The present invention relates to a plug connector arrangement with secondary locking in accordance with the preamble of patent claim 1. Such a plug connector arrangement is known from DE 698 18 788 B1. Such plug connector arrangements are used, in particular, in automobile manufacture, for example, in cable wiring of an injector nozzle.
Such plug connector arrangements are used in the engine compartment of a motor vehicle, where they are exposed to raw external influences. These influences include temperature differences, vibrations, moisture, and dirt. This necessitates design measures so as to keep a plug connection functioning reliably. Included here is preventing the contact from coming loose due to vibrations and/or temperature fluctuations and preventing moisture and dirt from penetrating into the plug connector arrangement, so as to prevent corrosion of contacts.
Known from DE 698 18 788 is a plug connector arrangement in which a plug is plugged onto a cylindrical part at an angle of 90° to the cylinder axis. The cylindrical part involves an injector nozzle for diesel engines. The plug has locking arms that are made of bent steel wire and have catch lugs that engage behind shoulders that are formed on the cylindrical jacket of the injection nozzle. The catch arm exercises a very tight holding effect, because the catch arms, formed from steel wire, can have a high spring force. The loosening of the plug connection is accomplished relatively simply, because, in the part of the plug connected to the cables, the steel wires are pressed together, that is, are pressed toward each other, so that a “see-saw effect” ensues due to an underpropping of the wire catch arms in their middle region, so that the catch lugs are released from the locked position.
A drawback of this plug connector arrangement is that it is not possible to exclude an incomplete locking of the catch arms and also an unintentional release of the plug connection is possible, for example, by a backward pull on the connector cable.
The invention is based on the problem of presenting a plug connector arrangement for which an incomplete plugging together is ruled out and an unintended release of the plug connection is made impossible.
This problem is solved in accordance with the claim.
Features of preferred embodiments of the present invention are characterized in the subclaims.
The invention proceeds from the basic idea of creating a design in which it is impossible for an incompletely performed plugging operation to bring the secondary locking into its final position and for which it is visible, through the persistence of the secondary locking in its pre-catch position, that the plug and its own plug are plugged together.
The plug arrangement in accordance with the invention is suitable, in particular, for the cable wiring of an essentially cylindrical diesel injection nozzle, onto the axis of which the plug is plugged at an angle of 90°.
The invention will be described in detail below on the basis of the description of an embodiment example with reference to the drawing. Shown therein are:
At the cable-side end of the plug 1, the secondary locking 3 and the housing 23 have handling surfaces 27 and 28, on which the user presses when the plug 1 is plugged into the plug region of the mating plug 4 so as to, first of all, lock the plug 1 in the mating plug 4 and, subsequently, bring the secondary locking 3 into its final catch position.
In its rear part, the plug housing 23 further has opposite-lying indentations 29, which extend into indentations 30 in the secondary locking 3 and which make freely accessible the rear end of the first catch arms 2 in the form of steel wire clips.
When the plug connection is released, the secondary locking 3 is first moved into its pre-catch position by pulling on the handhold 28. Once this has happened. the recesses 29 and 30 align, so that, now, the wire clip of the first catch arms 2 can be pressed together with two fingers. Owing to the fact that the wire clip lies on the bottom of the grooves 24, there results a “see-saw effect”, so that the front part of the wire clip with the catch lugs 5 is raised out of the grooves 24. The engagement of the catch lugs behind the shoulders 6 of the mating plug 4 is thereby released and the plug 1 can be withdrawn.
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The release of the plug connection begins with the pulling of the secondary locking 3 out of its final catch position into its pre-catch position. The depressions 29 and 30 are then flushly aligned and the wire clip of the first catch arms 2 is accessible for access with two fingers.
The wire clip is then pressed, so that the catch lugs 5 are released from their locking behind the shoulder 6 and are positioned above the ramp 12. A pulling of the plug 1 out of the mating plug 4 can now ensue.
The above-described example of an embodiment of the invention claimed in the claims is not to be understood as limiting, but serves merely for purposes of illustration. Thus, for example, the shape of the ramps 12 is not necessarily curved, as for the cylindrical jacket surface of an injection nozzle, but rather can have other suitable shapes, such as, for example, that of a linear ramp. The first catch arm need not involve a wire clip; also conceivable is the use of plastic catch arms. The form of the plug housing in the embodiment example shown was chosen from practical considerations, because it has advantages in injection molding. Any other useful form is conceivable, whereby, customer-specific wishes, which ensue from a specific form of a mating plug, can be taken into consideration without anything further.
For plugging in, corresponding to a first conventional procedure, the user first presses on the handling surface 27 in order to lock the plug 1 in the mating plug 4 and subsequently presses on the handling surface 28 in order to bring the secondary locking 3 into its final catch position. However, a further advantage of the invention consists in the fact that it is also possible to accomplish the plugging with one motion in that it is sufficient to press on the handling surface 28 in order to shift the secondary locking 3, first together with the locked-together housing 23, until the latter locks in the fully plugged-in state, and subsequently alone to the final catch position.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2004 055 297 | Nov 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2005/012242 | 11/15/2005 | WO | 00 | 1/7/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/053717 | 5/26/2006 | WO | A |
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