This application is the National Stage of PCT/DE2015/100066 filed on Feb. 18, 2015, which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of German Application No. 10 2014 002 669.8 filed on Feb. 28, 2014, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference. The international application under PCT article 21(2) was not published in English.
The invention relates to a plug-in connector comprising a housing and at least one chamber for the reception of at least one electrical contact element which can be attached via a locking element inside the housing, wherein the locking element is a locking hook that is arranged at the contact element and that can be locked in place inside the housing in an opening adjusted to that locking hook.
A plug-in connector with a secondary locking device follows from DE 20 2006 010 308 U1 for example. In this plug-in connector, which has at least one contact element that is arranged in the base element of the plug-in connector, at least one secondary locking recess is provided which is arranged inside the contact element in an oblique orientation with respect to the mating direction, and with which a locking cam of a secondary locking element meshes in the locking position of the secondary locking element. The contact element is embodied as a spring contact element. To facilitate the attachment inside the housing, it is provided that a locking hook, which meshes with a corresponding locking opening inside the housing, is arranged on a U-shaped connecting plate which connects the two spring contacts. This locking hook is punched out from the U-shaped connecting plate. The locking hook protrudes from the U-shaped connecting plate in a spring-like manner and in its latched state meshes with the opening inside the housing, thus holding the spring contact element, formed by both spring contacts and the U-shaped connecting plate, inside the housing. Such an attachment allows only limited tensile forces. Moreover, it renders the mounting process laborious. Also, the manufacture of the locking hook as a hook punched out from the U-shaped connecting plate involves a considerable amount of work.
In contrast to the plug-in connector known from the state of the art, in the plug-in connector according to the invention the snap-in element is not arranged in the U-shaped connecting plate between the spring contacts and on the side that is facing away from the spring contacts, but rather above the spring contacts, and namely in such a manner that the snap-in element is arranged in a lid-like manner above the sheet metal which is bent in a U-shape, wherein it also reaches up to the front area of the spring contact. Such a formation does not only allow for easier and faster manufacture, but also makes it possible to design the snap-in element with a larger size. Since the snap-in element juts out to beyond the spring contacts in a lid-like manner, as it were, it can be designed to be wider, and due to this fact as well as to its arrangement above the spring contact, it also facilitates a considerably higher resistance against extraction forces as compared to the snap-in element arranged in the U-shaped connecting plate. Advantageous further developments are the subject matter of the dependent subclaims. So it is provided, for example, that the snap-in element has a locking hook, with its bending area being formed on that side of the spring contacts which is facing the contact openings. In this way, the locking hook is arranged in the area of the contact openings.
Preferably, the bending area is wider than the snap-in element. Thereby, higher bending forces and enhanced stability are made possible.
In order to provide a better stability and to minimize the danger of the long hook itself being bent, it is further preferably provided that the snap-in element has a beading that substantially extends across its entire length.
Moreover, it is advantageously provided that the spring contacts, on the side that is facing the snap-in element, have an obliquely positioned supporting surface for the locking hook in its unengaged state. Thus, the snap-in element rests, as it were on the spring contacts up to the point where it is latched into the locking opening provided for that purpose. This supporting surface restricts the bending angle of the snap-in element in a very advantageous manner, thus avoiding that the snap-in element is damaged through overbending.
On the side that is facing the spring contacts, the snap-in element itself has a supporting surface for a knife-blade contact element. In the mated state of the knife-blade contact element and the spring contact element, any unlatching of the locking hook out of the locking opening is avoided since the supporting surface rests on the knife-blade contact element, with its cuboid-shaped exterior shape being formed at the opening of the U-shaped cross-section of the spring contact element, which is closed by the “lid”, that is the snap-in element.
In addition, such a plug-in connector may also have a secondary locking device, such as is described in DE 20 2006 010 308 U1. Through the arrangement of the snap-in element above the spring contact elements, such a secondary locking device may at the same time be secured against unlocking in a very advantageous manner, since the snap-in element simultaneously avoids any actuation of the secondary locking device.
Preferably, it is provided that the spring contact element and the snap-in element are formed integrally with each other. With regard to easy manufacturing, the spring contact element and the snap-in element are formed from a single punched part and are bent multiple times.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are shown in the drawings and are described in more detail in the following description.
In the Figures:
A spring contact element of a plug-in connector according to the invention, which is termed 100 in its entirety, comprises two contact elements that are embodied as spring contacts 110, 120 in
A crimp area 160, which serves for receiving and crimping of litz wire in a manner that is per se known, is attached to the spring contacts 110, 130. Attached to the crimp area 160 is a strain relief 162, which [serves] for receiving an insulating cladding of a cable formed by litz wires.
The snap-in element 140 is attached to the U-shaped profile on the side that is facing away [from the] contact caps 111, 121 of the spring contacts 110, 120, for example it may be formed as an integral part of it. It can be made in a punching process from a flat metal sheet, which is bent at a right angle three times, initially for the purpose of forming the spring contacts 110, 120 and then for the purpose of forming the snap-in element 140 that is arranged above them in a lid-like manner. The snap-in element 140 comprises a beading 141 which extends throughout in the longitudinal direction and which serves the purpose of increasing the stability of the elongated snap-in element 140. At the front end that is facing the contact caps 111, 121, a locking hook 142 is formed at the snap-in element 140. Its function will be described in the following in more detail.
On their upper side, i.e. on the edge that is facing towards the snap-in element 140, the spring contacts 110, 120 have surfaces 112, 122 that run obliquely and that are formed as supporting surfaces for the snap-in element. As can particularly be seen in
After a knife-blade contact element 500 has been inserted into the spring contact element 100, as is schematically shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2014 002 669 | Feb 2014 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/DE2015/100066 | 2/18/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2015/127926 | 9/3/2015 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3697934 | Merry | Oct 1972 | A |
3711819 | Matthews | Jan 1973 | A |
3853389 | Occhipinti | Dec 1974 | A |
3932013 | Yeager | Jan 1976 | A |
4379611 | Foege et al. | Apr 1983 | A |
6106339 | Nagai | Aug 2000 | A |
6186837 | Abe | Feb 2001 | B1 |
7255611 | Kubo | Aug 2007 | B2 |
8870607 | Lappoehn | Oct 2014 | B2 |
20170077637 | Lappoehn | Mar 2017 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
20 2006 010 308 | Nov 2006 | DE |
10 2010 024525 | Dec 2011 | DE |
10 2010 034789 | Dec 2011 | DE |
2006055706 | May 2006 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report of PCT/DE2015/100066, mailed Jun. 11, 2015. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170077637 A1 | Mar 2017 | US |