The disclosure relates to an add-on housing for plug-in connectors. Add-on housings of this kind are required, for example, in order to connect electrical lines to devices, for example switch cabinets or industrial appliances and/or machines, in a detachable manner.
Various solutions for the detachable connection of electrical lines in the form of cables to devices and associated housings are known in the prior art. For this purpose, cables with plug-in connectors are provided which are coupled to corresponding mating plug-in connectors and/or add-on housings.
However, when connecting devices such as switch cabinets and machines, different connection mechanisms to those used for connecting sensors or data transmission elements are frequently requested. Particularly in the case of data transmission elements, there are various connection mechanisms for securing a data line to a corresponding component. In particular, latching elements such as those known from commercially available LAN cables or patch cables with a cable terminal are known in the art. These are usually Ethernet cables with different insulation and shields and the plug-in devices known as RJ-45. These RJ-45 plug-in devices can usually be locked in a corresponding add-on housing using a simple, spring-loaded latching element. In order to release the connection, pressure is exerted on the latching element, for example, and a tensile force is simultaneously exerted against the plug-in direction. In industry, apart from this latching element, latching elements are primarily known which engage with the connecting element in the add-on housing during a plug-in movement of the cable and can be removed again by pulling on the connecting element against the plug-in direction. Plug-in connectors with this kinematics are known as push-pull connectors.
Furthermore, there are latching elements which are provided with a circumferential flexible locking lip, or circumferential locking plates, which are fitted onto an add-on housing, where they engage with a likewise circumferential elevation or depression. These kinds of latching elements are usually referred to as snap-collar or also snap-in locking.
The two latching elements described above incorporate certain advantages and disadvantages and are widespread, particularly in the industrial field of application.
However, the disadvantage of the prior art is, in particular, the lack of compatibility between the latching elements and the add-on housings required in each case. Since data transmission contacts which frequently resemble one another are provided with the described plug-in devices which differ from one another and have latching elements, it is desirable for different embodiments of the latching elements to be able to be fitted onto a uniform add-on housing.
The German Patent and Trademark Office has conducted a search of the following prior art in the priority application of the present application: DE 10 2019 120 868 A1, WO 2011/006154 A1 and DE 10 2013 111 321 A1.
The disclosure provides an add-on housing for electrical plug-in connectors which receives multiple latching elements, which have the same kind of plug-in connectors and which differ from one another, properly and securely.
The disclosure is based on an add-on housing for an electrical plug-in connection, which add-on housing has a housing side with at least one first fastening form and a plug-in side with at least one holding form, wherein a flange is arranged between the housing side and the plug-in side, which flange is provided for attaching the add-on housing to an appliance housing, and wherein the add-on housing has at least one through-hole along the longitudinal axis of the add-on housing, which is designed to receive an insulating body with contact elements located therein, wherein the plug-in side has at least two holding forms, at least one first holding form and at least one second holding form. By means of this embodiment it is possible to ensure that two electrical plug-in connectors, for example, with an identical insulating body and the contact elements contained therein, but differently configured latching elements, can be attached to an add-on housing. In this way, the manufacturer's production costs are lowered, since for various latching elements and latching devices, a single housing and customer benefits are similarly increased.
One embodiment is based on an add-on housing for an electrical plug-in connection, which add-on housing has at least one first holding form and at least one second holding form, wherein the at least one first holding form differs from the at least one second holding form. This embodiment allows differently configured latching elements to be used with a comparable, in particular identical, insulating body. By way of example, in this way plug-in connectors, for example of the push-pull connector kind, and plug-in connectors of the snap-in kind, can be connected to an add-on housing according to the invention. This means that two plug-in connectors which differ from one another are fitted with an identical insulating body, which plug-in connectors are brought into engagement with an insulating body in the through-hole of the add-on housing. These plug-in connectors may have different latching elements within, or along, the housing and nevertheless be received by the add-on housing according to the invention.
A particularly skillful embodiment proposes an add-on housing for an electrical plug-in connector, wherein at least one first holding form is formed to receive at least one first latching element of a first plug-in connector, and wherein at least one second holding form is formed to receive at least one second latching element of a second plug-in connector. This means that the add-on housing has a circumferential bead on the plug-in side, for example, which bead is formed to allow a snap-in plug-in connector to engage. In addition, the add-on housing has a groove for receiving a latching element, for example, wherein the latching element must be assigned to a push-pull connector, for example. Latching elements of other kinds of plug-in connectors are of course also conceivable.
A logical embodiment proposes an add-on housing for an electrical plug-in connection, wherein the position of the first holding form on the plug-in side differs from the position of the second holding form on the plug-in side along the longitudinal axis of the add-on housing.
This means that, for example, a bead for a snap-in connector does not immediately follow a groove for a latching hook, for example a push-pull connector, but an interval of, for example, half the length of a holding form such as a groove, or of a holding form such as a bead, is kept between the at least two holding forms.
A skillful embodiment proposes an add-on housing for an electrical plug-in connection, wherein the first holding form is formed on the plug-in side in such a manner that a latching element of a plug-in connector is brought into engagement as a snap closure with the first holding form of the add-on housing. The first holding form is therefore designed in particular for a snap closure, also referred to as a snap-in connector. The embodiment proposes an add-on housing for an electrical plug-in connection, wherein the first holding form is preformed on the plug-in side as an elevation and/or bead. For this purpose, a circumferential bead is usually preformed in the plug-in region of the add-on housing. Likewise, the first holding form may be configured as a circumferential, point-shaped form, for example as circumferential, (partially) spherical elevations. In this case, it is pertinent to the use of a snap closure that the snap-on collar of the snap closure must be briefly extended to a larger diameter, at least during the plug-in progress, so that it can subsequently lock behind a corresponding holding element through a reduction in diameter.
A further embodiment proposes an add-on housing for an electrical plug-in connection, wherein the second holding form is formed in such a manner that a latching element of a plug-in connector is brought into engagement with the second holding form of the add-on housing as a latching closure. The embodiment proposes an add-on housing for an electrical plug-in connection, wherein the second holding form is preformed on the plug-in side as a depression and/or groove. In this case, in particular, the latching closure should be understood to be at least one latching hook which engages with a holding form, for example, in other words a groove, in particular. In the case of a push-pull plug-in connector, this latching hook can be lifted out of the second holding form, such as a groove, by a retrieval element, or it can be lifted above a second holding form, as a result of which the connection can be released again. So-called push-pull latching elements of plug-in connectors normally use a groove in order to countersink a latching lug in the groove. This latching lug is lifted out of the groove by pulling the plug-in housing, as a result of which the plug-in connector can be removed from the add-on housing.
Finally, one embodiment envisages an add-on housing for an electrical plug-in connection, wherein the through-opening has a further form which is configured to receive at least one third latching element that differs from the first latching element and the second latching element. In this case, a form which is initially provided for the purpose of securing the plug according to the poka-yoke principle is provided, furthermore for receiving a further latching element. For this purpose, a depression for receiving a latching lug, such as in the case of current RJ-45 plug-in connectors, for example, can be incorporated and/or excluded.
The disclosure is further based on a plug-in connector system consisting of an add-on housing for an electrical plug-in connection according to the invention and a corresponding plug-in connector with latching element, wherein the add-on housing is designed optionally to receive a first plug-in connector with a first latching element, or a second plug-in connector with a second latching element. In this case, the first latching element of the first plug-in connector differs from the second latching element of the second plug-in connector. Logically, the add-on housing has a through-hole which receives an insulating body and contact elements which correspond to the insulating body and the contact elements of both plug-in connectors.
The plug-in connector system having an add-on housing according to the invention for an electrical plug-in connection is sensibly expanded, in that the add-on housing is designed to receive a third plug-in connector with a third latching element, wherein the third latching element differs from the first latching element and the second latching element. In this way, an add-on housing can be offered which, on the one hand, receives a plug-in connector with a snap collar lock, also referred to as a snap-in lock. Furthermore, plug-in connectors with latching hooks engaging on the outside of the plug-in region of the add-on housing, particularly known as push-pull locks, are also received. In addition, plug-in connectors can moreover be connected to latching hooks engaging with the add-on housing from within, in a similar manner to the locks of a commercially available RJ-45 plug-in connector known in the art.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is illustrated in the drawings and will be explained in greater detail below.
The figures contain partially simplified schematic representations. Identical reference signs are used for the same, but possibly not identical, elements. Different views of the same elements could be scaled differently.
Directional indications such as “left”, “right”, “up” and “down” are to be understood with reference to the respective figure and can vary in the individual representations with respect to the represented object.
To better illustrate this,
Even if different aspects or features of the invention are shown in combination in each case in the figures, it is clear to the person skilled in the art—unless otherwise specified—that the combinations which are shown and discussed are not the only ones that are possible. In particular, units or groups of features which correspond to one another can be exchanged for one another from different exemplary embodiments. In addition, the articles “a” and “an” as used in this application and the appended claims should generally be construed to mean “one or more” unless specified otherwise or clear from context to be directed to a singular form.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2019 131 714.2 | Nov 2019 | DE | national |
10 2020 103 896.8 | Feb 2020 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/DE2020/100979 | 11/19/2020 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2021/104568 | 6/3/2021 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20220393386 A1 | Dec 2022 | US |