Applicant claims priority under 35 U.S.C. ยง119 of GERMAN Application No. 10 2004 054 003.9 filed on Nov. 9, 2004.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a female multipole connector for electric plug-type connectors, particularly for weak current, in which contact springs are accommodated in guide channels of a plate-shaped basic body, so as not to come loose.
2. The Prior Art
Plug-type connectors are known, in which multipole female connectors are plugged into multipole plugs, particularly in multiple rows, in a quiver-like manner. The female multipole connectors and multipole plugs have contact elements that correspond to one another.
These plug-type connectors connect electronic components or modules with one another, preferably for releasably connecting circuit boards with one another. In the case of such a plug-type connector described in International Application No. WO 01/29931 A1, the female multipole connectors consist of plate-like basic bodies made of insulating material, into which guide channels that lie next to one another and extend lengthwise are worked. During the assembly process of the female multipole connectors, contact springs in the shape of conductive tracks are inserted into these guide channels. The contact springs are punched from sheet material for springs, in one piece, and bent. They usually carry the actual, mostly two-arm contact spring for contacting with a contact blade on one end of the conductive track, and a solder connection at the other end of the conductive track. The contact springs that have been laid into place are secured by means of a planar cover plate that is set onto the plate-shaped basic body. The inside of the cover plate also has guide channels, which interact with the guide channels in the basic body in such a manner that the raised ribs of the cover plate engage into the recessed guide channels of the basic body. In this manner, contact springs that have been laid into the recessed guide channels of the basic body are mechanically fixed in place. Furthermore, the basic body has small tabs, distributed over its surface, which correspond with small holes in the cover plate. In this manner, the cover plate can be set onto the basic body, fitted with components, with a non-positive lock and a positive lock.
The cover plate is part of the production costs, particularly the material costs and the assembly costs, and increases the thickness of the female multipole connector.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide a female multipole connector for plug-type connectors in which the production costs can be lowered, and the thickness of the female multipole connectors can be reduced, while meeting the same mechanical and electrical requirements.
This task is accomplished, according to the invention, by means of a female multipole connector in which the contact springs are directly, mechanically, and rigidly connected with the basic body, in other words without ancillary components.
According to a first embodiment, the contact springs are directly connected with the basic body with an elastic positive lock. According to a variant of the elastic positive lock, the contact springs are mechanically, rigidly connected with the basic body by means of a direct snap connection. For this purpose, snap-in contours for the contact springs are molded into the guide channels, according to a preferred embodiment. It is advantageous if the side walls of the guide channels possess projections having snap-in slants, behind which the contact springs snap in, at intervals. The projections can be disposed either on one side or both sides, distributed over the length of the guide channels. The placement of pairs of snap-in projections on both sides has proven to be particularly advantageous. Furthermore, at least one passage, in each instance, is provided in the bottom of the basic body of the female multipole connector, in the region of the snap-in projections on the side walls of the guide channels, to improve the spring-elastic behavior of the said body segments of the side walls. The passages are preferably disposed under each snap-in projection. It is also advantageous that the lengthwise expanse of a passage is greater than the lengthwise expanse of a snap-in projection. According to another embodiment, a passage is disposed under the end regions of each snap-in projection.
For problem-free snapping in during the joining process, the contact springs have such spring properties, in the section of the conductive track, that they deform elastically when they are pressed behind the projections of the guide channels, and spring back elastically again behind the projections when the end position has been reached.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the contact springs themselves carry catch projections that elastically snap in behind corresponding bottom-side undercuts in the guide channels.
According to a another embodiment of the invention, a plastic positive lock takes place between the contact springs and the basic body.
In a preferred embodiment of the plastic positive lock, a tab connection of the contact springs on the back of the basic body is provided. The tabs are inserted through passages in the basic body and bent around against the bottom of the basic body. According to another variant, cross-set extenders attached to the contact springs are set crosswise.
According to another embodiment, the contact springs are fixed in place in the basic body by thermally partially plasticized side walls, or attached by thermal riveting using pins that project upward out of the basic body, which pins pass through passages in the conductive tracks of the spring contacts.
The advantages of the invention consist, in particular, in the fact that an additional cover plate is no longer required for attaching the spring contacts in the basic body, thereby reducing the production expenditure. Since the plug-type connectors being considered are produced in large numbers, a correspondingly great economic advantage can be achieved.
Other objects and features of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description considered in connection with the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood, however, that the drawings are designed as an illustration only and not as a definition of the limits of the invention.
In the drawings, wherein similar reference characters denote similar elements throughout the several views:
a, 1b, and 1c show cross-sectional views of the female multipole connector shown in
Referring now in detail to the drawings,
Accordingly, guide channels 2 are angled away at a right angle. Contact springs 3 are inserted into guide channels 2, so as not to become loose and in a mechanically rigid manner.
Contact springs 3 consist of well conductive sheet material for springs, for example hard copper sheet. They are punched and bent from a single piece, in automated equipment. At one end of contact spring 3, the actual contact spring has been formed in the machining process, here a two-arm contact spring 4 for the contact blades of the multipole plug. At the other, there is a solder connector, here an SMD solder connector 5 for soldering the plug-type connector onto a circuit board. The conductive track 6 of the contact spring 3 that connects the two connectors 4, 5 is bent at the same right angle as the guide channel 2 that is provided for it. Snap-in projections 8 are worked into the side walls 7 of guide channels 2, on both sides and in pairs. In the example, two to four pairs of snap-in projections 8 are provided, depending on the length of contact springs 3. When contact springs 3 are assembled during the assembly process, which preferably takes place fully automatically, they snap behind snap-in projections 8 by way of snap-in slants 9 of snap-in projections 8. Elastic deformation of the contact springs 3 in the snap-in regions is forced to occur, until the end position has been reached when contact springs 3 snap in behind snap-in projections 8, and contact springs 3 that were elastically deformed in the corresponding regions of the conductive tracks 6 make their deformation retroactive again.
Afterwards, contact springs 3 are connected with basic body 1 in mechanically rigid manner, by means of a direct snap connection, thereby making it possible to eliminate the usual cover plate without replacing it.
In
In
In one variant, the contact springs themselves can form catch projections 33, in that catch nubs or catch projections 33 are molded on, which snap in behind corresponding undercuts 22 of the guide channels. In this way, the snap-in projections on the guide channels can be eliminated, and the joining process is facilitated by means of better guidance of the contact springs in the flat-walled guide channels. Engagement slots in the bottom region of the guide channels for the nubs of the contact springs are sufficient.
All of the characteristics mentioned in the above specification, as well as all of the characteristics that can be derived from the drawings alone are furthermore integral parts of the invention, even if they have not been particularly emphasized and mentioned in the claims.
The invention is not restricted to the exemplary embodiment, but rather can be varied in many different ways, within the scope of the disclosure.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 054 003 | Nov 2004 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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RE28147 | Hoffman | Sep 1974 | E |
5380220 | Okabe | Jan 1995 | A |
5934927 | Nagai | Aug 1999 | A |
6471549 | Lappöhn | Oct 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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WO 0129931 | Apr 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060110981 A1 | May 2006 | US |