The present invention relates to a pin for the soldering-free, electric connection with a printed circuit board, a pressing-in tool for the insertion of at least one such pin into a printed circuit board, and a method for manufacturing a soldering-free, electric connection of a pin with a printed circuit board using this pressing-in tool.
Pins of this type are used, e.g., in large numbers in plug connector strips for electronic control units, which are used in motor vehicles; the pins were either soldered or pressed into the related printed circuit board. To create a soldering-free, electric connection with a metallized hole in the printed circuit board when the pins are pressed in, the pins include a special elastic press-in zone, which is deformed plastically and elastically when it is pressed into the hole in the printed circuit board and adapts to the diameter of the hole.
The dimensional stability of the pins - which are either wire-drawn or punched out of a flat strip, due to the tip geometry on the insertion side - is limited. Installation aids have therefore been used for insertion, which are placed in position as a separate part when plug connector strips are assembled, and which remain in the unit after the plug connector strip is assembled. In addition, there are special designs of plug connector strips with straight or fully embedded, right-angled pins, with which a plastic housing formed directly on the plug connector strips via injection moulding is always used. Since plug connector strips include up to approximately 100 pins, there is a risk that, since the elastic regions of the exposed pin shafts between the insulating body of the plug connector strip and the contact point in the printed circuit board are short, a tight mechanical coupling will occur which, due to the bimetal effect of the different thermal expansion coefficients, results in a high mechanical load on the pressed-in contact points. To eliminate this disadvantage, complex measures have been required, which increase the fabrication cost and effort and limit the amount of freedom available to design the plug connector strip.
Publication U.S. Pat. No. 6,106,308 A makes known a pin of the type mentioned initially, which is composed of a punched, twice-right-angled element, which includes a right-angled, open socket connector in the region of a plug connector and, in the application region, it includes a shoulder which extends out of the punching plane in the shape of an S. Although the multiple bends in the connection section of the pin in the punching plane improve the stiffness in the punching plane, the stiffness perpendicular thereto is still inadequate. For this reason, the sacrificed installation aids mentioned previously—the disadvantages of which were described above—are also required in this case.
The present invention is based on the object of providing a pin, a pressing-in tool, and a method of the type mentioned initially, which make it possible to manufacture plug connector strips with different configurations without sacrificing installation aids, and with a high level of production quality.
According to the present invention, this object is attained using a pin with the features named in claim 1. Further configurations of this pin are described in claims 2 through 5.
This object is also attained by using a pressing-in tool for inserting at least one pin as recited in claim 6, and by using a method for creating a soldering-free, electric connection of a pin to a printed circuit board as recited in claim 8.
A preferred further embodiment of the pressing-in tool is described in claim 7.
Due to the inventive configuration of the pin, the pressing-in tool, and the method, plug connector strips can be advantageously manufactured with improved production quality. The large elastic regions in the connection section of the pins result in a mechanical decoupling between an insulating body and the printed circuit board, with the result that large plug connector strips with more than ten pins can also be realized without limitations. The design can be realized with a right-angled plug connector strip just as flexibly as when the soldering technique is used and, by using the pressing-in technique, the “taboo” zones are advantageously reduced as compared with the known selective soldering method.
Advantageously, the regions that do not contain the sacrificed installation aids compensate for different thermal expansion coefficients resulting from the mechanical decoupling between the insulating body and/or plug connector strip and the printed circuit board, and for the motions of the plug connector strips relative to the plug connector strips.
The inventive pressing-in tool, which is provided for inserting and pressing in a pin, and, when the pins are arranged in groups, for inserting and pressing in groups of pins, advantageously guides the right-angled pins during installation without the need for additional installation aids which are sacrificed, such as pull-through plates.
The inventive pins can be manufactured extraordinarily easily out of a single punched part after a single turn around an axis in the punched plane without any further deformation of the securing section and the bearing profile before they are pressed in. By arranging such pins in several groups, a high amount of flexibility in the manufacture of plug connector strips can be advantageously attained, and reduced component assembly is also advantageously possible without limitations.
It is also favorable that, with the pins, the pressing-in tool, and the method, an automated, monitored assembly of plug connector strips is made possible in a cost-effective manner and with a high level of process reliability.
The present invention is explained below with reference to the attached drawing.
A perspective view of a right-angled pin 10 is shown in
Inventive pin 10 is composed of a right-angled, punched sheet profile and includes a contact pin section 11, a first securing section 12 for securing pin 10 in a not-shown plug connector or plug connector strip, a connection section 13, which is angled by preferably 900 around an axis which lies in the punching plane and extends to a bearing profile 14, and a second securing section 15 with a pressing-in region 16 with deformable legs 16′, which are at least elastically and, optionally, plastically deformable for pressing into a hole in a printed circuit board (not shown in
Pin 10, which is composed of a punched sheet profile, has a bearing and securing profile 17 in its first securing section 12, which extends toward both sides of pin 10 in the punching plane. After pin 10 is punched and before connection section 13 is bent, bearing profile 14 is also located in the punching plane and transitions—on both sides of pin 10, via a conical transition section 22—into an expanded section 18, which extends in a stepped manner on both sides into a wider bearing section 19. As described in greater detail below, bearing section 19 is provided for placement of a pressing-in tool, which is removed after pin 10 is pressed in.
As an example,
A portion of a row of pins with pressing-in tool 24 placed on top is shown schematically in
Pressing-in tool 24 is composed of a dimensionally stable guiding and reinforcing body 23 which can be placed on particular pin 10. As shown in
As shown in
To remove press-in tool 24, it is lifted upward far enough that the pin shafts and/or bearing profile 14 of pins 10 are exposed, then the press-in tool is removed upwardly out of the picture plane of
Press-in tool 24 is dimensionally stable and can also be provided with a matrix of integrally formed pin receptacles 28, which are positioned in several planes, one behind the other, and which are offset. Dimensionally stable guiding and reinforcing body 23, with bearing profile 31, ensures that pin 10 is guided and reinforced reliably when it is pressed in.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2004 020 422.5 | Apr 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP05/51869 | 4/26/2005 | WO | 6/12/2007 |