1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to a swaged-on fitting, and in particular to an electrically conductive termination fitting that connects an inner conductor to an external conductor on a cable, and simultaneously coaxially anchors the external conductor, where the external conductor functions as an electrode.
2. Prior Art
Known prior art cable connections include RCA connectors, where a wire is connected to a plug having an electrical socket covered with an insulator, wherein the wire is typically soldered in position in the coaxial electrical socket. Sometimes, instead of soldering, the electrical socket is crimped against the wire. Large wires do not lend themselves to soldering if the wire is insulated, as the insulation is typically a thermoplastic like PVC. The plug can then be plugged into another socket-like receptacle that has a spring loaded wall, which provides friction between the plug and the socket-like receptacle. A second wire is in electrical contact with the socket-like receptacle.
The prior art does not read on plugs that themselves are also an electrical socket, where the wire is inserted directly into the plug and there is no insulator, other than the wires.
In another type of connection, the wire is prepared by stripping back the insulation, and the wire itself acts as the plug. Probably the most common electrical connection is made through a junction box, and some of these connections do not require a plug or screw, but typically the wire is stiff enough that it can act as a plug, and therefore limited in gauge and current. Flexibility requires wires that are combination of individual wire strands, and solder is often employed to improve contact. Smashing out the multi-strand wire with a crimping tool or screw generally improves electrical contact; this requires that the wire be bent. Cables with a core strength member do not lend themselves to any of the previously discussed connectors.
Applicant is unaware of any prior art that reads on a swaged-on fitting that not only appends an external conductor, but terminates only a portion of a coaxial cable, enabling a strength member to pass through the fitting.
The invention is a corrosion resistant swaged-on conductive fitting for a coaxial cable having an inner conductor that is sealed from the environment by a cable jacket, and an external conductor that is exposed to the environment, and where the coaxial cable has a contiguous strength member that passes through the fitting substantially intact. In the broadest scope, the conductive fitting has an intermediate ring that functions as an electrical receptacle with an aperture for the pass-through of the strength member, where the receptacle receives and is in electrical contact with the inner conductor of a prepared end of the inner conductor. The intermediate ring also functions as an electrical plug that can be plugged into an electrical socket, and, in one variation, an inner ring functions as the electrical socket with a center opening for the pass through of the strength member. The intermediate ring is essentially nested in a socket portion of the inner ring. The inner ring is swaged onto the intermediate ring and the jacket covering the inner conductor, therein forming a connecting terminal on the cable, where the connecting terminal has the extending coextensive core strength member.
The inner ring, in combination with an outer ring, can be used to provide an anchoring and electrical connection of an external conductor to the inner conductor. The external conductor, which typically is an electrode having a plurality of exposed wires, overlays at least a portion of the inner ring; and the external conductor is anchored between the outer ring and the inner ring. In the second swaging, the outer ring is swaged, anchoring the external conductor between the outer ring and the inner ring. The swaging establishes excellent electrical contact with the inner ring. The connecting terminal is not only conductive, but it is also load bearing. The combined first and second swagings immobilize the conductors and rings, and provides conductivity to the conductors through the intermediate ring and the inner ring, while at the same time environmentally protecting the inner conductor and other components.
The invention can be significantly more complicated, in part because the connections are used in salt water, which is corrosive and conductive. Another factor that complicates the connection is that the cable has a strength member at its core, and the strength member traverses through the conductive fitting without being cut, crimped or even bent. The strength member remains totally intact.
One of the solutions is that the cable jacket is typically made of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), where PTFE is selected in large part because it has excellent resistance to heat and oxidation. However PTFE has a low coefficient of friction, and it has to be gripped without piercing the cable jacket. The inner ring has interior load holding grooves that are in contact with the jacket, and the first swaging embosses the jacket creating a plurality of embossed ribs in the jacket, such that the grip is both frictional and the grip has an interference fit between the grooves and the plurality of embossed ribs, where an embossed rib partially protrudes into to an opposing recessed groove, therein providing a water tight seal and resistance to translational movement and rotational movement.
The foregoing invention will become readily apparent by referring to the following detailed description and the appended drawings in which:
The illustrated embodiment of the invented conductive fitting enables electrical conduction between an external conductor and an inner conductor of a cable, while environmentally protecting the inner conductor. The illustrated conductive fitting provides isolation of the cable's components, where the cable's components include an insulating jacket, coverings, and corrosion resistant fittings. The inner conductor is covered by the insulating jacket of the coaxial cable having a core strength member, which typically is a wire rope. The inner conductor and the external conductor never come into direct contact with each other. Conductance is through an inner ring and an intermediate ring that is axially seated in the inner ring, similar to a plug in receptacle. Both rings are conductive and in excellent electrical contact, so there is little electrical resistance. The external conductor is in electrical contact with an exterior side of a wall of the inner ring. The inner conductor is in electrical contact with an interior side of a wall of the intermediate ring, so there is an electrical path from the external conductor through the inner ring, through the intermediate ring, and finally into the inner conductor of the coaxial cable.
The conductive fitting 500 typically has three main elements: An inner ring 510 as shown in
The outer ring 540 has the largest outside diameter 541, the inner ring 510 has the next largest outside diameter 511 and a length 512 that is longer than the outer ring length 542. The intermediate ring 560 has an outside diameter 561 that is equal to or slightly smaller than the inside diameter 513 of the inner ring 510 to permit the inner ring to snugly fit over the intermediate ring, and a length 562 that is similar to the length 542 of the outer ring 540. As is illustrated in
The inner ring substantially includes a deep socket 514 and a ribbed annular stem 536. The deep socket 514 has an entrance 516 with an inside diameter 513, and a length 517. The inside diameter 513 is only slightly larger than the outside diameter 15 of the S-cable 12 illustrated in
The ribbed annular stem 536 extends outwardly from the base 520. The ribbed annular stem 536 is coaxial with socket 514. The center opening 522 of the ribbed annular stem 536 is larger than a thickness 19 of the strength member 14 (see
The relationship of the elements is illustrated in the cross-sectional view in
Referring to
The inner ring 510 is then swaged onto the cable 12. The swaged-on inner ring 510 causes the sealing grooves 518 to emboss the cable jacket 18. The embossed jacket, after swaging, has a plurality of embossed ribs, each rib partially protruding into an opposing recessed groove 518, therein providing both frictional resistance and an interference fit and thereby providing resistance to translational movement and rotational movement of cable 12 relative to fitting 500.
In the illustrated embodiment, an external conductor 20 is anchored to the S-cable 12 between the outer ring 540 and the inner ring 510. The external conductor 20, which comprises a plurality of exposed wires, is positioned so that at least some of the wires overlay the inner ring 510 with their ends substantially aligned with the bottom 568 of intermediate ring 560. The outer ring is slid over the external conductor 20 and is similarly aligned with the intermediate ring. The outer ring 540 is swaged, anchoring the external conductor 20 between the outer ring 540 and the inner ring 510. In the exemplary embodiment of the invention illustrated and described herein, the external conductor functions as an electrode of a magnetic influence minesweeping cable, which is in contact with salt water and can be submerged several hundred feet. The external conductor 20 has no insulation and is exposed to the seawater environment, as illustrated in
The center aperture 570 of the intermediate ring has an inside diameter that is smaller than the inside diameter of the center opening 522, and this can be advantageously used to help insulate the cable 12. The short rubber tube 590 can be slid over the strength member 14, and pushed into the center opening 522 of annular stem 536 of the inner ring 510 until the rubber tube 590 abuts the bottom 568 of the intermediate ring 560. The short rubber tube 590 has an inside diameter that is substantially the same size as the strength member's outside diameter 19. The diameter can be temporarily increased by swelling the short rubber tube 590 in solvent to facilitate movement of the rubber tube over the strength member. Additionally, a heat shrinkable rubber is easier to work with. The rubber tube provides a backup seal and an insulator between the strength member 14 and inner ring 510. As shown in
It is anticipated that not all applications of the invented conductive fitting 500 will require anchoring an external conductor, and in those applications the outer ring would not be required, and therefore only swaging of the inner ring would be required.
The composition of the wires of the layers of the inner conductor 16 is advantageously selected to include a conductive metal that is relatively soft, such as a soft grade of aluminum. The external conductor 20, when used as an anode electrode, has been found to have improved resistance to corrosion if it is made of titanium-clad copper with mixed metal oxides, and this influences the composition of conductive materials that come into direct and indirect contact with the external conductor 20. The composition of the external conductor 20 affects the selection of the materials used in the invented rings 510,540,560. If the preferred composition of titanium-clad copper with mixed metal oxides is used in the external conductor 20, then the inner ring 510 preferably has a titanium-based composition with platinum plating. The outer ring 540 also preferably has a titanium-based composition. The intermediate ring 560 would preferably have an aluminum-based composition. It can also be plated, for example with tin to reduce corrosion.
It has been found that the intermediate ring enables improved conductivity with the inner conductor, where the inner conductor is composed of a softer aluminum, and the intermediate ring is composed of a harder aluminum that is plated with tin. When the inner ring is swaged, the softer aluminum inner conductor deforms against the harder aluminum intermediate ring, forming a low resistance electrical contact. A good contact between the aluminum intermediate ring and an inner ring comprised of titanium plated with platinum provides satisfactory (but not as good) electrical properties, but the combination provides excellent resistance to corrosion. The aluminum intermediate ring has the added advantage that during swaging it swages similar to the cable.
From
As previously discussed, the outside diameter of the intermediate ring 560 is slightly smaller than the inside diameter of the inner ring 510 before swaging. After the first and second swaging the outside diameter 561 of the intermediate ring 560 and the inside diameter 513 of the inner ring 510 are nearly the same.
It is to be understood that the foregoing description and specific embodiments are merely illustrative of the best mode of the invention and the principles thereof, and that various modifications and additions may be made to the invention by those skilled in the art, without departing from the spirit and scope of this invention, which is therefore understood to be limited only by the scope of the appended claims.
The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States of America for Governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties.
| Number | Name | Date | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1186813 | McFerran | Jun 1916 | A |
| 1909344 | Green | May 1933 | A |
| 3184535 | Worthington | May 1965 | A |
| 4035007 | Harrison | Jul 1977 | A |
| 6538203 | Nolle | Mar 2003 | B1 |
| 7311553 | Tamm | Dec 2007 | B2 |
| 7874881 | Sosa | Jan 2011 | B1 |