip is inserted into an assigned recess in the carrier part and is fastened therein.
Regarding the above-described configuration, it is difficult to ensure adequate flexibility to compensate for component tolerances or to achieve deformation during an assembly procedure. Moreover, the tools required to produce the plastic-coated pressed screens are very expensive. Likewise, any geometric change or the creation of a component variant is a complex undertaking and increases costs. If a wiring harness is used to achieve flexibility, a short but coated pressed screen is typically required as an intermediate part to connect the cable ends since it is only possible to weld the contact pins to a fixed sheet-metal surface and not to connect them directly to the flexible cables.
According to the invention, coated pressed screens used previously are replaced by a plastic guide part without coated metallic parts. Uniform weld flanges are inserted in this plastic guide part and are fixedly anchored using a pine-tree profile, to name one example. On the profiles that are used, which can be designed e.g. as a pine-tree profile, the electrical connecting cables are first attached by crimping, for example, or they are attached in another manner.
The proposed solution has considerable cost advantages compared to the coated pressed screen. The reuse of an identical, small punched-bent part also results in very low tool costs, and the solution provided according to the present invention is characterized by excellent tolerance compensation and provides a certain amount of mobility even in tight spaces. The solution provided according to the invention makes it possible to realize a large variety of types, that is, a relatively large number of variants, coupled with very low costs for changes and tools. The assembly of the electrical cables can be automated, or carried out by a subcontractor.
In the solution provided according to the invention, the connector lugs, which are also referred to as terminals, are first connected to the electrical cables by crimping, for example. The working procedure is identical to that of attaching known connector terminals to electrical cables and can be implemented by any cable manufacturer, and may even be automated. It is possible, for example, to assemble the electrical cables where the other cable end was assembled. The cable end opposite the cable end to be assembled can also remain exposed.
The weld flange provided according to the invention is designed without snap-in hooks and includes a pine-tree contour on the outer side, for example. In the case of the connector snap-in that is typically used, the connector terminal is seated in the corresponding receiving chamber with play. In the solution provided according to the invention, however, a play-free, stressable interference fit is required because the forces introduced from the electrical connecting cable would otherwise act on the weld point of the electronic control unit, which is to be avoided. Using the weld flange provided according to the invention, the forces introduced from the cable can be decoupled from the weld point of the electronic control unit.
In a second step, the weld flanges are inserted into a housing part. When the spacial conditions are tight, the crimping region within which the weld flange provided according to the invention is connected to the electrical cable at any angle relative to the welding “flat”. In this case, the welding “flat” is understood to mean the connector lug that is bonded to the particular contact pin of an electronic control unit, preferably being welded thereto in this case, thereby resulting in an electrically conductive contact. Care must merely be taken to ensure that the force-introduction area is accessible for press fitting, and this is ensured by the plane offset.
The plastic housing part is a component that is preferably derived from a component of the transmission control that is available, although it can have a different appearance and can transition e.g. into a supporting frame, a cable duct, or the like.
The present invention will be described in greater detail below with reference to the drawings. They show:
The depiction shown in
As shown in
On connector part 12, electrical cable 14 is accommodated in crimping 20 and includes cable sheathing 16 and a conductor 18. As shown in
As furthermore shown in the depiction in
While the end, shown in
Connector lug 28 shown in
A housing part 36, which is shown in a partial depiction in
In the state in which connector part 12 is installed in receiving chamber 40, connector lug 28, on which lateral profiling 30 has preferably been formed, is disposed above the edge of housing part 36 by an overhang 48. As a result, connector lug 28 including welding “flat” 38 extends above openings 60 for contact pins 56. Openings 60 in contact strip 64 of housing part 36 are used to receive contact pins 56 of an electronic control unit 50. As soon as housing part 36 is fastened to electronic control unit 50 using connector parts 12, which are locked in position in receiving chambers 40 using interference fit 44, contact pins 56 extend through openings 60 and are thereby disposed underneath connector lugs 56, which cover openings 60 in a flush manner, of each of the connector parts 12. Next, depending on the orientation and number of contact pins 56, which should be contacted, on electronic control unit 50 (see the depiction in
The illustration presented in
As shown in the perspective view in
As shown in the depiction in
An electronic control unit 50 according to the perspective top view in
As shown in the illustration in
Housing part 36 according to the depictions in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 061 117 | Dec 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/066230 | 11/26/2008 | WO | 00 | 7/13/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/077299 | 6/25/2009 | WO | A |
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