This disclosure relates to a splicing connector for use with single pair ethernet (SPE) cables. More specifically, a T-shaped splice adapter is disclosed that splices into a SPE cable to enable an additional cable pathway to be created in parallel with the original cable.
Single pair ethernet (SPE) cables provide high performance transmission of data and power available while using only a single pair (two wires) of conductive wires. So the SPE cable offers a reduction in cabling material over cables that include two pairs of conductive wires.
With the introduction of SPE cables, new cabling components and accessories are developing for working with the SPE cables in new, or sometimes the same, application scenarios.
This disclosure relates to a T-splice adapter for splicing into a SPE cable and connecting an external device to the SPE cable in a parallel connection. The T-splice adapter offers a simple and effective use of a cable splicing assembly that can be applied to the specific features of a SPE cable.
According to an embodiment, a cable splicing device is disclosed. The cable splicing device comprising a top housing and a bottom housing including a circuit board. The circuit board may comprise a first set of insulation displacement contacts (IDCs) configured to hold a pair of wires from a first single pair ethernet (SPE) cable, a second set of IDCs configured to hold a pair of wires from the first SPE cable, and a third set of IDCs configured to hold a pair of wires from a second SPE cable.
This disclosure relates to a splicing connector for use with single pair ethernet (SPE) cables. More specifically, a T-shaped splice adapter is disclosed that splices into a SPE cable to enable an additional cable pathway to be created in parallel with the original cable. The SPE cable being spliced into may be referred to as the trunk cable. Further, the SPE cable may be a solid type, or stranded type, of cable and either a shielded type, or unshielded type, of cable.
The T-splice adapter is spliced into the main trunk cable to create one or more cable drops along the length of the trunk cable, where each cable drop comprises a shorter section of SPE cable (i.e., the spur cable) that is run to other external devices such as sensors or actuators that will now be electrically coupled to the trunk cable in parallel through the T-splice adapter. So the T-splice adapter provides an easy and efficient way for to splice into long runs of the main trunk cable, which enables greater flexibility to dynamically control the cable system's scalability.
According to the disclosed embodiments, the T-splice adapter 100 has a “T” shaped body, where the additional spliced in spur cable 20 is perpendicular to the main trunk cable 10, as shown in
For the spur cable 20, the spur cable is cut and stripped of its insulation jacket to expose its individual copper wires, wire 23 and wire 24, that comprise the single pair. After the wires 23, 24 are exposed and untwisted, they are individually placed into their respective IDCs. For example, the trunk cable 10 may be placed into a third wire holder 119, and then the corresponding wire 23 is placed into IDC 121 and the corresponding wire 24 is placed into IDC 122.
As shown in
Also included in the top portion 110 is a conductive plating 131 that provides additional shielding for the cables. The conductive plating 131 is configured to be in contact with one or more of the wire holders 117, 118, 119 when the T-splice adapter 100 is in a closed state to provide a shielding feature that ensures that there is sufficient shielding maintained between the trunk cable 10 and the spur cable 20.
The trunk cable 10 and/or spur cable 20 themselves may further include a shielding layer that goes around their conductive wires, positioned between their conductive wires and insulation layer. The shielding layer may be made from a material in the form of metalized foil (mylar substrate with metallic components to form a foil), metallic overbraid (wire woven to form a shield of various densities, expressed as “% coverage”), or a combination of both that surrounds the wire conductors. The conductive plating 131 may be made from a material that is the same, or similar, to that of the shielding layer.
The wire retention features 115, 116 are configured to securely install the individual wires into their respective IDCs, and/or maintain the individual wires within their respective IDCs when the top portion 110 is closed and the T-splice adapter 100 is in the closed state. For example, according to an alternative installation method, the prepped wires 13, 14 may be placed into a lead-in portion on a top half of their respective IDCs 111-114. Then when the top portion 110 is closed into the closed state, the first wire retention feature 115 will abut against and push down the wires 13, 14 into an installed position on their respective IDCs 111, 112 where the IDCs 111, 112 will have penetrated any insulation layer on the wires 13, 14 to make contact with the conductive wire cores. Similarly, when the top portion 110 is closed into the closed state, the second wire retention feature 116 will abut against and push down the wires 13, 14 into an installed position on their respective IDCs 113, 114 where the IDCs 111, 112 will have penetrated any insulation layer on the wires 13, 14 to make contact with the conductive wire cores.
After the wires 13, 14 of the trunk cable 10 and the wires 23, 24 of the spur cable 20 are successfully installed on their respective IDCs 111-112, 113-114, 121-122, power and/or data may be communicated between the spur cable 20 and the trunk cable 10. The electrical communication between the trunk cable 10 and the spur cable 20 is provided by the layout of the traces in the circuit board 130.
In addition or alternatively, the wires 13, 14 of the trunk cable 10 may be electrically coupled to the wires 23, 24 using a physical termination apparatus such as compression using a screw.
Also, the T-splice adapter 300 includes an inner housing that includes a circuit board 230. The circuit board 230 includes a set of IDCs 221, 222 for receiving and holding the wires 23, 24 of the spur cable 20. A difference offered by the T-splice adapter 300 over the T-splice adapter 100 is the circuit board 230 including only a single set of IDCs 211, 212 for receiving and holding the wires 13, 14 of the trunk cable 10. Only the single set of IDCs 211, 212 is needed for the wires 13, 14 of the trunk cable 10 because the trunk cable 10 is not cut into two separate pieces as is done for the T-splice adapter 100.
So for the T-splice adapter 300, instead of cutting the wires 13, 14 from the trunk cable 10 all the way through to create two separate pieces requiring both the first set of IDCs 111, 112 and the second set of IDCs 113, 114 shown to be included in the T-splice adapter 100, the T-splice adapter 300 according to this alternative embodiment does not cut through the wires 13, 14 from the trunk cable 10 into separate pieces. It follows that in the T-splice adapter 300 of this alternative embodiment, only a single set of IDCs 211, 212 is provided on the circuit board 230 for receiving and holding the wires 13, 14 of the trunk cable 10.
The installation process using the T-splice adapter 300 includes removing the outer insulation layer jacket 11 from a portion of the trunk cable 10 that will be placed between a first wire holder 217 and a second wire holder 218. The exposed wires 13, 14 are then installed onto their respective IDCs 211, 212 corresponding to the trunk cable 10. A wire retention feature 215 is included on the top portion 210 for securing the wires 13, 14 into their respective IDCs 211, 212, similar (or the same) to how the wire retention feature 115 is shown to operate in
After the installation process is completed and the T-splice adapter 300 is in the closed state, the spur cable 20 will be spliced into the trunk cable 10 via the tracing map on the circuit board 230, as shown in
The circuit board 130, but also applicable to the circuit board 230, may be configured to allow for additional functions to be achieved and/or added to the external device being spliced into the trunk cable 10 via the spur cable 20. For example, when the circuit board 130 is configured to include a built-in terminating resistance, the T-splice adapter 100 can be used at the end of a cable system 200 to terminate a section as shown in
By configuring the circuit board 130 with the proper level of resistance, the T-splice adapter 100 can also act as its own spur device in cases where the T-splice adapter 100 is added at different lengths of the trunk cable 10 in anticipation of splicing in external devices in future applications. To achieve this feature where the T-splice adapter 100 can be used as its own spur device within the electrical circuitry, the T-splice adapter 100 is produced to further include a termination resistor that remains electrically connected to the circuit provided by the trunk cable 10 until the spur cable 20 is connected to the T-splice adapter 100. In doing so, the bus does not see open circuit points where the spur cable 20 is not connected during the original installation of the T-splice adapter 100 to the trunk cable 10. This scenario is shown in
According to an exemplary embodiment for attaching cables to the T-splice adapter 100 during an installation process, one or more of the following processes may be implemented: opening the clam shell outer housing of the T-splice adapter 100 to separate the top portion 110 from the bottom portion 120, electrically coupling a first wire and a second wire of the trunk cable 10 to the first set of IDCs 111-112 located at a first end of the T-splice adapter 100, electrically coupling the first wire and the second wire of the trunk cable 10 to the second set of IDCs 113-114, and electrically coupling a first wire and a second wire of the spur cable 20 to the third set of IDCs 121-122. Electrically coupling the first wire and the second wire of the trunk cable 10 into the first set of IDCs 111-112 may include cutting the trunk cable 10 and fitting a first portion of the trunk cable 10 into the first wire holder 117, and electrically coupling the first wire and the second wire of the trunk cable 10 into the second set of IDCs 111-112 may include fitting a second portion of the trunk cable 10 into the second wire holder 118. Electrically coupling the first wire and the second wire of the spur cable 20 to the third set of IDCs 121-122 may include fitting a portion of the spur cable 20 into the third wire holder 119. The installation process may further include closing the clam shell outer housing of the T-splice adapter 100 to bring the top portion 110 and the bottom portion 120 together such that a conductive plating 131 contacts at least one of the first wire holder 117, the second wire holder 118, or the third wire holder 119. The installation process may further include installing an external device (e.g., sensor) to the spur cable 20.
Furthermore, while the particular embodiments described herein have been shown and described, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made without departing from the teaching of the invention. The matter set forth in the foregoing description and accompanying drawings is offered by way of illustration only and not as limitation. The actual scope of the invention is intended to be defined in the following claims when viewed in their proper perspective.
This application claims benefit to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/048,806, filed Jul. 7, 2021, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2967795 | Bollmeier et al. | Jan 1961 | A |
3715459 | Hoffman | Feb 1973 | A |
4738009 | Down et al. | Apr 1988 | A |
4946394 | Knapp et al. | Aug 1990 | A |
5055064 | Imaizumi | Oct 1991 | A |
6402541 | Mindeau | Jun 2002 | B1 |
7503785 | Stepniak | Mar 2009 | B2 |
8007310 | Landis et al. | Aug 2011 | B2 |
9149858 | Keswani | Oct 2015 | B2 |
9774179 | Marcath et al. | Sep 2017 | B1 |
10998685 | Curtis | May 2021 | B2 |
11038288 | Peterson | Jun 2021 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2018200528 | Nov 2018 | WO |
2019147774 | Aug 2019 | WO |
2019165466 | Aug 2019 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20220013932 A1 | Jan 2022 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
63048806 | Jul 2020 | US |