This invention relates to multiple wire cables, and more particularly to small gauge coaxial wiring.
Certain demanding applications require miniaturized multi-wire cable assemblies. To avoid undesirably bulky cables when substantial numbers of conductors are required, very fine conductors are used. To limit electrical noise and interference, coaxial wires having shielding are used for the conductors. In other application, twisted pairs, parallel pairs, unshielded insulated single wires, and other configurations may be employed. A bundle of such wires is surrounded by a conductive shield formed of braided small wires to prevent radio interference from being emitted or received by the cable components. An outer protective sheath covers the shield.
Some applications requiring many different conductors prefer that a cable be very flexible, supple, or “floppy.” This has been achieved by providing a shielding braid that loosely receives the wires, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,734,362, which is incorporated herein by reference. Because the braid is formed of bare metal wires, it may have an abrasive effect on the bundle of signal wires in certain applications where flexing and external stresses are extreme. Such abrasion may generate open failures in the individual shield wires of coaxial wire components, generating signal noise during operation due to shorting between the now-open wire shield and the outer braided cable shield. Other failure modes include abrasion of wire insulation, which may expose the signal conductors to shorting with the braid or to each other. This is critical because the compact size desired for many such cables requires a very thin insulation layer (in the range of 0.001 to 0.010 inches) on each wire.
Because the stresses and wear are generally concentrated at the ends of a cable near strain relief elements such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,672,894 (incorporated herein by reference), measures have been taken to protect the cable bundle at such stress points. As disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,580,034 (incorporated herein by reference), the cable bundle may be wrapped at its ends near the stress points with a low-friction Teflon tape. While effective, this reduces the benefits of a loose shield, which provides the desired supple effect. Tape-wrapped wires are captured in a bundle that does not readily flatten to permit easy bending to small radiuses. This is not problematic for many applications, because the flexibility remains excellent over nearly the entire length of the cable. However, in some applications, flexibility near the ends is a valued characteristic that is preferably not sacrificed. Moreover, for applications in which there is a risk of damage due to intense stresses causing wear anywhere along the entire cable length, wrapping the entire cable bundle with tape to prevent such wear unacceptably sacrifices the flexibility desired for many applications.
The present invention overcomes the limitations of the prior art by providing a cable assembly having a plurality of wires, each having a first end and an opposed second end. A sheath including an shield encompasses all the wires. The shield is a braid formed of a plurality of braid wires, and each of the braid wires has an insulating coating. The wires of the braid may be gathered at an end into a pigtail. The insulation is removed from the wires at the pig tail. The insulation may be removed by dipping the pigtail in a high temperature solder bath.
The cable 16 includes a multitude of fine coaxially shielded wires 32. As also shown in
The shielding and conductor of each wire are connected to the circuit board, or to any electronic component or connector by any conventional means, as dictated by the needs of the application for which the cable is used. The loose portions 36 of the wires extend the entire length of the cable between the strain reliefs, through the strain reliefs, and into the housing where the ribbon portions are laid out and connected.
The ribbon portions 34 are each marked with unique indicia to enable assemblers to correlate the opposite ribbon portions of a given group, and to correlate the ends of particular wires in each group. A group identifier 40 is imprinted on the ribbon portion, and a first wire identifier 42 on each ribbon portion assures that the first wire in the sequence of each ribbon is identified on each end. It is important that each group have a one-to-one correspondence in the sequence of wires in each ribbon portion. Consequently, an assembler can identify the nth wire from the identified first end wire of a given group “A” as corresponding to the nth wire at the opposite end ribbon portion, without the need for trial-and-error continuity testing to find the proper wire. This correspondence is ensured, even if the loose intermediate portions 36 of each group are allowed to move with respect to each other, or with the intermediate portions of other groups in the cable.
In the preferred embodiment, there are 8 groups of 16 wires each, although either of these numbers may vary substantially, and some embodiments may use all the wires in a single group. The wires preferably have an exterior diameter of 0.016 inch, although this and other dimensions may range to any size, depending on the application. The cable has an overall exterior diameter of the jacket portion 60 of 0.330 inch and the sheath has a bore diameter of 0.270 inch. As the loose wires tend to pack to a cross-sectional area only slightly greater than the sum of their areas, there is significant extra space in the bore in normal conditions. This allows the wires to slide about each other for flexibility, and minimizes wire-to-wire surface friction that would occur if the wires were tightly wrapped together, such as by conventional practices in which a wire shield is wrapped about a wire bundle. In the preferred embodiment, a bend radius of 0.75 inch, or about 2 times the cable diameter, is provided with minimal bending force, such as if the cable is folded between two fingers and allowed to bend to a natural radius. Essentially, the bend radius, and the supple lack of resistance to bending is limited by little more than the total bending resistance of each of the components. Because each wire is so thin, and has minimal resistance to bending at the radiuses on the scale of the cable diameter, the sum of the wire's resistances adds little to the bending resistance of the sheath and shield, which thus establish the total bending resistance.
The shield wires 62 are 40 gauge (0.0031 inch) copper wire 66 with a 0.004 inch thick coating 68 of insulating material, although other wire gauge may be employed for different applications. In the preferred embodiment, Solvar™ material from REA of Fort Wayne, Ind. is preferred for the insulation. In alternative embodiments, the shield braid wire insulation may be any alternative dielectric material having a robust resistance to abrasion and a low friction surface such as thermoplastic or thermoset resin. In the preferred embodiment, the exposed surface of the insulation is treated with or includes a material for lubricity, to aid in the manufacturing process, and to further avoid internal friction or abrasion in the finished cable. For lubricity, the entire insulation may be of a common lubricious material, or an outer layer or coating of such material may be provided.
Nonetheless, the sheath material at least partly encapsulates the shield wires, generating adhesion that helps to maintain the shield and sheath interior in contact with each other throughout the length, without detaching during manufacture, assembly, or use of the cable. Consequently, the shield wires do not fall away from the sheath, but remain adhered along the entire length. This provides elastic resistance to tension, and facilitates restoration of its original length when tension is removed. The shield wires provide an elongation limit as they fully compress about the wires within to resist increasing tension, after which the elasticity of the sheath returns the shield to its original length and diameter about the wires within to provide the desired flexibility as discussed above. In some applications, these functions and benefits may be achieved if the shield detaches from the sheath, as long as the sheath is loose with respect to the cable wires, and remains attached to the sheath at each end.
As shown in
Because the insulation material is selected for its strength, wear, and lubricity characteristics, it is from a group of materials with an effective melting point above that of a typical solder bath, which has a temperature in the range of 400-600° F. By effective melting point, this disclosure intends to refer not necessarily to the precise temperature at which a solid-to-liquid phase change is said to occur, but instead simply to a temperature at which the coating effectively melts, dissolves, burns away, vaporizes, or otherwise allows the braid wire ends to become exposed and accessible for soldering. Some residual insulation material in the solder joint does not impair a good connection that includes all braid wires, and the insulation is still considered to have been effectively melted. In the preferred embodiment, a solder bath temperature of 700° F. is employed.
In the standard solder temperature range under 600° F., suitable insulation materials do not effectively melt. There are other insulation materials that are formulated for melting away at such temperatures, but these are not suitably durable nor lubricious for the usage in the preferred embodiment. Such unsuitable low-temperature insulation materials include, for example, urethane-based coatings such as Nyleze® from Phelps-Dodge of Trenton, Ga. These are prone to nicking, which would expose the braid wire. Moreover, such materials do not lubriciously pass through the machines used for braiding the shield, and would be damaged by this process, or be unbraidable.
With the tip of the pigtail soldered, the rest of the pigtail remains flexible. This allows it to be flattened and readily captured by the cup and cone elements of the strain relief disclosed above. The tip extends from the strain relief 96 as the bundle protrudes from the center of the strain relief in a conventional manner. This allows the pigtail tip to be soldered (at conventional temperatures) or crimped for an electrical connection to ground circuitry in the instrument and the transducer wand, or whatever elements are being connected by the cable.
In an alternative embodiment, the shield ends may be stripped by mechanical means such as scraping with a blade, abrading with an abrasive sand-type blast, by a swaging process that exposes the wires, or by a connection that bites through the insulation to make contact.
Such methods are employed in an alternative embodiment in which the braided shield is simply folded back and crimped with a metallic ring encircling the cable end and connected to the exposed braid wires and grounded to a ground connection.
While the above is discussed in terms of preferred and alternative embodiments, the invention is not intended to be so limited. For instance, the cable need not employ a loose shield to enjoy the benefits of insulated shield wires, where flexibility is not needed (such as internal to an instrument). The cable may be employed in any application; the medical ultrasound application illustrated is an example. The cable bundle need not employ ribbonized components.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060144613 A1 | Jul 2006 | US |