This invention relates generally to the electrical connectors and more particularly to a shorting clip for an electrical connector.
Female electrical connectors commonly have a shorting clip in the form of a U-shaped body having two depending legs to engage the sides of the respective female terminals. When the male connector is plugged in, the male connector has an abutting surface that engages a ramp on the U-shaped body to deflect it away from the female terminals.
The known designs for shorting clips may be very sensitive to the overall tolerance stack of the connection system. Some designs, particularly ones with lift ramps, are also sensitive to the amount of axial movement of the electrical plugs. Some lift ramps do not always guarantee sufficient deflection to assure disengagement from the female electrical terminals.
Some clips may be overstressed when deflected to introduce permanent yielding that may result in, when released from the deflective force, loss of resilient motion back toward the electrical terminals with a resultant lack of adequate shorting contact force with the electrical terminals.
Shorting clip designs have required mounting of the clip axially within the electrical terminal body which requires specialized assembly steps often with specialized assembly tooling.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, an electrical connector assembly has a first connector body with an open ended cavity. Laterally spaced terminals that are made from electrically conductive material are mounted in the terminal cavity. A shorting clip is mounted at a distal end of the first connector body and extends into the terminal cavity. The clip is made from electrically conductive and resiliently yieldable material. The shorting clip has an intermediate deflection section spaced away from a wall of the first connector body and positioned to be deflected a predetermined distance by a second connector body mating with the first connector body. The shorting clip has distal contact areas for normally being biased to abut against both laterally spaced terminals. The distal contact areas are resiliently movable away from the laterally spaced terminals when the intermediate deflection section is deflected by the second connector body.
Preferably, the shorting clip has a laterally extending tab. The first connector body has a side wall with a groove for slidably receiving the tab. The groove has an inclined upper wall for deflecting the shorting clip downward as it is installed into the terminal cavity. The groove ends in a transversely extending notch to allow the tab to move into the notch and allow the shorting clip to resiliently bias to a shorting position against the terminals when fully installed in the first connector body. The tab and notch normally affix the shorting clip axially in place in the first connector body.
Desirably, a secondary lock has a staging position to maintain the shorting clip in a deflected position and to provide space between the secondary lock and distal contact areas in order to install the laterally spaced terminals into the terminal cavity without abutting or touching the shorting clip. The secondary lock is movable from the staging position to a seat position to allow the shorting chip to resiliently bias to its shorting position against the terminals.
In one embodiment, the secondary lock has laterally movable between the staging position to the seat position. The secondary lock has notches therein to receive a portion of the shorting clip as it resiliently moves to its shorting position. The shorting clip has a raised standoff area to abut the secondary lock when in the staging position to space the distal contact area from the terminals and receivable in the notches of the secondary lock when in the seat position to allow the distal contact area to abut the terminals.
In one embodiment, the terminals are male terminals extending axially within the terminal cavity. In one embodiment, the groove has a lower abutment wall for preventing the shorting clip from overdeflecting.
Referring now to the drawings and more particularly to
The electrical female connector 10 comprises a body 14 with an axial opening 15 that also has two female terminals 16 mounted therein. The terminals 16 are installed and locked in place by a slide lock 18.
The male connector 12 has a body 20 also with an axial extending cavity 22 extending from a distal end 24 thereof that houses two laterally spaced electrical male terminals 25 made from electrically conductive material e.g. metal. A shorting clip 26 is affixed near or at the distal end 24 and extends into the axial opening 22 to abut the two laterally spaced terminals. The shorting clip 26 is also made from electrically conductive and resiliently yieldable material e.g. spring steel, to short the two laterally spaced male terminals 25 together when the female connector is not engaged as shown in
The shorting clip has a mounting section 28 that comprises a lower plate 30 that fits in a slot 32 of the male connector body 20 at the distal end 24. The shorting clip then has a nose section 34 that wraps about a lip 36 of the body at the distal end 24. The clip 26 then doubles back to extend within the axial opening 22 and has an inclined section 36 that slopes up and away from the inner walls 38 of the body about the axial opening 22 and then levels off at a deflection section 40. The shorting clip then forks into two prongs 42 which are laterally spaced to provide a central gap 43 therebetween. Each prong 42 which have two vertical standoff sections 44 and 46. Vertical standoff section 44 is set lower than standoff section 46 and is laterally spaced therefrom. The shorting clip 26 is normally resiliently biased such that each standoff section 44 normally constants a respective male terminal 25 to short the terminals 25. When in this shorting position, each standoff section 46 is laterally positioned to fit within a respective notch 48 in the secondary lock 27 as shown in
Referring now to
Referring now to
The male connector 12 is now ready to be mated to the female connector 14. As shown in
Once the female connector is engaged past the deflection area 40 (to the right as shown in
Once the female body, becomes disengaged past the deflection section 40 (to the left as shown in
If the shorting clip needs to be removed from the body 20, it is deflected downward till tab 50 moves out of notch 56 till it engages the lower wall 65 of groove 52 which aligns the tab 50 with groove 52 and frees the clip to be pulled out with tab 50 sliding in groove 52. The lower wall 65 is positioned to prevent the clip 26 from over-deflecting by abutting the tab 50.
In this fashion, by having the shorting clip 26 mounted at the male connector body 20 in the preferred embodiment, lift ramps found in previous constructed shorting clips have been eliminated and the concerns regrading potential breakage or creep of the lift ramp have also thus been eliminated. The basic clip geometry provides increased deflection movement of the standoff section 44 compared to the deflection travel of the mid area—i.e. the deflection area 40 and thus the issue of low deflection movement that has been a concern with other designs has been eliminated. While past clips have been critically sensitive of the axial position of one body with respect to a lift ramp, the present construction eliminates this critical sensitivity. The present construction is not sensitive to the position along the axis of engagement of the female body beyond the deflection area 40.
The present construction of the lip also provides for installation with basic tooling. The mount second at the distal end eliminates the need for specialized tooling that needs to intrude deep into the axial cavity to install the clip. The clip is installed with a sliding motion until the tab locks into the side notch to lock the clip in place. Any over-deflection concerns relation to over deflection during installation have been eliminated. The secondary lock also provides installation of the terminals without the need of specialized tooling. Again, concerns about over-deflecting the clip during terminal installation have also been eliminated. Because there is no over-deflection engagement and disengagement of the female body, the shorting clip provides for a durable and long lasting life for the electrical terminal body.
It will be readily understood by those persons skilled in the art that the present invention is susceptible of broad utility and application. Many embodiments and adaptations of the present invention other than those described above, as well as many variations, modifications and equivalent arrangements, will be apparent from or reasonably suggested by the present invention and the foregoing description, without departing from the substance or scope of the present invention. Accordingly, while the present invention has been described herein in detail in relation to its preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that this disclosure is only illustrative and exemplary of the present invention and is made merely for purposes of providing a full and enabling disclosure of the invention. The foregoing disclosure is not intended or to be construed to limit the present invention or otherwise to exclude any such other embodiments, adaptations, variations, modifications and equivalent arraignments, the present invention being limited only by the following claims and the equivalents thereof.
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