The invention relates to a pluggable conductor terminal with an insulating housing and more particularly, to a conductor terminal for connecting a conductor with a pin on a printed circuit board, and wherein the terminal includes a one piece contact spring particularly bent and arranged within the insulating housing.
In conventional models, such pluggable conductor terminals include a contact piece for which the contact part of the contact pin to be contacted and the clamp spring with a clamp point for the conductor to be connected consist of two or more parts that are joined together by means of welding or soldering. In the course of the miniaturization of such clamps whose disk-shaped insulating housings suited for row configuration include a width of magnitude of 3 mm, the contact parts and clamp springs possess correspondingly small dimensions, but must meet high requirements for positive function. Therefore, the weld or solder connection of the current- or voltage-conducting contact piece is performed with great precision, which is realizable only at high expense.
It is the task of the invention to provide a conductor terminal of the type mentioned at the outset whose contact part is simpler to produce.
It is essential to the invention that the contact piece and the clamp spring consist of a single part, namely a flat band bent exclusively crosswise to its longitudinal dimension. The peculiarity of the torsion spring is that it comes into contact with the connected conductor only by means of its clamp leg that is tensioned by the clamp leg against the clamp abutment formed by the insulating housing. The more or less point- or line-shaped contact point between the clamp leg and the clamped conductor is then adequate in any case if only low amounts of current flow through the metallic flat band.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be better understood by reading the following detailed description, taken together with the drawings wherein:
In particular,
First, a spring tulip 4 is shaped from a flat, metallic band 2 that is positioned within a contact space 5 of the insulating housing 1. The spring tulip 4 is the contact element for a plug connector 6 in the floor or bottom region of the insulating housing 1, by means of which the conductor terminal may be stacked onto a contact pin 7. Such a contact pin 7, as seen in
The contact space 5 is an elongated space extending along the plug direction of the contact pin 7. This corresponds to the elongated shape of the spring tulip 4 that first consists of a spring leg 9 formed from one of the two ends of the flat band 2. The spring leg 9 passes over a flexible joint with an arc of more than 180° and is transformed into a support leg 11 that rests against an inner wall of the insulating housing 1. Therefore, when the contact pin 7 is inserted, only the spring leg 9 of the spring tulip 4 can expand, for which free space 12 is provided within the contact space 5 into which the spring leg 9 of the spring tulip 4 may expand. Insertion of the contact pin 7 into the spring tulip 4 is simplified by means of an end 9.1 of the spring leg 9 bent away from the supporting leg 11. The flexible joint 10 of the spring tulip 4 offset from the pin guide 8 toward which the spring tulip 4 opens upon insertion of the contact pin 7. The supporting leg 11 of the spring tulip 4 extends along a straight direction parallel to the contact pin 7, and the inner side of the supporting leg 11 of the spring tulip 4 lies tangential to the pin guide 8.
As
The section of the flat band 2 forming the torsion spring 15 is mounted within a clamping space 19 of the insulating housing 1, whereby the side of the bearing leg 16 facing away from the clamp leg 18 is supported by the entire surface of a wall of the clamping space 19 facing toward the bottom side of the insulating housing 1. A wedge-shaped strike surface 20 is located within the clamping space 19 with its upper side angled toward the non-jointed clamp leg 18. The clamp leg 18 strikes against this upper side upon depression so that the torsion spring 15 is not over-extended.
The second end of the flat band 2 forms a clamp end 21 at the clamp leg 18 that interacts with a clamp abutment 22. The clamp abutment 22 is formed by a clamping rib 23 of the insulating housing 1 projecting into the clamping space 19. The clamp abutment 22 of this clamping rib 23 extends at an angle of 45° to the plug direction of the contact pin 7. A conductor-guide channel 24 leads to the clamp abutment 22 at the same angle within the insulating housing 1, as
A guide channel 26 is formed into the insulating housing 1 between the conductor-guide channel 24 and the contact space 5 that receives the spring tulip 4. This guide channel 26 extends parallel to the plug direction of the contact pin 7. A pusher 27 is mounted within the guide channel 26 so that it may be displaced. The inner end 28 is designed to be narrow enough that, as
As
Finally,
Modifications and substitutions by one of ordinary skill in the art are considered to be within the scope of the present invention, which is not to be limited except by the allowed claims and their legal equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2007 036 295 | Jul 2007 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5915991 | Roman | Jun 1999 | A |
6109952 | Jaag | Aug 2000 | A |
6336824 | Sorig | Jan 2002 | B1 |
6682364 | Cisey | Jan 2004 | B2 |
6851967 | Miyoshi et al. | Feb 2005 | B2 |
7004781 | Walter | Feb 2006 | B2 |
7083463 | Steinkemper et al. | Aug 2006 | B2 |
7329143 | Schrader | Feb 2008 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090035998 A1 | Feb 2009 | US |