The invention relates to a plug guide for connecting a plug on a first circuit board to a mating connector or a plug receiving element on a second circuit board.
Such a connection of two circuit board connectors is necessary, for example, in the case of a digital tachograph where the circuit board for the display must be connected to the system circuit board of the tachograph.
Since, as a rule, the plug is provided on the rear of the display circuit board and the system circuit board is accommodated in a housing, the plug in process cannot be visually checked. The circuit board plug connections used are in most cases plugs or connector strips or plug receiving elements with a large number of pins. It must, therefore, be ensured that the plug is not plugged in offset by one or more plug in positions, resulting in wrong electrical polarization. This is of the greatest significance particularly in the case of plug connections with a large number of pins since misplugging with an offset by one row of pins upwards, downward or to the side is practically unrecognizable visually from the outside and must be corrected again with effort only when the entire device is electrically connected.
The invention is, therefore, based on the object of providing a plug guide for the abovementioned purpose, which always ensures a correct plug in process.
The object is achieved by the fact that the plug guide surrounds the plug at least in a u-shaped manner and can be secured in relation to the plug.
The fact that the plug is surrounded by the plug guide in at least a u-shaped manner establishes a type of coding with respect to the mating connector so that any offset to the side or to the top or bottom is impossible.
Securing the plug guide relative to the connector prevents loss so that, during the plugin process, the plug guide is not lost accidentally and unnoticed and misplugging occurs.
The plug guide according to the invention thus makes it possible to ensure a correct plugging process even without a visual check.
In the plug guide according to the invention, the guiding is advantageously achieved by the external geometry and also by the internal geometry. The inside geometry of the plug guide matches the mating connector in such a manner that it can be plugged into the plug guide with only very little play. To make the plugging process as simple as possible, the inside geometry is preferably provided with generous lead-in bevels or chamfers at the edges at the plugin end.
To provide for easy plugging-in also with respect to the guide achieved by the outside geometry, the top and bottom edge at the plugging end is preferably also provided with generous lead-in bevels.
According to a preferred embodiment, the plug guide is bindingly connected to the plug or to the circuit board of the plug, respectively.
An embodiment provides that, for this purpose, vertical metal strips stand away from the circuit board, into which the plug guide is pushed on with an L-shaped hook arranged at the top. A further development provides that, at the top of the plug guide, noses are molded on which can lock into corresponding recesses on further metal lugs standing away vertically. As a rule, the metal strips are present in any case since they are used for securing the display on the circuit board.
Thus, the cross-sectionally u-shaped plug guide can be
The position of the plug guide is thus unambiguously established so that the risk of mispluggings during the plugging process is eliminated.
According to a preferred embodiment, the metal lugs standing away from the display circuit board have through holes which are aligned with further through holes in the plug guide and are used for screwing the display circuit board to the plug guide, the system circuit board and possibly a housing surrounding the system circuit board.
The screwing together has the advantage that, when a force is acting on the display circuit board, the forces are not absorbed via the plug connection but via the screw connection. A transmission of force via the plug connection would have the disadvantage that the contacts become fatigued with time and thus a high endurance strength of the plug connection would not be guaranteed.
Further advantages of the invention are specified in the subclaims and in the subsequent description of the figures.
The invention will now be explained in greater detail with reference to an exemplary embodiment shown in the drawings, in which:
On the system circuit board 4, a corresponding mating connector 4 is provided into which the plug 2 has to be plugged. The plug 2 is constructed as connector strip and the mating connector 4 is constructed as BLADE connector in the exemplary embodiment shown.
As can be seen from
Since, during the plug in process of the plug 2 on the display circuit board 1 into the mating connector 4 on the system circuit board 3, the plugging process cannot be checked visually and the risk of mispluggings is to be avoided, a u-shaped plug guide 7 is provided according to the invention at the plug 2, which surrounds the plug 2 on three sides in a closely adjoining manner with only little play and only exposes the plug 2 on the underside. The underside of the plug 2 must be exposed in order to provide the possibility of a plugging process for the mating connector 4 arranged horizontally on the system circuit board.
The plug guide 7 is shown in detail in FIGS. 6 to 11 and will be explained in greater detail with reference to these figures.
Further securing of the guide part 7 on the display circuit board 1 is achieved by the fact that noses 13 are provided above the flanges 9 on the plug guide 7 and so that further metal lugs 14 stand away from the circuit board 1 which have corresponding recesses 15 which, in turn, can be engaged by the noses 13.
The noses 13 are formed in a wedge shape so that, after the noses 13 have become locked in the recesses 15, the plug guide can no longer be pulled from the circuit board 1 without detaching the locking.
Lateral securing is similarly achieved by the two oppositely located noses 13 at recesses 15 and by the hook 11. Further centering of the plug guide 7 with respect to the plug 2 is achieved by the cross-sectionally u-shaped internal geometry of the plug guide 7 which prevents lateral movement and, respectively, movement toward the plug.
As already explained at the beginning of the description of the figures,
The lead-in bevels 16 are shown in an enlarged representation in
The lead-in bevels 16 ensure that, even if the plug 2 is introduced slightly from the side, it is precisely guided over the mating connector 4.
So that the plug in process is facilitated also due to the external geometry of the plug guide 7, it is also provided with a chamfer or lead-in bevel 17 both on the lower edge at the plug in end and on the upper edge at the plug in end. As seen in
As shown in FIGS. 6 to 11, the plug guide 7 is represented as being made of one piece of plastic and only needs to be plugged onto the plug 3 on the system circuit board 1, during which process, due to the hook 11 attached on the top and the noses 13 standing away on the top (see
In
As is shown in
As a result, in the mounted state (see
Due to the system circuit board being screwed to the plug guide 7, the cover 6 and the metal lugs 14, scarcely any or almost no force is transferred to the electrical plug connection even when the display is touched.
The invention is not restricted to the exemplary embodiment shown. It is not mandatory that the two circuit boards 1 and 3 are perpendicular to one another during the plugging process and, respectively, the plug guide does not mandatorily need to be constructed to be unshaped but can also be closed all around.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10233441.2 | Jul 2002 | DE | national |
The present application is a continuation of international application PCT/DE2003/002037, filed Jun. 18, 2003, which designated the United States and further claims priority to German patent application 10233441.2, filed Jul. 23, 2002, the both of which are herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/DE03/02037 | Jun 2003 | US |
Child | 11035144 | Jan 2005 | US |