The present invention relates to a splice protection sleeve flange, and especially to rings intended especially to be incorporated into a splice protection sleeve flange.
Splice protection sleeves are used especially in the field of telecommunications for the purpose of protecting a cable, especially a power cable or a telephone cable, such as a fibre-optic cable. For this purpose, the splicing point is surrounded by a sleeve normally consisting of a shell terminated at least at one of its ends, and usually at both its ends, by a flange. The flange comprises an elliptical or circular, annular outer part on the inner face of which a seal is placed, the said seal being made of an elastomer material or often of what is called a gel, especially a polyurethane gel. The seal is interposed between a fixed ring and a moveable ring. By bringing the moveable ring closer to the fixed ring, the seal is compressed so as to make it flow and ensure good sealing around the cable. However, this assumes that the inside diameter of the two rings is as far as possible just greater than the diameter of the cable so that the material of the seal does not flow between the cable and the inner face of the rings. Now, it is desirable that the same splice protection sleeve be able to serve to protect cables of different diameter.
The solution normally used for this purpose consists in providing as many rings of different inside diameter as there are different diameters of cables to be protected. In order not to have to provide as large a number of pieces, rings have already been provided which may be cut along pre-established cutting lines so as to give them different diameters, but with the following drawbacks: the cutting work that has to be carried out on site requires the cable diameter to be measured beforehand and this diameter to be transferred to the ring to be cut, and it is necessary to carry out this work for as many cables as the splice protection sleeve contains, something which, when there are several cables of different diameter, may result in errors. Furthermore, the cutting is irreversible. Once a ring has been cut, it can no longer serve for a cable of smaller diameter. Once it has been cut and found not to be suitable, because of a diameter error having been committed, the ring must be scrapped.
The invention helps to overcome these drawbacks with a ring which does not require the cable diameter to be measured beforehand, but simply a test of positioning the ring around the cable because the ring can be used reversibly, that is to say the same ring, after having been used for a large-diameter cable, can again be used for a small-diameter cable so that there are fewer errors and less scrap and so that any error on site can be immediately remedied.
The ring according to the invention comprises means for putting it around a cable without slipping it thereover. According to the invention, the ring comprises a base part, the inner and outer circumferential lateral faces of which include a male part and a female part, respectively.
The said means may consist of the fact that the ring is split along an entire generatrix or by the fact that it consists of at least two ring sectors joined together into a ring by tenons and mortises. In this way, the ring may be placed around the cable on site without having to slip the cable through it and cut the cable.
The ring according to the invention may thus form part of a set of at least two rings, the base bodies of which are of different diameter and in which the male part of one of the rings penetrates the female part of the other ring.
To adapt the ring to a given cable diameter, the plastic rings are snapped out of each other in order to keep the one whose inside diameter is appropriate to the cable to be surrounded.
According to one embodiment for ensuring good sealing provided by the seal, a projecting part going all around stems from one of the transverse faces of the ring.
The subject of the invention is also a flange of a splice protection sleeve, which comprises an annular outer part and at least one ring according to the invention or a set of rings according to the invention, the male or female part of the ring or, when there are more of them, the male or female part of the larger-diameter ring cooperating with a complementary shape provided on the inner face of the outer part of the flange so as to immobilize the ring in order thus to obtain the fixed ring.
According to another embodiment, the subject of the invention is also a flange of a splice protection sleeve, which comprises an annular outer part and at least one ring according to the invention or a set of rings according to the invention, the male part of the larger-diameter ring, when it is turned towards the outside, just coming into contact with the inner face of the outer part of the flange or, when the female part of this ring is turned towards the outside, the outer lateral face of the base body just coming into contact with the inner face of the outer part of the flange. This allows the moveable ring to be obtained.
As explained above, a seal is in contact with a transverse face of the two rings in which this seal is intended to be compressed.
According to another aspect of the present invention, the present invention relates to the flanges intended especially for being used in splice protection sleeves, such as those found in particular in the telecommunications field for the purpose of protecting a cable, such as a power cable or a telephone cable, for example a fibre-optic cable. Federal Republic of Germany Patent Application No. 19958112.6 discloses a splice protection sleeve comprising a shell closed by two flanges. Each flange defines a passage for a cable. A seal is interposed between two annular walls or walls into which the cable is slipped. One of the walls can move along the cable and is displaced by means of a slide so as to compress the seal and make it flow radially inwards in order for it to be properly applied against the cable and thus ensure good sealing. However, tests have shown that one does not thus obtain the sealing that might be expected. The invention remedies this drawback by means of a flange which ensures good sealing.
According to another aspect of the present invention, the subject of the invention is a flange comprising an annular seal housed in an open chamber between a sleeve and two annular transverse walls internal to the sleeve, at least one of which is movable, with the possibility of flowing radially inwards. According to the invention, means are provided which are intended to maintain contact between the sleeve and the seal when the transverse walls are brought closer together.
It has now been understood that, when by bringing the two transverse walls closer together the seal is made to flow, the latter, contrary to what might be expected, does not flow equally in all directions and especially equally in the radially internal and external directions, but quite to the contrary the flow has a solely inwards preferential direction so that a void is created between the sleeve and that part of the seal which ought to be in contact with this sleeve, but which is only facing the latter and at a certain distance therefrom, via which void leaks take place.
The flange according to the invention passes the following sealing test:
The flange is mounted on a cable so as to close an enclosure immersed in water at 25° C. and filled with air at a pressure of at least 500 mbar and, after the two transverse walls have been brought closer together by a distance representing 50% of the dimension of the seal in the direction in which the walls are brought closer together, no air bubbles escape from the enclosure over a period of 48 hours.
According to a first embodiment, the means for maintaining contact are formed by the fact that the seal is adhesively bonded to the sleeve. This embodiment is not preferred because both the flange and the seal have to be changed if the seal is damaged and because it requires fastidious bonding operations that are not easy to perform. It is preferred for the contact-maintaining means to be obtained by conformation, especially obtained directly when moulding the parts.
According to a first embodiment obtained by conformation and with great effectiveness, the means comprise a projecting portion on one of the transverse walls, and preferably on both transverse walls, the said portion projecting into the chamber. Good results have in particular been obtained when the ratio of the largest dimension of the projecting portion in the direction in which the walls are brought closer together to the distance between the projecting portion and the sleeve is greater than 0.5 and preferably greater than 1. The bulge taken up by the seal thus remains in contact with the projecting portion and no leakage line is created.
Another possibility of forming the contact-maintaining means by conformation consists in providing a projecting portion on the sleeve, this portion projecting into the chamber. Just like the first embodiment, this second embodiment is simple and not difficult to mount, the two walls being interchangeable in the first embodiment just as in the second. It is preferable for the projecting portion, when it is on the sleeve, to be off-centre with respect to the middle of the distance between the two walls after they have been brought closer together, so that contact is easier to maintain between the projecting portion and the seal which has taken a bulge.
According to a third embodiment, the means intended to maintain contact between the sleeve and the seal when the transverse walls have been brought closer together include a second seal interposed between one of the walls, preferably the fixed wall, and a stop for the sleeve, the said stop projecting radially inwards. In this way, the required sealing between the sleeve and the outer circumferential portion of the seal is ensured at a point other than that where it flows and where a bulge detrimental to maintaining good sealing is created. Preferably, the said one wall, namely preferably the fixed wall, is provided with a passage and the seal and the second seal are made as one piece passing into the passage. When the gel serving as the seal is poured in, the two seals and the two sealings required are provided at the same time and the fitting procedure is simplified thereby.
In the appended drawing, given solely by way of example:
The half-ring shown in
In
In
Shown in the perspective view in
In
The half-flange shown in
As shown in
In
In
When the two walls 105 and 106 are brought closer together, the portion 111 of the seal which forms a second seal ensures good contact with the sleeve since this contact takes place on the radial stop 112 and since the portion 111 of the seal does not take a bulge at this point, when the two walls 105 and 106 are brought closer together.
In
The apparatus in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0111585 | Sep 2001 | FR | national |
0111586 | Sep 2001 | FR | national |
This application is a United States national application claiming priority to International Application No. PCT/EP02/09668 filed on Aug. 30, 2002, which in turn claims priority to French Patent Application No. 0111585 filed on Sep. 7, 2001, and French Patent Application No. 0111586 filed on Sep. 7, 2001.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP02/09668 | 8/30/2002 | WO | 10/8/2004 |