This is a National Stage Application of International Patent Application No. PCT/DE2010/000769, with an international filing date of Jul. 1, 2010, which is based on German Patent Application No. 20 2009 004 984.1, filed Jul. 3, 2009 and on German Patent Application No. 20 2009 005 059.9 filed Jul. 24, 2009.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a motor vehicle lock comprising: mechanical locking and/or latching elements, and electrical, electromotive, and/or electronic components interacting therewith, which components are attached to a part of the housing of the motor vehicle lock, wherein an electric line attached to the housing part leads to at least one of the electrical, electromotive, and/or electronic components.
2. Brief Description of the Related Art
Motor vehicle locks having these characteristics are known from DE 10 2006 017 830 A1 and DE 20 2005 015 588 U1. These publications describe component carriers that are integrated into parts of the housing of the motor vehicle lock, that are provided with conducting path assemblies and that are equipped with electrical, electronic, and/or electromotive structural elements or components. Examples of such components are connectors, micro switches, sensors, motors, etc., which are used in door lock units of a motor vehicle. Electrical connections are provided by conducting path assemblies essentially consisting of multi-strand conducting paths, which are encapsulated to form a module made of plastic and are in this way embedded into parts of the lock housing. For the attachment of electrical, electronic, and electromotive components, the module can be equipped with separate mountings formed during injection molding of the module. The conducting path assemblies that are integrated into parts of the motor vehicle lock provide relatively stiff or rigid component carriers that ensure safe positioning of the components relative to the motor vehicle lock as well as securing the electrical connection.
Although the conducting paths integrated into the housing lead to a reliable electrical connection, the manufacturing costs associated with the production of the conducting paths are no longer justifiable when long distances to remotely disposed electrical, electromotive, or electronic components are to be bridged. An extension of the component carriers, including the conducting paths to such remotely disposed regions, can lead to such high manufacturing costs during mass production that they are no longer acceptable.
The aim of the invention is, therefore, to provide a technologically simple and inexpensive installation of electrical connections that span longer distances within a motor vehicle lock.
As a solution, provided is a motor vehicle lock with the above-described features, an electric line comprising a flexible single-core or multi-core cable, which runs through a cable conduit disposed in a part of the housing, wherein the cable conduit comprises permanently plastically-deformed material at least on one side of the cable path, which due to its deformation immobilizes the cable in the cable conduit.
Such an electrical connection is both technologically simple and inexpensive in a motor vehicle lock, especially when larger distances are to be spanned within the motor vehicle lock. The electrical connection may be either a power connection, e.g., to provide power to an electric motor for locking and unlocking the motor vehicle lock, or a signal connection, or a data control connection, e.g., to sensors, electronic controllers, or micro switches of the motor vehicle lock. Providing an operative width of the cable conduit at the site of the deformation that is smaller compared to the rest of the cable conduit, and particularly smaller than the diameter of the cable, ensures a sufficiently secure fixing of the electrical cable along the cable path without the risk that the cable can fall out of the cable conduit, e.g., as a result of vibrations of the door lock.
In a preferred embodiment, the cable path is bounded at one side by a wall of the cable conduit that is preferably sunk into a part of the housing and at the other side by pins that are deformed. The pins are formed at the bottom of the cable conduit and extend perpendicular to the longitudinal direction of the cable.
In a class of this embodiment, the pins are longitudinally compressed and clamp the cable against a wall of the cable conduit.
In another class of this embodiment, the pins are longitudinally compressed only along the length of their head regions. This results in the enlargement of the diameter of the pins in the head regions, which is coupled with a reduction of the operative width of the cable conduit, i.e., the length of the aperture of the cable conduit toward the exterior. In this class of this embodiment, the cable is also prevented from escaping the cable conduit and from leaving the established cable path.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the front surface of the pins coincides with the external surface of the part of the housing surrounding the cable conduit through which the cable passes.
According to a further embodiment of the invention, one cable path runs on one side of the pins and another cable path runs on another side of the pins. The pins can be either of circular cross-sections, or they have elongated cross-sections stretching parallel to the cable path.
Further advantages and embodiments of the invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments which are shown in the drawings, in which:
a shows a cross-section of the cable conduit with an electric cable placed therein, but before the cable is fixed;
b shows the cable conduit of
a shows a cross-section of an alternative cable conduit with an electric cable placed therein, but before the cable is fixed;
b shows the cable conduit of
A relatively long arm 3a extends from the first component carrier 3. To the end portion of the arm 3a is attached an electromotive component 6. This arrangement allows for the electromotive component 6 to be relatively far removed from the other components of the device. In this embodiment, the electromotive component 6 is an electric motor.
The lower portion of
To supply power to the electric motor 6 disposed at the end of the arm 3a, an electric line comprising two electric cables 8 extends along the arm 3a to the contact terminals of the electric motor 6. Because of the length of the arm 3a and, hence, the distance of the electrical connection to be bridged, this electric line is not designed as a conducting path and is not a printed or embedded part of the component carrier but instead is run as a conventional, single-strand or multi-strand cable 8. The guiding and fixing of the cable 8 is explained below with reference to further drawings.
The cable conduit 15, which is open to the outside, primarily has a rectangular cross section, comprising a base 17 and two walls of 16. On the base 17 of the cable carrier are integrally formed pins 20 in the shape of studs. In this exemplary embodiment, the pins or rods 20 are disposed in the middle of the cable conduit 15 and are arranged in a row, one next to the other, such that the row follows any bends of the cable conduit 15, as shown in
In the embodiment shown in
Dashed lines in
a shows a cross section through the housing part 10 in the vicinity of the cable conduit 15, wherein an electric cable 8 comprising an electric wire and electric insulation is disposed in the cable conduit 15 along the cable path 19a. The other cable path 19b can also be fitted with a single-strand or multi-strand electric cable, but is shown as empty in this figure.
As shown in
In order to fix the cable 8, the respective cable conduit is narrowed in sections. This is done by introducing a deformation V of the pin 20 along its entire length, resulting in a widening of the pin, whereby the cable 8 is clamped between the widened pin 20 and the non-deformed wall 16 of the cable conduit. This situation is shown in
The pin 20 is compressed in the direction of its longitudinal axis until its front surface 21 is even with the plane of the outer surface 22 of the housing portion 10 that surrounds the cable conduit 15. The compression is therefore preferably imparted with a tool having an enlarged tool surface which contacts both with the front surface 21 as well as, in the same plane, the outer surface 22. As soon as the tool surface abuts the outer surface 22, the compression process is completed. To support the permanent plastic deformation of the plastic material of the pin 20, the distortion is preferably performed under simultaneous heating of the pin such that the pin retains its expanded form after it is cooled.
In the alternative embodiment shown in
As shown in the embodiment of
As shown in the embodiment shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20 2009 004 984 U | Jul 2009 | DE | national |
20 2009 005 059 U | Jul 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/DE2010/000769 | 7/1/2010 | WO | 00 | 1/2/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/000363 | 1/6/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4297565 | Parr | Oct 1981 | A |
6268566 | Takiguchi et al. | Jul 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
20 2006 011 567 | Nov 2006 | DE |
10 2006 017 830 | Oct 2007 | DE |
1 039 581 | Sep 2000 | EP |
2 806 249 | Sep 2001 | FR |
2 275 578 | Aug 1994 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120111073 A1 | May 2012 | US |