Claims
- 1. The method of making an electrical connector including the steps of dividing a strip of resilient sheet metal partway along its length by slitting the strip in such manner as to form a pair of fingers extending from and joined by an unslit portion of the strip wherein the fingers have free ends and mutually opposite edges, and deforming the slit strip in such a manner as
- (a) to divide the fingers into a pair of support finger portions extending from and joined by said unslit portion of the metal strip and a pair of wire-gripping finger portions extending substantially transversely from said support finger portions, respectively, to the free ends of the fingers in such a manner that portions of said mutually opposite edges of the fingers constitute wire-gripping edges of said wire-gripping finger portions, and
- (b) to develop twists in said support finger portions in mutually opposite directions such that the wire-gripping edges of the wire-gripping finger portions bear forcibly against each other, when nothing is interposed therebetween, at a point spaced substantially from said support finger portions.
- 2. An electrical connection device including a base of insulation, an electrical connector, and a rotor, said connection device having means for constraining said rotor to turn about an upright axis,
- said electrical connector including a strip of resilient sheet metal divided by being slit partway along its length into a pair of fingers extending from and joined by an unslit portion of said strip, said fingers having free ends and mutually opposite edges, said divided strip of resilient sheet metal being deformed so as to constitute means for:
- (a) dividing said fingers, respectively, into a pair of support finger portions extending from and joined by said unslit portion of the metal strip and a pair of wire-gripping finger portions extending substantially transversely from said support finger portions to said free ends and having mutually opposite wire-gripping edges constituted of portions of the mutually opposite edges of said fingers, and
- (b) developing twists in mutually opposite directions in said support finger portions in such manner as to cause said wire-gripping edges to bear forcibly against each other at a point spaced substantially from said support finger portions when nothing is interposed therebetween,
- said strip of resilient sheet metal being secured to said base, said wire-gripping finger portions being spaced from and transverse to said axis and being disposed for gripping a wire at least approximately parallel to said axis, said rotor having a wire-driving portion operative in a wire-inserting stroke of the rotor for forcing a wire broadside from a position opposite to said free ends of said wire-gripping finger portions and at least approximately parallel to said axis to a position between said wire-gripping edges.
- 3. A dual connection device including a base of insulation, two electrical connectors of sheet metal fort making connection to two inserted wires, respectively, each of said connectors including a pair of side-by-side elongated fingers divided by bends into a pair of upstanding support finger portions and a pair of wire-gripping finger portions extending to free ends from said bends, said pairs of wire-gripping finger portions being disposed in a plane, and a rotor of insulation pivoted to said base and adapted to turn about an axis perpendicular to said plane, said rotor having driving portions for forcing respective wires from initial positions opposite said free ends to positions gripped by said pairs of wire-gripping finger portions, respectively.
- 4. A dual connection device as in claim 3, wherein a gap is provide in said rotor between said driving portions for developing an extended surface creep distance between said driving portions of the rotor.
- 5. A dual connection device as in claim 3, wherein each of said connectors has a separate wiring terminal under the base.
- 6. A connector as in claim 3, wherein said rotor is incompletely divided by a gap into two rotor portions having a resilient interconnection, and wherein said base of insulation has rigidly spaced-apart detents cooperable with detent formations of said two resiliently connected portions of said rotor for restraining said rotor releasably either in position to receive inserted wires opposite to said free ends, or in position gripped by said pairs of wire-gripping finger portions.
- 7. An electrical connection device including a support of insulation, an electrical connector, and a rotor, and means for constraining said rotor to turn about an axis upright with respect to said support, said electrical connector comprising an elongated metal strip divided partway along its length to form a pair of fingers extending side-by-side from an undivided portion of the strip to free ends, said fingers being divided by transverse bends to constitute a pair of side-by-side upright support finger portions extending from said undivided portion of the strip to said bends and a pair of wire-gripping finger portions transverse to and offset from said axis and extending from said bends to said free ends of the fingers, respectively, said wire-gripping finger portions having wire-gripping edges and being related to the axis of the rotor and to each other for admitting a wire disposed in an initial position at least approximately parallel to and offset from said axis and opposite to said free ends and for the wire to be driven by the rotor into an inserted position gripped by and between said wire-gripping finger portions, said rotor having a wire-driving portion operable in a wire-insertion stroke for forcing a wire from said initial position to said inserted position.
- 8. An electrical connector as in claim 7, wherein said metal strip is permanently deformed so as to impose mutually opposite twists on said support finger portions so as to cause the wire-gripping finger portions to be biased forcibly towards each other at a point of contact remote from said bends.
- 9. An electrical connection device as in claim 7, wherein said means for constraining said rotor to turn about said axis includes mutually cooperating bearing surfaces of said rotor and said insulating means.
- 10. An electrical connection device as in claim 7, wherein a deformation is formed in or close to said undivided area where ends of said support portions adjoin said undivided portion, said deformation acting to twist said support ends in such a manner as to cause the wire-gripping finger portions to be biased forcefully toward each other at a point remote from said bends and to cause said wire-gripping finger portions to be spaced apart elsewhere.
- 11. An electrical connection device as in claim 7, wherein said support of insulation further includes means for restraining said wire-gripping finger portions against being deflected by a wire that is gripped while being moved, both during said wire-inserting stroke and during a reverse wire-removal stroke of the rotor.
- 12. An electrical connection device as in claim 7, wherein said wire-gripping finger portions and their free ends incorporate means for displacing insulation locally from the inner conductor of an insulation-sheathed wire and for establishing contact of the wire-gripping edges with the locally bared inner conductor when the wire is driven by said rotor against said free ends and between said wire-gripping finger portions.
- 13. An electrical connector as in claim 7, wherein said support finger portions embody mutually opposite twists such as to cause said wire-gripping finger portions to bear forcibly against each other at a point of contact spaced substantially from said bends, when nothing is interposed between the wire-gripping finger portions.
- 14. An electrical connection device as in claim 7, wherein portions of said support of insulation provide means for blocking said wire-gripping finger portions against being displaced with a wire that is being driven by said rotor in its wire-inserting stroke.
- 15. An electrical connection device as in claim 14, for making electrical connection to a wire which has a sheath of insulation on a center conductor, wherein said connector is formed so as to cause said free ends of said fingers to penetrate said insulating sheath of said wire and so as to bare portions of said center conductor of the wire for engagement by said wire-gripping edges when said rotor is being operated in said wire-inserting stroke.
- 16. An electrical connection device as in claim 14, wherein said free ends of said wire-gripping finger portions are so shaped and so related to each other that, when a wire having insulation covering and an inner conductor is carried by said driving portion of the rotor in its wire-inserting stroke against said free ends and between said wire-gripping finger portions, the inner conductor is bared of insulation locally for engagement with said wire-gripping edges.
- 17. An electrical connection device as in claim 7, wherein said rotor is formed of insulation and has a hole in its axial end for exposing an area of said connector for engagement by a test probe.
- 18. A connection panel wherein multiple electrical connection devices as in claim 17 are unified on a common base so that said exposed area of the connectors of said connection devices form a pattern of contacts engageable by a pattern of test contacts of a test block.
- 19. An electrical connection device as in claim 13, wherein said metal strip is divided along part of its length to have two elongated contact portions each of which has an undivided portion and a pair of elongated fingers, each pair of fingers of said two elongated contact portions of the strip replicating the fingers as set forth in claim 13, one of said pairs of fingers constituting the pair of fingers of claim 13 and the other of said pairs of fingers constituting a second pair of such fingers, the free ends of the fingers of each pair being spaced apart arcuately about said axis from the free ends of the other pair of fingers and the wire-gripping finger portions of both pairs of fingers extending in the same rotational direction from the free ends of their respective pairs of fingers.
- 20. An electrical connection device including a base of insulation, an electrical connector, and a rotor, and means constraining the rotor to turn about an axis-upright relative to said base, said electrical connector comprising a metal strip secured to said base and being longitudinally divided to include an elongated pivot for said rotor upright relative to said base and, at opposite sides of said pivot, first and second elongated connector portions, each of said connector portions being longitudinally divided along at least part of the length thereof, so as to form first and second pairs of fingers having respective pairs of wire-gripping finger portions, the wire-gripping finger portions of each of said connector portions being spaced from the axis of said elongated pivot and disposed transverse to said axis, said wire-gripping finger portions of each of said connector portions having mutually opposite edges disposed for gripping an upright wire therebetween and end formations that form a recess whose edges converge toward said mutually opposite edges, and said rotor having wire-driving portions operative in a wire-inserting angular stroke of the rotor for forcing two upright wires broad-side against the respective end formations of the wire-gripping finger portions of said first and second connector portions and for forcing the upright wires between said mutually opposite wire-gripping edges of the respective first and second pairs of wire-gripping finger portions.
- 21. An electrical connection device as in claim 20, wherein the rotor has a wire-removing portion relative to only one of said pairs of wire-gripping finger portions, said wire-removing portion constituting means, operative in the wire-removing stroke of the rotor, for withdrawing one wire from one of said pairs of wire-gripping finger portions while, despite operation of the rotor in a wire-removing stroke, one of a pair of previously inserted wires remains gripped by one of said pairs of wire-gripping finger portions.
- 22. A connection panel wherein multiple electrical connection devices in accordance with claim 20 are carried by said base, the rotors being apertured to expose the respective pivots of the connectors thereof for enabling test contact to be made to each electrical connector.
- 23. An electrical connector comprising an elongated resilient sheet metal strip slit partway along its length to form a first pair of elongated fingers having mutually opposite cut edges and extending to free ends and having respective support ends extending from and joined by an unslit portion of the metal strip, said fingers being divided by at least approximately transverse bends into a pair of side-by-side support finger portions extending between said support ends of the fingers and said bends, respectively, and a pair of side-by-side wire-gripping finger portions extending substantially transverse to said support finger portions from said bends to said free ends, respectively, said wire-gripping finger portions having mutually opposite elongated wire-gripping cut edges constituted of portions of the mutually opposite cut edges of the fingers, said support finger portions embodying mutually opposite sustained twists related to each other so as to cause the wire-gripping finger portions to bear with substantial force against each other at a point spaced substantially from said bends, when there is nothing interposed between the wire-gripping finger portions, and to cause the fingers to be spaced apart elsewhere.
- 24. An electrical connector as in claim 23, wherein said free ends of the fingers, also being the free ends of the wire-gripping finger portions, have edges that converge toward said mutually opposite cut edges, the stiffness of said fingers and the bearing force of the fingers against each other being related in such a manner that, when wire having a central conductor and a sheath of insulation is forced broadside at said converging edges and between said wire-gripping finger portions, the insulation is displaced locally and the central conductor is bared for engagement by said wire-gripping finger portions.
- 25. An electrical connection device including an electrical connector and a driver for forcing a wire into assembly with said connector, and means for maintaining said driver assembled to said electrical connector,
- said electrical connector including a strip of resilient sheet metal divided by being slit partway along its length into a pair of fingers extending from and joined by an unslit portion of said strip, said fingers having free ends and mutually opposite cut edges, said fingers having bends that divide the fingers into a pair of support finger portions extending to said bends from said unslit portion of the metal strip and a pair of mutually opposite wire-gripping finger portions extending substantially transversely from said support finger portions to said free ends and having mutually opposite wire-gripping edges constituted of portions of the mutually opposite cut edges of said fingers, and said support finger portions embodying twists in mutually opposite directions such as to cause said wire-gripping finger portions to bear forcibly against each other at a point spaced substantially from said support finger portions when nothing is interposed between the wire-gripping finger portions and such twists causing the wire-gripping finger portions to be spaced apart elsewhere,
- and said driver having means for driving a wire broadside from a position opposite to the free ends of the wire-gripping finger portions to an inserted position between and gripped by said wire-gripping finger portions.
- 26. An electrical connection device as in claim 25, wherein said driver is a rotor mounted for operation about an imaginary axis and having a wire-driving portion offset from said axis and wherein said wire-gripping finger portions and said free ends are correspondingly offset from said axis, arranged so that a wire, when disposed at said free ends, may be driven by said wire-driving portion broadside between said wire-gripping edges.
- 27. An electrical connection device as in claim 20, wherein each of said connector portions has a pair of side-by-side upright support finger portions extending to a respective pair of said wire-gripping finger portions.
- 28. An electrical connection device as in claim 27, wherein said base of insulation further includes means for restraining respective pairs of said wire-gripping finger portions against being moved in the wire-insertion direction during said wire-inserting stroke of the rotor.
- 29. An electrical connector comprising an elongated resilient sheet metal strip slit partway along its length in such a manner as to form a first pair of side-by-side elongated fingers having mutually opposite cut edges, said fingers extending to free ends and extending from and joined by an undivided area of the metal strip, said fingers being divided by at least approximately transverse bends into a pair of support finger portions extending between said undivided area of the strip and said bends, respectively, and a first pair of side-by-side wire-gripping finger portions extending substantially transverse to said support finger portions from said bends to said free ends of the fingers, respectively.
- 30. An electrical connector as in claim 23, further including a second electrical connector replicating that of claim 23, said free ends of the pairs of wire-gripping finger portions of said first and second connectors being disposed diametrically opposite each other relative to an imaginary center line, and a rotor whose axis extends along the center line, the rotor having a pair of wire-driving portions, the pairs of wire-gripping finger portions of said electrical connectors being related to each other and to said rotor so that driving the rotor and its wire-driving portions in a wire-insertion stroke is operative to force two wires broadside from initial positions opposite to the ends of the pairs of wire-gripping finger portions, respectively, into positions gripped by and between the pairs of wire-gripping finger portions of the first and second electrical connectors, respectively.
- 31. The method of making an electrical connector including the steps of slitting a strip of resilient sheet metal partway along its length so as to leave a portion of the strip unslit and so as to form a pair of fingers having free ends, the fingers extending from and being joined by said unslit portion of the strip and having mutually opposite cut edges; forming bends in said fingers to provide a pair of support finger portions extending to said bends from said unslit portion of the strip and to provide a pair of mutually opposite wire-gripping finger portions extending substantially transversely from said support finger portions to said free ends, and having mutually opposite wire-gripping edges, and said method including the step of imposing mutually opposite twists in said support finger portions in such a manner as to cause the wire-gripping finger portions to bear with substantial force against each other at a point spaced substantially from said bends when-nothing is interposed between the finger portions and to cause the mutually opposite edges of said wire-gripping finger portions to be spaced apart elsewhere.
- 32. An electrical connector including a strip of resilient sheet metal divided by being slit partway along its length into a pair of fingers extending from and joined by an unslit portion of said strip, said fingers having free ends and mutually opposite cut edges, said fingers having bends that divide the fingers into a pair of side by side support finger portions extending to said bends from said unslit portion of the metal strip and a pair of mutually opposite wire-gripping finger portions extending substantially transversely from said support finger portions to said free ends and having mutually opposite wire-gripping edges constituted of portions of the mutually opposite cut edges of said fingers, and each of said support finger portions embodying sustained twists in mutually opposite directions such as to cause said wire-gripping finger portions to bear forcibly against each other at a point spaced substantially from said support finger portions when nothing is interposed between the wire-gripping edges, and to cause the wire-gripping finger portions to be spaced apart elsewhere.
- 33. The method of making an electrical connector, including the steps of slitting an elongated resilient sheet metal strip partway along its length in such a manner as to form a pair of side-by-side elongated fingers having mutually opposite cut edges and said fingers extending to free ends from and joined by an undivided area of the strip, bending the fingers so as to form a pair of side-by-side support finger portions extending to said bends from said undivided area of the strip and a pair of side-by-side wire-gripping finger portions extending at least approximately transverse to said support finger portions from said bends to said free ends, respectively, said method including the step of imposing mutually opposite sustained twists in the support finger portions, the twists being related to cause the wire-gripping finger portions to bear forcibly against each other at a point spaced substantially from the bends when there is nothing between the wire-gripping finger portions, such twists causing the fingers to be separated elsewhere.
- 34. An electrical connection device for making connections to multiple inserted wires, said device including insulation means, a rotor, means for constraining said rotor to turn about an axis, and multiple contacts supported by said insulating means for making connection separately to multiple wires, said rotor having wire-insertion driving means effective when said rotor is turned in a forward stroke for driving multiple wires from respective starting positions opposite said contacts to respective connected positions engaged by said contacts, said rotor including wire-disconnecting means operative in a reverse stroke of the rotor for driving fewer than all of said multiple wires out of engagement with their respective contacts.
Parent Case Info
This is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 08/029,439 filed Mar. 3, 1993.
The present invention relates mainly to insulation-displacement connectors ("IDC's") and, while it will be recognized that certain aspects of the invention are more generally applicable, the following specification is addressed to IDC's and to panels of such connectors.
US Referenced Citations (7)
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
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29439 |
Mar 1993 |
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