The invention concerns the field of fuse holders, and notably fuse holders for automotive applications.
In particular, fuse holders of this type can be used to protect charging circuits of electric vehicles. Such circuits can carry currents of 63 amperes at 250 volts, for example. With such currents, the risk of overheating or even of fires occurring has to be taken under consideration. In order to eliminate, or at least to limit, this type of risk, the charging circuits are equipped with fuses. These fuses are advantageously placed as far upstream as possible in the charging circuit, for example at the level of the charging socket, in order to protect the vehicle and any occupants.
Given the importance of the protection role of these fuses, improvements to these fuses in order to increase their efficacy and reliability are looked for.
To this end, there is provided in accordance with the invention a fuse holder including two housing elements. For example, once assembled, these two housing elements form a tube closed at each of its ends. They then make it possible to accommodate a fuse. A plurality of fuses may be accommodated in parallel between two housing elements. Each fuse includes two connecting terminals. Each housing element includes a contact intended to make an electrical connection with one of these terminals. To be more precise, two contacts are provided for each fuse, each situated in a respective housing element. Each contact is then intended to make an electrical connection with one of the two connecting terminals of a fuse.
The fuse holder further includes a support in which one or more fuses can be accommodated. The fuse holder is positioned inside the two housing elements assembled together so that each terminal is electrically connected to a contact.
The support makes it possible to increase the accuracy of the positioning of a fuse in a fuse holder, notably vis a vis the electrical connection between contacts and terminals, to the benefit of the reliability of the function implemented by this fuse.
In order to facilitate the insertion and the positioning of a fuse in a support, the support may be mounted on one of the housing elements in a mobile and/or removable manner. In this case, the support can occupy an open position in which the fuse can be mounted in the support. The support is then moved from this open position to a closed position in which the support is at least partly inserted in the housing element on which it is mounted. During this movement of the support, the support is guided in a precise manner by guide means in that housing element. Each fuse terminal is therefore also guided precisely toward a contact of this housing element, so that in the closed position each contact of this housing element and a terminal of the fuse are engaged one in the other.
There may equally be provision for the support to be movable to its closed position only if the fuse is correctly oriented and positioned in its support. The overall size of the exterior envelope of the support fitted with an incorrectly positioned fuse being greater than that of the exterior envelope of the support in which each fuse is correctly positioned, a snug opening is provided in the housing element on which the support is mounted in a mobile manner. Accordingly, if a fuse is not correctly positioned in the support, the latter cannot be moved through this opening.
The orientation and the positioning of a fuse in its support must be particularly precise, notably, for example, if the contacts are female contacts each receiving a respective pin extending from a terminal of the fuse, or vice versa. Accordingly, if the pin has a rectangular section, the support may include a slot, also rectangular and essentially perpendicular to the axis of the pin. The pin can then be snugly inserted in this slot, in accordance with an orientation enabling alignment of the pin with the opening of the female contact to make possible, or at least to facilitate, the introduction of the pin into the female contact when the support is moved from its open position to its closed position and/or when the housing elements are moved toward each other with a view to closing them.
Retaining means retaining the fuse on the latter can contribute to precise positioning of the fuse in its support and consequently of the fuse in the fuse holder.
There may equally be provided a support with locking reinforcing means known as primary lock reinforcement means or terminal position assurance means. For example, these locking reinforcement means may include a tongue that can be engaged behind a contact (here “behind” does not mean relative to the direction of insertion of the contact into its housing in a housing element but rather relative to a face of the contact perpendicular to this insertion direction), or a contact tongue, if that contact is correctly positioned in the housing element in which it is mounted. In other words, if the locking reinforcement means cannot be engaged behind this contact, the support cannot be moved, or at least not moved all the way, from its open position to its closed position, thereby indicating to the operative that the contact is not correctly positioned in the housing element in which it is mounted.
The fuse holder may also include a seal to provide the seal between the two housing elements. In this case, the support may include a retaining element such as a lug retaining the seal on one of the housing elements when the other housing element is not assembled thereto. This feature makes it possible to ship the fuse holder with a support pre-mounted on a housing element and with a seal already in place on the latter, whereas the contacts, the cables and the fuse will not be mounted until a later stage.
The housing element on which the seal is mounted may have a rim overlying the seal to protect it when the housing elements are not assembled together, for example during transportation steps.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent on reading the following detailed description and from the appended drawings.
In these drawings:
One example of a fuse holder 1 is represented in
As represented in
The fuse 10 includes two terminals 10a, from each of which extends a pin 10b forming a male contact adapted to be electrically connected with a female type contact 3.
As represented in more detail in
The support 9 also includes guiding and fixing means 15 (
Each flange 13 includes a slot 13a. Each slot 13a is of essentially rectangular shape, open on an edge of the flange 13 oriented toward the top of the support 9. Each slot 13a is intended to receive a pin 10b of the fuse 10. Each pin 10b has an essentially rectangular cross section (i.e. a section perpendicular to the direction of insertion of the pin 10b into a contact 3, which also corresponds to the direction A of assembly of the first housing element 4 and the second housing element 5). Each pin 10b can then be snugly inserted in a respective slot 13a, as shown in
The support 9 also includes locking reinforcement means 16. These consist essentially of a tongue 16a extending longitudinally toward the exterior of the support 9 from each flange 13. The function of these tongues 16a is described in more detail later, with reference to
When the fuse 10 is correctly positioned between the lateral lugs 14, under the detents 14a and with the terminals 10a inserted in the slots 13a, the support 9 can be moved longitudinally, toward its closed position, inside a cavity 18 in the cap 4a of the first housing element 4 and leading to an opening 19. During this movement, the lugs 15a slide in diametrically opposite grooves 20 disposed longitudinally on the external face 4b of the cap 4a. Accordingly, on insertion of the support 9 into the first housing element 4, the latter is inevitably correctly oriented, so that the opening of the female contact 3, which is accommodated in the first housing element 4, is aligned with the corresponding pin 10b.
If the fuse 10 is not correctly positioned in the support 9, it projects from the external envelope which it should be inside. Its overall size is then such that it can no longer pass through the opening 19. Because of this, the support 9 cannot be moved into the closed position (that corresponding to
The second housing element 5 can then be threaded onto the support 9 and around the cap 4a, to be locked by the locking means 6. As can be seen in
As shown in
If the contacts 3 are correctly inserted in their respective housings of the first housing element 4 and the second housing element 5, the locking tongues 22 spring into a cut-out 23 in the contacts 3 provided for this purpose. Accordingly, on inserting the support 9 in the first housing element 4, and on mounting the second housing element 5 on the already constituted assembly of the first housing element 4 and the support 9, the tongues 16a can be placed behind the contacts 3, and to be more precise behind the tongues 22. If on the other hand a contact 3 is not correctly inserted in its housing, the corresponding tongue 22 blocks the passage of a tongue 16a and either the support 9 cannot go to the closed position or the second housing element 5 cannot be fully locked onto the first housing element 4. In both cases the operative is alerted to a mounting error.
As can also be seen in
It can equally be seen in
A fuse holder with a single support for a single fuse has been described above, but in accordance with variants the fuse holder in accordance with the invention may include either a single support but one that is able to accommodate a plurality of fuses or a plurality of supports each accommodating one or more fuses. All these variants may have one or more of the features defined in the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1363102 | Dec 2013 | FR | national |
This application is a national stage application under 35 U.S.C. §371 of PCT Application Number PCT/EP2014/078322 having an international filing date of Dec. 17, 2014, which designated the United States, said PCT application claiming the benefit of priority under Article 8 of the Patent Cooperation Treaty to French Patent Application No. 1363102, having a filing date of Dec. 19, 2013, the entire disclosure of each of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2014/078322 | 12/17/2014 | WO | 00 |