This application is a National Stage application of PCT/EP2009/064826 filed on Nov. 9, 2009 and published in the French language, and entitled “ELECTRIC CONNECTOR, AND CORRESPONDING ELECTRIC CONNECTION ELEMENT, ELECTRIC LINKING MEMBER, AND ASSEMBLING METHOD,” which claims priority to French application FR0806253 filed on Nov. 8, 2008.
The present invention relates to an electrical connector, in particular for establishing an electrical connection of a functional board in a junction rack. The invention also relates to a corresponding electrical connection element and electrical linking member, as well as to a corresponding method of assembly.
In the military sector, combat aircraft and vehicles are generally equipped with numerous electrical and electronic systems. These systems may be subjected to significant stresses in terms of vibrations and jolts when the vehicles move around in a combat zone.
In order to protect the electronic equipment and be able to ensure that it operates even under difficult conditions, it is housed on functional boards inserted into junction racks.
To provide for the electrical connections of the functional board, it is necessary to allow a slight relative movement between the board and a junction terminal while ensuring reliable electrical connection. This is why these electrical connections are effected with the aid of a harness of electrical wires or a flexible circuit one end of which is soldered to the board and the other end of which is joined to a connector of the male or female type intended to cooperate with a mating connector carried by the rack. The length of the harness or of the flexible circuit is designed to allow this relative movement between the board and an electrical junction terminal.
However, this soldering operation is irksome and lengthy, since not only is it necessary to solder all the electrical wires or electrical tracks one by one, it is also necessary however thereafter to check the quality of the soldering spots one by one.
Moreover, the dimensions in applications of this type do not make it possible to resort to wiring. Indeed, a wire-based harness or flexible cable has one rib related to the manufacturing process of significant minimum length, namely greater than 30 mm.
Moreover, when the functional board is inserted into the rack, access to the connector may be difficult or impossible.
To alleviate this drawback, it has also been proposed to envisage a connector with male contacts mounted movably in relation to their longitudinal axis and thrust by springs toward contacting spans of the junction terminal.
Indeed, the male contacts rub on the contact spans thus allowing a relative movement between the board and the junction terminal.
Now, in terms of connection security, this solution is not optimal, since in the hostile environments to which military vehicles may be subjected, significant accelerations may lead to a loss of the electrical connection. Furthermore, this solution is not robust in the presence of dust or deposits, for example of oil, which may also decrease the quality of the electrical connection of the functional board and of the components housed therein.
The present invention is aimed at proposing an electrical connector which makes it possible to circumvent, at least partially, the aforementioned drawbacks.
For this purpose, the subject of the invention is an electrical connector comprising a plurality of electrical connection elements, comprising respectively a first electrical contact part and a second electrical contact part, characterized in that each electrical connection element furthermore comprises a rigid electrical linking member one end of which is linked via a first articulation on the first contact part and the other end of which is linked via a second articulation to the second electrical contact part, and in that the first electrical contact parts are retained in a first base and in that the second electrical contact parts are retained in a second base. This electrical connector can comprise one or more of the following characteristics, taken singly or in combination:
The subject of the invention is furthermore an electrical connection element for an electrical connector such as defined above, characterized in that said connection element comprises a first electrical contact part exhibiting a male plug or female socket and a second electrical contact part, and in that it furthermore comprises a rigid electrical linking member one end of which is linked via a first articulation on the first contact part and the other end of which is linked via a second articulation to the second electrical contact part.
The subject of the invention is also an electrical linking member for a connection element such as defined hereinabove, characterized in that it is formed by a rod carrying at each end a knuckle for cooperating with an associated receptacle of an electrical contact part.
The subject of the invention is furthermore an electrical linking member for a connection element such as defined hereinabove, characterized in that it is formed by a rod carrying at each end a receptacle for cooperating with an associated knuckle of an electrical contact part.
The invention also relates to a method for assembling an electrical connector, comprising the following steps:
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will emerge from the following description, given by way of example, without limiting character, with regard to the appended figures in which:
In all the figures, the same elements bear the same reference numbers.
In
This electrical connector 1 comprises a first base 3 and a second base 5, made for example of plastic such as polyphenylene sulfide PPS. These bases 3 or 5 may be identical or different depending on the junction terminals that the connector is supposed to join electrically. These bases may be mounted straight or bent on an integrated circuit or on the facade of an outer casing.
The bases 3 and 5 furthermore comprise at their lateral ends drilled ears 9 in which articulated fixings 11, represented schematically in
These first and second bases 3 and 5 carry respectively ends of connection elements 7 which are represented in a detailed manner in
The connection elements 7 according to
The electrical connection element 7 comprises a first electrical contact part 13 and a second electrical contact part 15 made for example of brass CuZn as well as a rigid electrical linking member 17 made for example of bronze BZ4 or else of copper-beryllium alloy CuBe2, one end of which is linked via a first articulation 19 on the first contact part 13 and the second end of which is linked via a second articulation 21 to the second electrical contact part 15.
These articulations 19 and 21 are effected in the form of a knuckle articulation.
According to the embodiment of
As seen in
According to one embodiment, not represented, each receptacle 27 can exhibit a constriction at its end for introducing the knuckle 25 so as to serve as stop for an associated knuckle when the latter has been introduced so as to prevent the articulation from being able to come apart.
Moreover, it is seen in
Moreover, it is noted in
Referring to
In
In
In
The variant represented in
In these figures, it is more clearly apparent that the knuckles 25 can slide inside the receptacle 27.
The embodiment of
In this embodiment, the receptacles 27 are split, but provision may also be made for the knuckles to be split as described above without departing from the scope of the present invention.
According to yet another variant represented in
According to a variant embodiment of the connector 1 represented in
The block 41 (
In this case, the bases 3 and 5 are then fixed on the block 41, for example by gluing with the aid of a silicone glue.
Referring to
The housings 43 and 45 exhibit a shape complementary to that of the bases 3 and 5. In the example illustrated in
According to the embodiment illustrated, the fixing is then effected between the lateral walls 49 of the housing 43, 45 and the lateral walls 51 of the base 3, 5.
For this purpose, it is possible to provide for example a groove (not represented) in the lateral walls 51 of the bases 3, 5 and into which glue is inserted.
Furthermore, such a connector 1 exhibits a smaller height relative to the embodiment illustrated in
Moreover, as noted in
Thus, the assembling of such a connector 1 with reference to
During a second step E2, the electrical linking members 17 are inserted into the elastic and insulating material block while leaving the ends of the electrical linking members 17 free, that is to say that first ends project relative to the housing 43 of the block 41 and the second opposite ends project relative to the housing 45 of the block 41.
It is thereafter possible during a step E3 to mount the first base 3 on the block 41 with the first contact parts 13 facing the first ends of the electrical linking members 17 and to link via the first articulations 19 the first ends of the electrical linking members 17 on the first contact parts (13).
In a similar manner, during a step E4 the second base 5 is mounted on the block 41 with the second contact parts 15 facing the second ends of the electrical linking members 17 and the second ends of the electrical linking members 17 are linked via the second articulations 21 on the second contact parts 15.
Finally, in step E5 the bases 3, 5 are fixed on the block 41.
Simple assembly of the connector 1 is thus obtained. Of course, the order of certain steps of this method of assembly may be reversed.
Thus, by virtue of these articulated electrical connection elements, a connector can be produced which makes it possible to alleviate the tolerances and play between for example a PCB board and a rack and their respective connectors.
It is therefore readily understood that the connector presented hereinabove allows fast mounting of a board in a rack while ensuring a certain flexibility.
In a yet more advanced version, the bases are equipped with guidance means cooperating with complementary guidance means of the mating connector so that a sort of self-alignment of the connectors is obtained by virtue of the flexibility of the connector 1.
It makes it possible to circumvent the irksome soldering steps and allows secure retention of the electrical connection.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08 06253 | Nov 2008 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/064826 | 11/9/2009 | WO | 00 | 5/23/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2010/052320 | 5/14/2010 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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PCT Search Report of the ISA for PCT/EP2009/064826 dated Feb. 2, 2010. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120021616 A1 | Jan 2012 | US |