Claims
- 1. A machine for fabricating twist pins each from wire formed by a plurality of helically coiled strands, each twist pin further having a plurality of bulges formed at predetermined positions along a segment of wire from which twist pin is fabricated, comprising:
a wire feed mechanism which is receptive of a source of the stranded wire, the wire feed mechanism including:
a roller which frictionally contacts the wire, and a feed motor connected to rotate the roller while the roller is in frictional contact with the wire to advance the wire; a bulge forming mechanism into which the wire feed mechanism advances the wire to establish a predetermined position at which a bulge is to be formed, the bulge forming mechanism including:
first and second controllable clamp members located at locations to contact the wire above and below the predetermined position at which the bulge is to be formed, the first and second clamp members connected for rotation in an antihelical direction relative to one another and to the wire, the first and second clamp members selectively gripping and releasing the wire when controlled, a drive motor connected to rotate the first and second clamp members in complete relative revolutions with respect to one another; a first actuator connected to control the first clamp member to grip the wire at the beginning of a bulge-forming rotational interval of the relative revolution; a second actuator connected to control the second clamp member to grip the wire at the beginning of the bulge-forming rotational interval, the first and second clamp members rotating the wire anti-helically between the first and second clamp members during the bulge-forming rotational interval to untwist the helically coiled strands until the strands deflect radially outward to form the bulge; and the first and second actuators controlling the first and second clamp members to release the grip on the wire at the end of the bulge-forming interval.
- 2. A machine as defined in claim 1 wherein:
the drive motor rotates the first and second clamp members relative to one another through a wire-advancement rotational interval which occurs sequentially with respect to the bulge-forming interval; the feed motor responds to the wire-advancement rotational interval to rotate the roller and advance the wire; and the feed motor advances a predetermined amount of the wire to establish the predetermined position where the next bulge is to be formed during the wire-advancement rotational interval.
- 3. A machine as defined in claim 2 wherein:
the drive motor continuously rotates the first and second clamp members relative to one another through the bulge-forming rotational interval without interruption of the continuous relative rotational movement.
- 4. A machine as defined in claim 2 wherein:
the bulge-forming rotational interval is greater than half of a single relative revolution of the first and second clamp members.
- 5. A machine as defined in claim 1 wherein:
one of the clamp members is stationarily connected; the other one of the clamp members is connected to a wheel which is connected for rotation relative to the stationary clamp member; and the drive motor is connected to rotate the wheel.
- 6. A machine as defined in claim 2 wherein:
one of the clamp members is stationarily connected; the other one of the clamp members is connected to a wheel which is connected for rotation relative to the stationary clamp member; the drive motor is connected to rotate the wheel; the drive motor is controllable to temporarily cease rotating the wheel during the wire-advancement rotational interval and while the wire feed mechanism is advancing the wire to the predetermined position.
- 7. A machine as defined in claim 2 wherein:
one of the clamp members is stationarily connected; the other one of the clamp members is connected to a wheel which is connected for rotation relative to the stationary clamp member; the drive motor is connected to rotate the wheel at a predetermined rotational rate during the bulge-forming rotational interval; the drive motor is controllable to temporarily reduce the rotational rate of the wheel to a lesser value from the predetermined rotational rate during the wire-advancement rotational interval while the wire feed mechanism is advancing the wire to the predetermined position.
- 8. A machine as defined in claim 1 wherein the wire feed mechanism further comprises:
a slack wire supplying assembly contacting the wire upstream in a path of the wire from the roller, the slack wire supplying assembly operatively delivering an amount of slack wire from which the roller advances wire to the bulge forming mechanism.
- 9. A machine as defined in claim 8 wherein the slack wire advancement assembly further comprises:
a second roller in addition to the roller first aforesaid, the second roller frictionally contacting the wire; and a feed motor connected to rotate the second roller and advance the slack amount of wire.
- 10. A machine as defined in claim 1 further comprising:
a wire severing device positioned downstream of the bulge forming mechanism relative to the advancement of the wire through the bulge forming mechanism, the wire severing device selectively controllable to sever the wire and release the twist pin formed in a segment of the severed wire; a pneumatic inductor assembly positioned to receive the severed twist pin from the wire severing device, the pneumatic inductor assembly creating a flow of gas sufficient to convey the twist pin after the wire severing device releases the twist pin; a delivery tube assembly connected to receive the flow of gas and the conveyed twist pin from the pneumatic inductor assembly, the delivery tube assembly including a delivery nozzle through which the flow of gas and the twist pin is conveyed; a cassette having a plurality of receptacles formed therein in predetermined positions; and a movement device supporting the cassette at a position below the delivery nozzle and operative to move the cassette to position an unoccupied receptacle below the delivery nozzle to receive a severed wire segment containing the twist pin.
- 11. A machine as defined in claim 10 wherein:
the movement device moves the cassette to position an unoccupied receptacle below the delivery nozzle after a twist pin has been received into a receptacle.
- 12. A machine as defined in claim 10 wherein:
each receptacle conducts the flow of gas through the receptacle to carry the twist pin into the receptacle.
- 13. A method of fabricating a twist pin having bulges from wire formed by a plurality of helically coiled strands, comprising the steps of:
advancing the wire to a predetermined position at which a bulge is to be formed; rotating the wire anti-helically through a continuous rotational interval relative to positions above and below the predetermined position to untwist the helically coiled strands until the strands deflect radially outward to form the bulge; severing a segment of the wire within which the bulge is formed from a remaining length of the wire to form the twist pin; and conveying the severed twist pin within a flow of gas into a receptacle immediately after severing segment containing the twist pin.
- 14. A method as defined in claim 13 further comprising the step of:
advancing the wire by frictionally contacting a roller with the wire and rotating the roller while in frictional contact with the wire.
- 15. A method as defined in claim 14 further comprising the step of:
tangentially contacting the roller with the wire.
- 16. A method as defined in claim 14 further comprising the step of:
rotating the roller in contact with the wire in a singular rotational direction.
- 17. A method as defined in claim 16 further comprising the step of:
intermittently rotating the roller in the singular rotational direction.
- 18. A method as defined in claim 13 wherein the step of rotating the wire anti-helically further comprises the steps of:
gripping the wire at the above or below positions; holding the wire stationarily at the one gripped position; and rotating the gripped wire at the other gripped position through a bulge-forming rotational interval to form the bulge.
- 19. A method as defined in claim 18 further comprising the step of:
continuously rotating the wire through the bulge-forming rotational interval without interruption of the continuous rotational movement.
- 20. A method as defined in claim 18 further comprising the step of:
establishing the bulge-forming rotational interval as a fractional portion of approximately three-fourths of a complete revolution.
- 21. A method as defined in claim 18 further comprising the step of:
establishing the bulge-forming rotational interval as a fractional portion greater than half of a single revolution.
- 22. A method as defined in claim 21 further comprising the steps of:
selectively gripping and releasing the wire at both positions with a controllable clamp member at each position; rotating the clamp members in a complete revolution relative to one another; controlling the clamp member to grip the wire during the bulgeforming rotational interval which occupies a fractional portion of the complete relative revolution; and controlling the clamp member to release the grip on the wire during a remaining rotational interval of the complete relative revolution which is not occupied by the bulge-forming rotational interval.
- 23. A method as defined in claim 22 further comprising the steps of:
releasing the grip on the wire at the one position during the remaining rotational interval and while the grip on the wire at the other position is released; and advancing the wire to another predetermined position at which a bulge is to be formed during the remaining rotational interval while the grip is released.
- 24. A method as defined in claim 18 further comprising the steps of:
releasing the both grips on the wire after forming the bulge; and advancing the wire to another predetermined position at which a bulge is to be formed well both grips are released.
- 25. A method as defined in claim 13 further comprising the step of:
creating an amount of relatively slack wire; and advancing the wire from the amount of relatively slack wire.
- 26. A method as defined in claim 25 further comprising the steps of:
using wire wound on the spool; unwinding wire from the spool to create the amount of relatively slack wire by frictionally contacting a roller with the wire and rotating the roller while in frictional contact with the wire.
- 27. A method as defined in claim 13 further comprising the step of:
confining the twist pin in the receptacle until withdrawing the twist pin from the receptacle for insertion in a via of a printed circuit board.
- 28. A method as defined in claim 13 further comprising the steps of:
forming a plurality of twist pins in the manner aforesaid; conveying each twist pin into a separate receptacle of a cassette having a plurality of receptacles; and delivering each conveyed twist pin to a different receptacle of the cassette.
- 29. A method as defined in claim 28 further comprising the steps of:
delivering each conveyed twist pin from a delivery nozzle; and moving the cassette relative to the delivery nozzle to position an unoccupied receptacle below the delivery nozzle for receipt of a twist pin.
- 30. A method of fabricating a twist pin having bulges from wire formed by a plurality of helically coiled strands, comprising the steps of:
gripping the wire at one position with a first controllable clamp member above the location where the bulge is to be formed; gripping the wire at another position with a second controllable clamp member below the location where the bulge is to be formed; rotating the first and second clamp members anti-helically with respect to one another through a continuous bulge-forming rotational interval to untwist the helically coiled strands to deflect the strands between the positions into the bulge; controlling the first and second controllable clamp members to release the wire after the relative rotation through the bulge-forming rotational interval; continuing the relative rotation of the first and second clamp members through a wire-advancement rotational interval following the bulge-forming rotational interval; and advancing the wire during the wire-advancement rotational interval.
- 31. A method as defined in claim 30 further comprising the step of:
maintaining the relative rotation of the first and second clamp members during the wire-advancement rotational interval.
- 32. A method as defined in claim 30 further comprising the step of:
temporarily ceasing the relative rotation of the first and second clamp members during the wire-advancement rotational interval while advancing the wire.
- 33. A method as defined in claim 30 further comprising the steps of:
stationarily positioning one of the clamp members; and rotating the other one of the clamp members relative to the stationary clamp member.
- 34. A method as defined in claim 33 further comprising the step of:
rotating the rotating clamp member in a single rotational direction.
- 35. A method as defined in claim 30 further comprising the step of:
continuously rotating the clamp members in complete relative revolutions with respect to one another.
- 36. A method as defined in claim 30 further comprising the step of:
occupying a complete relative revolution of relative rotation of the clamp members by the bulge-forming rotational interval and the wire-advancing rotational interval.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED INVENTIONS
[0001] This invention is related to inventions for Wire Feed Mechanism and Method Used for Fabricating Electrical Connectors, Rotational Grip Twist Machine and Method for Fabricating Bulges of Twisted Wire Electrical Connectors, and Pneumatic Inductor and Method of Electrical Connector Delivery and Organization, described in the concurrently-filed U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 190.327; 190.328; and 190.329, respectively, all of which are assigned to the assignee hereof, and all of which have at least one common inventor with the present application. The disclosures of these concurrently filed applications are incorporated herein by this reference.