The subject matter herein relates generally to circuit board connectors.
Electrical connectors provide communicative interfaces between electrical components where power and/or signals may be transmitted therethrough. For example, the electrical connectors may be used within telecommunication equipment, servers, and data storage or transport devices. Typically, electrical connectors are used in environments, such as in offices or homes, where the connectors are not subjected to constant shock, vibration, and/or extreme temperatures. However, in some applications, such as aerospace or military equipment, the electrical connector must be configured to withstand certain environmental conditions and still effectively transmit power and/or data signals.
In some applications, electrical connectors are terminated to circuit boards. The electrical connectors have solder tails that are soldered to the circuit board. Terminating the electrical connectors to the circuit board may be a time consuming and expensive process. For example, the electrical connector must be positioned relative to the circuit board and then the assembly is further processed to solder the solder tails to the circuit board. Furthermore, the circuit board interface may require that the contacts be arranged at a different pattern than the mating interface. For example, the circuit board may require particular spacing between the circuits for routing of the circuits.
Accordingly, there is a need for an electrical connector that offers alternative mounting to the circuit board to establish an electrical connection.
In one embodiment, a press-fit circuit board connector is provided including a housing having a mating end and a mounting end. The housing has a contact holder including a plurality of contact channels. Contacts are received in corresponding contact channels. Each contact has a mating pin and a mounting pin opposite the mating pin. The mating pin is compliant and configured for compliant mating with a corresponding socket contact of a mating connector. The mounting pin is compliant and configured for press-fit mechanical and electrical connection to a circuit board. The mating pins of the contacts are arranged at the mating end to define a pin mating interface having a first pattern and the mounting pins of the contacts are arranged at the mounting end to define a pin mounting interface having a second pattern different than the first pattern.
In another embodiment, a press-fit circuit board connector is provided including a housing having a mating end and a mounting end. The housing has a contact holder including a plurality of contact channels. Contacts are received in corresponding contact channels. Each contact has a mating terminal and a mounting terminal discrete from the corresponding mating terminal and mechanically and electrically connected to the corresponding mating terminal. The mating terminal extends between a front and a rear and has a mating pin at the front. The mounting terminal extends between a front and a rear and has a mounting pin at the rear. The front of the mounting terminal is terminated to the rear of the mating terminal. The mating pin is compliant and configured for compliant mating with a corresponding socket contact of a mating connector. The mounting pin is compliant and configured for press-fit mechanical and electrical connection to a circuit board.
In a further embodiment, a press-fit circuit board connector is provided including a housing having a mating end and a mounting end. The housing has a contact holder including a plurality of contact channels. Contacts are received in corresponding contact channels. Each contact has a mating pin and a mounting pin opposite the mating pin. The mating pin is stamped and formed into a barrel-shape from a sheet having a first thickness. The barrel-shaped mating pin is compliant and configured for compliant mating with a corresponding socket contact of a mating connector. The mounting pin is stamped and formed into an eye-of-the-needle shape. The mounting pin has a second thickness thicker than the first thickness. The mounting pin is compliant and configured for press-fit mechanical and electrical connection to a circuit board.
The circuit board connector 100 includes a housing 104 having a mating end 106 and a mounting end 108 opposite the mating end 106. The mating end 106 is configured for mating with a mating connector. The mounting end 108 is configured for mounting to the circuit board 102. In an exemplary embodiment, the circuit board connector 100 defines a vertical board-to-board connector configured to mate with the corresponding mating connector between two circuit boards that are oriented parallel to each other; however other types of connectors may be used in alternative embodiments, such as a right-angle connector. In the illustrated embodiment, the mating end 106 defines a plug configured to be mated with a receptacle connector; however, the mating end 106 may define a receptacle in alternative embodiments.
The housing 104 has a contact holder 110 holding a plurality of contacts 112 (
The contacts 112 each have a mating pin 116 (
In an exemplary embodiment, the mounting pins 118 are compliant and configured for press-fit mechanical and electrical connection to the circuit board 102. For example, the mounting pins 118 may be eye-of-the-needle pins. In an exemplary embodiment, the mating pins 116 are compliant and configured for compliant mating with corresponding mating contacts of the mating connector, such as socket contacts of the receptacle connector. In other various embodiments, the mating pins 118 may be configured to receive mating contacts. For example, the mating pins 118 may be female pins having sockets at the mating end to receive other male pins of the mating connector.
In an exemplary embodiment, the mating pins 116 are arranged at the mating end 106 to define a pin mating interface 120 having a first pattern and the mounting pins 118 are arranged at the mounting end 108 to define a pin mounting interface 122 having a second pattern different than the first pattern. For example, the mounting pins 118 at the pin mounting interface 122 have a pattern that is more spread out than the mating pins 116 at the pin mating interface 120. For example, the mounting pins 118 may be spread out to fit on the circuit board 102. Space may be needed on the circuit board 102 for plated through holes and/or for routing traces. The pin mating interface 120 may be designed to meet a particular standard, such as MIL-DTL-83513, or other standards, for intermateability, interchangeability and performance of a particular connector series. For example, in an exemplary embodiment, the circuit board connector 100 is a micro-D connector. In the illustrated embodiment, the mating pins 116 at the pin mating interface 120 are arranged in first and second rows, whereas the mounting pins 118 at the pin mounting interface 122 are arranged in more than two rows, such as third, fourth, fifth and sixth rows, allowing the mounting pins 118 to have a larger center line spacing between adjacent mounting pins 118 as compared to the center line spacing of the mating pins 116. Optionally, the mounting pins 118 at the pin mounting interface 122 are arranged in triangular groups with mounting pins 118 in the third and fourth rows forming triangular groups and with mounting pins 118 in the fifth and sixth rows defining triangular groups. In other various embodiments, the pin mating interface 120 may have more than two rows, such as four rows and the pin mounting interface 122 may have more than four rows, such as six rows. In other various embodiments, the mating and mounting interfaces 120, 122 may have the same pattern and/or spacing of pins, such as a 0.05″ triangular grid at both ends.
Optionally, the housing 104 and/or the contact holder 110 may be multi-piece structures. For example, the housing 104 may include a front shell 130 and a rear holder 132. The rear holder 132 may form part of the contact holder 110. The front shell 130 holds an insulator 134 forming part of the contact holder 110. Optionally, the front shell 130 may be metal and the insulator 134 may be plastic. Optionally, the rear holder 132 may be plastic or another dielectric material. The rear holder 132 may be metal and may hold an insulator therein, similar to the insulator 134. The front shell 130 may be secured to the rear holder 132 using adhesive, epoxy, mechanical fasteners, or other means. Providing multi-piece structures allows for different types of assembly of the circuit board connector 100, such as the use of multi-piece contacts 112.
In an exemplary embodiment, the contacts 112 are multi-piece contacts including a mating terminal 126 at the mating end 106 and a mounting terminal 128 at the mounting end 108. The mating terminal 126 defines the mating pin 116. The mounting terminal 128 defines the mounting pin 118. The mounting terminals 128 are discrete from the mating terminals 126 and are mechanically and electrically connected to the corresponding mating terminals 126 within the housing 104.
The front shell 130 extends between a front 150 and a rear 152. The front shell 130 includes a flange 154 between the front 150 and the rear 152. The flange 154 may have mounting openings for securing the front shell 130 to the rear holder 132 (shown in
The mounting terminals 128 each extend between a front 180 and a rear 182. The mounting pin 118 is provided at the rear 182 of the mounting terminal 128. In an exemplary embodiment, the mounting terminal 128 includes a connecting pin 184 at the front 180. The connecting pin 184 is compliant and configured for a press-fit mechanical and electrical connection to the mating terminal 126. In the illustrated embodiment, the connecting pin 184 is an eye-of-the-needle pin configured to be plugged into the base 140 (shown in
Each connecting pin 184, in the illustrated embodiment, includes a compliant portion extending to a tip 186. The compliant portion includes opposing first and second legs 188, 190 surrounding an opening 192. The legs 188, 190 may be compressed inward into the opening 192 when the connecting pin 184 is press-fit into the base 140 of the mating terminal 126. The legs 188, 190 may be spring biased outward against the mating terminal 126 after the legs 188, 190 are deflected.
The mating terminals 126 are received in the front shell 130 and are configured for mating with socket contacts of the mating connector. The mating pin 116 is provided at a front 146 of the mating terminal 126 and is configured to be mated with the socket contact. In an exemplary embodiment, the mating terminal 126 includes compliant beams 148 at the mating pin 116. The compliant beams 148 are bowed outward for connection to the socket contact when mated with the socket contact. The compliant beams 148 are deflectable and are configured to be spring biased against the socket contact when mated thereto. The compliant beams 148 are stamped and formed with the barrel shaped base 140 as a unitary structure with the base 140.
The mating terminal 126 includes the seam 144 extending the length between the front 146 and the rear 142. In an exemplary embodiment, the base 140 is open at the rear 142 to receive the connecting pin 184 of the mounting terminal 128. In an exemplary embodiment, the mating terminal 126 is oriented in the contact channel 114 such that the seam 144 is offset approximately 90° relative to the eye-of-the-needle shaped connecting pin 184. As such, the points where the first and second legs 188, 190 of the connecting pin 184 engage the base 140 are both offset from the seam 144 (e.g., approximately 90°). The compliant portion of the connecting pin 184 is compressed within the base 140 such that the legs 188, 190 press outward against the base 140 to ensure electrical connection between the mounting terminal 128 and the mating terminal 126. Optionally, the connecting pin 184 may press the base 140 outward, such as at the seam 144, such that the barrel shaped base 140 provides an inward biasing force against the connecting pin 184.
In an exemplary embodiment, the mounting terminals 128 transition between the connecting pin 184 and the mounting pin 118. Such transition spaces the mounting pins 118 apart from each other for mounting to the circuit board 102 (shown in
In the illustrated embodiment, the upper contacts are arranged linearly in a first row 202 at the pin mating interface 120 and the lower contacts are arranged linearly in a second row 204 at the pin mating interface 120. The upper and lower contacts are arranged in triangular groups 210 at the pin mounting interface 122. The upper contacts are arranged in the triangular groups 210 along third and fourth rows 212, 214 at the pin mounting interface 122 and the lower contacts are arranged in the triangular groups 210 along fifth and sixth rows 216, 218 at the pin mounting interface 122.
In the illustrated embodiment, the mating pins 116 at the pin mating interface 120 have a first center line spacing 220 between adjacent mating pins 116 within the same row 202 or 204. The mounting pins 118 have a second center line spacing 222 between adjacent mounting pins 118 within the same rows 212, 214, 216 or 218 and may have the same centerline spacing between each of the mounting pins 118 within the triangular group. The second center line spacing 222 is greater than the first center line spacing 220, which may provide additional spacing for routing conductors within the circuit board 102 (shown in
In alternative embodiments, other processes may be used to provide different thicknesses for the pins 116, 118. For example, the body of the contact 112 at the mating pin 116 may be skived or milled to reduce the first thickness, leaving the mounting pin 118 at the stock thickness. For example, the sheet of material used to form the contact 112 may have a thickness of 0.006″ and material is removed from the mating pin 116 to provide a first thickness of 0.004″.
It is to be understood that the above description is intended to be illustrative, and not restrictive. For example, the above-described embodiments (and/or aspects thereof) may be used in combination with each other. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from its scope. Dimensions, types of materials, orientations of the various components, and the number and positions of the various components described herein are intended to define parameters of certain embodiments, and are by no means limiting and are merely exemplary embodiments. Many other embodiments and modifications within the spirit and scope of the claims will be apparent to those of skill in the art upon reviewing the above description. The scope of the invention should, therefore, be determined with reference to the appended claims, along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled. In the appended claims, the terms “including” and “in which” are used as the plain-English equivalents of the respective terms “comprising” and “wherein.” Moreover, in the following claims, the terms “first,” “second,” and “third,” etc. are used merely as labels, and are not intended to impose numerical requirements on their objects. Further, the limitations of the following claims are not written in means-plus-function format and are not intended to be interpreted based on 35 U.S.C. §112(f), unless and until such claim limitations expressly use the phrase “means for” followed by a statement of function void of further structure.
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