The disclosure relates to a plug-in connector element with a locking device for detachable locking to a plug partner, wherein the locking device has a plurality of locking hooks which are distributed over the periphery of a base body, are each detented at a front end in the plugging direction, and can pivot in a radial direction between a locking position and a release position. In particular, the disclosure concerns electrical plug-in connector elements.
The term “locking” is here to be understood in a general sense and is intended to include both positive locking and non-positive locking, as well as latching.
In the case of electrical plug-in connectors, it is intended that the locking device prevents the connection from becoming detached unintentionally, for example by pulling on the cable. In the locking position, the locking hooks engage behind an undercut or in a latching recess of the plug partner such that at least a certain resistance opposes relative movement in the detaching direction.
In the case of the usual plug-in connectors, in particular in the case of compact electrical plug-in connectors, the locking hooks are designed as resilient tongues which can pivot in the radial direction by virtue of their inherent elasticity. The tongues can be formed directly on the base body or they can be formed integrally on a sleeve which surrounds the base body and for its part is held axially fixed on the base body.
A distinction is made between internal locks, in which the base body is plugged into a plug partner and the locking hooks are bent outward at right angles, and external locks, in which the base body is plugged onto the plug partner and the locking hooks are bent inward at right angles. In the case of electrical plug-in connectors, the locking devices are often designed as push-pull mechanisms in which the lock automatically latches into place when the plug-in connection is produced and unlocking is effected by an actuating element, for example in the form of a sleeve, being pulled backward in a detaching direction.
Plug-in connectors are also known in which the locking device has a threaded part which can be screwed to a mating thread of the plug partner. The thread and the mating thread can here be formed just in some sectors such that the threaded parts can be plugged axially into each other in a position in which the thread sectors are twisted relative to each other and the threads come into engagement with each other only in the event of subsequent rotation of one threaded part relative to the other. In that case, latching hooks, by means of which provisional locking has already been obtained in the position in which the threaded parts are not yet in engagement with each other, can be provided in the gaps between the threaded sectors.
DE 10 2012 111 408 B3 discloses a locking device for plug-in connectors, in which the locking hooks are designed as rocker levers which can pivot about a pivot point on the base body. The rocker levers are pretensioned into the locking position such that elongated arms of the pivot levers, which project beyond the pivot bearing counter to the plugging direction, are pulled inward by a spring ring.
An object of the disclosure is to provide a plug-in connector in which the locking device has a lower structural length.
This object is achieved in that the locking hooks are designed as components which are separate from one another and from the base body and are mounted on the base body such that they can each be tilted about an axis extending at right angles to the plug-in direction and at right angles to the radial direction, and which are each supported in the axial direction resiliently on the base body at the end opposite the detent.
The radial pivoting movement of the locking hooks between the locking position and the release position is not, or at least not solely, enabled by the inherent elasticity of the locking hooks and instead because the locking hook as a whole rotates about its tilting axis. Not only does this make it possible to reduce the length of the locking hooks but it also has the advantage that there is a reduced risk of fatigue fractures and hence the durability of the locking device is improved because there is no or at most just a small elastic deformation. Because the locking hooks are supported in the axial direction resiliently on the base body, the axial position of the tilting axis does not need to be fixed such that an axial translational movement of the locking hook can be superposed with the tilting movement. The locking hooks are then mounted on the base body in an, as it were, “floating” fashion. The locking hooks can be pretensioned into the locking position or selectively also into the release position by virtue of the resilient support, whether by the locking hook being pretensioned axially against a ramp which slopes upward or downward in the radial direction or by the axial spring force, together with a stop or support point for the locking hook, generating a torque.
Advantageous embodiments are described in the dependent claims.
In an embodiment, each locking hook has a radial projection, on which the axial spring force engages, at the end opposite the detent. This spring force can be generated by spring elements which are formed directly on this radial projection and are supported on a shoulder of the base body. For example, the spring elements can be designed as wings which extend circumferentially from the opposite sides of the radial projection.
In an embodiment, only every second locking hook has such resilient wings, whilst the locking hooks arranged in between have, instead of the wings, rigid support arms which overlap circumferentially with the radial projections of the spring-loaded locking hooks such that the resilient support is effected indirectly via the resilient wings of the adjacent locking hooks. By virtue of this structure, the resilient wings can also have a relatively large length circumferentially even in the case of compact plug-in connectors, as a result of which the elastic stress and hence the risk of fatigue fractures is reduced.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are explained in detail below with the aid of the drawings, in which:
Part of a circumferential wall of a plug-in connector is shown in an axial section in
In the case of the locking hook 16 shown in
The locking hook 18 shown in
A total of six locking hooks are shown in
As can be seen in
Tilting axes A and B, about which the locking hooks can pivot, are indicated in
Each groove 30 is delimited at the front end by an obliquely upward sloping ramp 32 at which the front end of the locking hook is supported such that the locking hook is also held at the front end at a distance from the base of the groove 30. In the locking position according to
Arranged on a part of the base body 10 which is delimited by the shoulder 24 and has a widened diameter is a detaching element 34 which is designed in this example as a sleeve which surrounds the base body 10 and is guided axially displaceably on this base body. The detaching element 34 has at the front end a radially inward facing flange 36 which engages over the projections 22 of the locking hooks 16, 18. In
In another embodiment, the tilting movement of the locking hooks 16, 18 into the release position can also be controlled or assisted by the rear flank of the detent 20 and the corresponding mating surface of the latching recess being beveled to a greater degree such that, when the locking hooks are pulled back, these angled surfaces slide along each other and are pressed more deeply into the groove 30.
The locking hooks 16, 18 with the form illustrated in
In the arrangement of the locking hooks 16, 18 shown in
In a different embodiment, in particular in the case of a relatively large diameter of the base body 10, all the locking hooks can also have the shape which is shown in
The locking hooks 16' each have at the rear end a radial projection 22' on which a helical spring 24' surrounding the base body 10' engages and which is supported at its opposite end on a shoulder 26' of the base body. The rear part of each locking hook 16' is received in an axial groove 30' of the base body. At the rear end, the locking hook has two laterally projecting axle stubs 40 which each engage in a pocket 42 formed in the flank of the groove 30'. In this way, a pivot bearing for the locking hook 16' is formed and at the same time the locking hook is fixed both in the radial and in the axial direction. The helical spring 24' exerts a torque on the locking hook by means of which the latter is held elastically in the engaged position shown in
In this embodiment, the plug-in connector element is locked to the plug partner 12' exclusively by latching. If the base body 10' is pulled off from the plug partner 12 with sufficiently high force, the locking hook is pressed out of the V-shaped latching recess of the plug partner 12, wherein the helical spring 24' yields, as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2020 105 041.0 | Feb 2020 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2020/082398 | 11/17/2020 | WO |