The present invention relates to an insertion-connected connector having a housing and having at least two electrical contact elements which each have a longitudinal axis and which are arranged in predetermined positions on an insertion side of the housing, orientated to have their respective longitudinal axes parallel to a direction of insertion of the insertion-connected connector, as defined in the preamble to claim 1.
To make an electrical connection between, on the one hand, a plurality of cable ends, which cable ends are each provided with appropriate contact elements such for example as co-axial insertion-connected connectors, pin contacts or receptacle contacts, and, on the other hand, a plurality of cable ends having appropriate complementary contact elements, such for example as co-axial plugs/couplers or receptacle contacts/pin contacts, or a plurality of complementary contact elements on the case of a piece of equipment, it has been necessary hitherto for each individual pair of contact elements to be plugged together manually as a separate operation. What is meant by the term “contact element” in the present case is any kind of insertion-connected contact having one, two, or more conductors, such for example as co-axial insertion-connected connectors in the form of co-axial plugs and co-axial sockets, and pin contacts and receptacle contacts. What is meant by “complementary contact element” or “mating contact element” is the associated insertion-connected contact in the given case in which the “contact element” can be inserted, i.e., if for example the co-axial plug is the “contact element” then the co-axial coupler is the “complementary contact element”, or if the pin contact is the “contact element” then the receptacle contact is the “complementary contact element”. What is meant by “insertion-connected connector” in the present document is a component which has two or more “contact elements”, and the “complementary insertion-connected connector” has the “complementary contact element” which corresponds to the “contact elements” of the “insertion-connected connector”. It is not essential for all the plurality of “contact elements” to be the same. Co-axial insertion-connected connectors may also be mixed with pin/receptacle contacts for example. Nor does the “pin” or “receptacle” type necessarily need to be identical for all the “contact elements” of an “insertion-connected connector”. Instead, co-axial couplers and co-axial plugs may also be mixed in an “insertion-connected connector”.
For example, where a motor vehicle roof aerial has a plurality of aerials, such as a mobile phone aerial and a GPS aerial, to connect it electrically to corresponding pieces of equipment, such for example as a mobile phone and a GPS receiver, it has been usual hitherto for cables which are provided at their free ends with appropriate contact elements to be run from the housing of the motor vehicle roof aerial. These contact elements are then connected, separately and individually, to complementary contact elements belonging to cables which run on to the pieces of equipment. However, this type of electrical connection is complicated and cost-intensive.
The object underlying the invention is to improve an insertion-connected connector of the above-mentioned type in respect of fitting and electrical contact.
This object is achieved in accordance with the invention by an insertion-connected connector of the above-mentioned type having the features characterised in claim 1. Advantageous embodiments of the invention are described in the other claims.
In an insertion-connected connector of the above-mentioned type, provision is made in accordance with the invention for each electrical contact element to be arranged in the housing to be movable in a plane perpendicular to the direction of insertion and to be connected, in an elastically resilient manner, to at least one second electrical contact element by means of at least one electrically insulating elastic resilient member, the elastic resilient member being so arranged and formed that the electrical contact elements are, except for differences due to tolerances, pre-positioned at the respective predetermined positions and can be deflected, in an elastically resilient manner, from these locations in the plane perpendicular to the direction of insertion.
This has the advantage that the contact elements are suspended in such a way as to float elastically and in this way differences due to tolerances between the positions of the electrical contact elements of the insertion-connected connector and the corresponding complementary electrical contact elements or mating electrical contact elements in a complementary insertion-connected connector in which the complementary electrical contact elements or mating electrical contact elements are rigidly arranged are automatically compensated for by elastic deflection of the electrical contact elements of the insertion-connected connector when the insertion-connected connector and the complementary insertion-connected connector are plugged together, and good electrical contact is ensured between any given electrical contact elements of an insertion-connected connector and a complementary insertion-connected connector in spite of any differences in their respective positions due to tolerances.
To provide a means of compensating for tolerances which is as flexible as possible, the electrical contact elements are arranged in the housing of the insertion-connected connector to be movable in such a way that the mobility of the electrical contact elements in the plane perpendicular to the direction of insertion encompasses tilting of the longitudinal axes of the electrical contact elements and/or a displacement thereof in translation in a parallel position.
In a preferred embodiment, each electrical contact element is in the form of a co-axial insertion-connected connector having a centre conductor and an outer conductor.
To allow signals to travel onward via the insertion-connected connector, each electrical contact element is connected to a signal conductor member which in each case connects an electrical contact element electrically to a connecting point for a cable.
Each signal conductor member is for example in the form of a co-axial line or a strip line and, as an option, may have electrical screening.
In a particularly preferred embodiment, all the signal conductor members are arranged to extend in a plane at right angles to the direction of insertion, starting from the given contact element, each signal conductor member being in the form of a rigid component and a recess being provided in the housing for each signal conductor member and being so formed that each signal conductor member can be moved, together with the associated contact element, in a plane perpendicular to the direction of insertion.
Each electrical contact element is usefully surrounded by an electrically insulating sleeve and each sleeve of an electrical contact element is usefully connected in an elastically resilient manner to a sleeve of an adjacent electrical contact element by means of a respective electrically insulating elastic resilient member, the resilient members being formed to be Q-shaped for example in a cross-sectional plane perpendicular to the direction of insertion and the sleeves and resilient members being formed to be in one piece with one another to form a resilient housing.
First latching means are formed on the housing and on each resilient member are formed second latching means which, by co-operating with the first latching means, fix the resilient members, and with them the electrical contact elements, to the housing.
In a preferred embodiment, each first latching means comprises an elastically resilient tongue which rises from the housing in the direction of insertion and which has a recess, with each second latching means comprising a latching nose which rises from the given resilient member perpendicularly to the direction of insertion and fits into the recess in the resilient tongue comprising the first latching means.
Mechanical coding which stops any unwanted incorrect insertion of the insertion-connected connector according to the invention is achieved by virtue of the fact that at least one of the tongues comprising the first latching means on the housing is of a different width from the other tongues.
To allow the insertion-connected connector to be secured in the inserted state, there rise from the housing in the direction of insertion at least two, and in particular three, latching spigots spaced apart from one another having respective latching noses which are formed to latch into a housing or insertion interface which carries contact elements complementary to the electrical contact elements of the insertion-connected connector.
The invention will be explained in detail below by reference to the drawings. In the drawings:
The first preferred embodiment of insertion-connected connector 100 according to the invention, which can be seen in schematic form in
The second preferred embodiment of insertion-connected connector 200 according to the invention, which can be seen in
As can be seen from
As is shown in particular in
The resilient housing 216, which can be seen in more detail in
The resilient members 244 which connect the sleeves 240 in an elastically resilient manner are of a substantially Q-shaped form in a cross-section perpendicular to the direction of insertion 222 and on their outside they carry second latching means 246 in the form of latching noses which fit into the recesses 232 in the tongues 230. Because of this arrangement, although the co-axial insertion-connected connectors 214 can be deflected from the desired position in an elastically resilient manner in the plane perpendicular to the direction of insertion 222, they are fixed in the direction of insertion 222.
When the insertion-connected connector 200 is being assembled, the resilient housing 216 is first slid over the co-axial insertion-connected connectors 214 so that each sleeve 240 receives a co-axial insertion-connected connector 214, as can be seen from
As can be seen from
The insertion interface is for example an arrangement of complementary co-axial insertion-connected connectors in the housing of a motor vehicle roof aerial having a plurality of aerials such for example as a mobile radio aerial and a GPS aerial. A co-axial insertion-connected connector of its own is provided for each aerial. The electrical connection between the aerial and the given terminal device, which in the present example are a mobile telephone and a GPS receiver, is made directly by inserting the insertion-connected connector 200 according to the invention in the insertion interface of the motor vehicle roof aerial. When this is done the respective co-axial insertion-connected connectors for the mobile phone aerial and the GPS aerial are plugged together simultaneously. Any additional cable connection can be dispensed with. The complementary co-axial insertion-connected connectors are each connected directly to their associated aerials. As well as an improvement in signal transmission due to the smaller number of joints along the signal path, what also results is simplified fitting, because the respective pairs of co-axial insertion-connected connectors and complementary co-axial insertion-connected connectors for the different aerials do not each have to be plugged together separately.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 013 282.0 | Mar 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP06/02575 | 3/21/2006 | WO | 00 | 9/12/2007 |