The present invention relates generally to electrical terminals providing a releasable mechanical and electrical connection to a current-carrying wire and, in particular, to a screw terminal in which the connection is made by tightening a machine screw.
Electrical screw terminals, normally as part of a terminal block, provide a versatile and reliable method of making electrical connections. The quality of the connection to a screw terminal, both in terms of providing low electrical resistance and high mechanical stability, is increased by increasing the clamping force of the nut on the wire. Increased clamping force may be obtained by applying greater torque to the machine screw. However, known screw terminals and terminal blocks are limited with respect to how much screw tightening torque they can accept and are correspondingly limited with respect to how much clamping force the screw terminals can apply to a wire.
In a simple terminal block, each screw terminal includes an electrically conductive machine screw which is threadably received by the terminal body. The wire to be connected is captured under the head of the machine screw as the machine screw is tightened.
In these simple terminal blocks, tightening the screw beyond a certain extent can squeeze the wire at least partially out from under the screw head. For multi-strand wires, this may reduce the number of strands that are mechanically held by the screw and compromise the electrical connection between the wire and screw terminal. For single-strand wires, this may completely remove the wire from its connection with the screw terminal, requiring an installer to loosen the screw and start over with connecting the wire to the terminal.
More sophisticated screw terminals employ enclosed channels into which the wire may be inserted to be captured between one wall (a clamping wall) of the channel and a threaded nut within the channel. Multiple terminals of this type may be held in an electrically insulating housing having barrier walls between terminals to form a terminal block. The nut may be guided by flanking walls of the channel to prevent its rotation as the machine screw is loosened or tightened. The channel may provide a lip opposite the clamping wall to retain the nut on the machine screw when the nut is loosened.
All such potential issues associated with existing screw terminals can compromise the clamping force that is applied to the wires and correspondingly compromise the integrity of the electrical connection. This can lead to device malfunction that may require field service calls by technicians to resolve and/or other downsides.
The present inventor has recognized that in channel-type screw terminals, tightening the screw beyond a certain extent can force the nut to rotate within the channel and push out the channel walls, away from each other. This distorts the channel which may loosen the connection between the screw terminal and the terminal housing. When the nut rotates in the channel, it is turning in unison with the screw, whereby it is not further advancing along the screw and not increasing the clamping force on the wire.
The inventor has also recognized that in such channel-type screw terminals, standard nuts are used which may be relatively thin in some screw terminals. Thin or short nuts have relatively few threads so that tightening the screw beyond a certain extent may strip the threads from the nut, rendering the screw terminal unusable.
Furthermore, the inventor has recognized that terminal blocks having channel-type screw terminals which require the nuts to be pulled up toward the screw head can be difficult to visually differentiate from those having screw terminals that require the nuts to be pushed away from the screw head. That is because many terminal blocks have small windows through which the wires are inserted into the screw terminals, while the particular mechanical configurations of the nuts, screws, and channels of the screw terminals are mostly covered by terminal blocks. Correspondingly, at times, assemblers mistakenly place wires underneath nuts in channel-type screw terminals, so that the wires get pinched between the nuts and the window perimeter edges instead of the nuts and the respective clamping walls.
The present inventor has developed screw terminals and corresponding terminal blocks that can apply larger clamping forces to wires while avoiding numerous problems that have previously been associated with trying to apply higher torques to the screws. The particular configuration(s) of the screw terminal and terminal block allow the machine screws to be tightened more than could previously be done, without compromising the interaction of the nut, the screw, and the clamping wall.
Specifically, the present invention provides an electrical screw terminal that includes a blade for connecting the electrical screw terminal to a receptacle that is provided in an electrical circuit. A terminal frame is connected to the blade and has a closed perimeter with an inner space defined within the closed perimeter. The inner space of the terminal frame houses a captured nut that moves along a screw when the screw is rotated. The closed perimeter of the terminal frame defined, at least in part by an upper wall, a pair of side walls extending from the upper wall, and a base wall extending between and connecting the side walls to each other at their lower ends.
It is thus one object of the invention to provide an electrical screw terminal of simple construction with a closed perimeter terminal frame that anchors its side walls together at their upper and lower ends, mitigating the extent to which a captured nut can within the terminal frame and push the side walls away from each other. This may increase how much clamping force the captured nut applies to a wire because rotation of the screw is substantially converted into linear movement of the captured nut along the screw. Therefore, the captured nut may move along the length of the screw in preference to rotating the captured nut and bending out the sidewalls of the terminal frame.
The base wall may include (i) an upright base wall portion that extends generally parallel to the side walls, and (ii) an angled base wall portion that extends generally angularly with respect to the side walls. The terminal frame may include a pair of lips extending from the side walls toward each other and connecting the side walls to the upright and angled base wall portions of the terminal frame.
It is thus another object of the invention to provide an electrical screw terminal with multiple base wall portions, at least one of which extends angularly with respect to the side walls. The angled base wall portion may serve as an angled gusset or brace that adds rigidity to the terminal frame. The pair of lips connects the side and base wall portions to each other, which may further add to the rigidity of the terminal frame. The rigidity of the terminal frame may help hold the side walls a constant distance from each other, ensuring that the sidewalls do not bend out to accommodate rotation of the captured nut, and resist folding, buckling over, or collapsing of the terminal frame. This may allow greater downward pressure and torque to be applied to the screw while installing a wire into the screw terminal, increasing the amount of clamping force applied to the wire.
The terminal frame may also include a finger extending between and fixing the upright and angled base wall portions with respect to each other, anchoring the side walls at a constant distance with respect to each other. An aperture may extend through at least one of the blade and the upright base wall portion and the finger may extend through the aperture. An end of the finger may be bent to define a J-shaped profile with the bent end pointing upward toward the terminal frame.
It is thus another object of the invention to provide an electrical screw terminal with upright and angled base wall portions that are mechanically attached to each other or to other components or portions of the screw terminal. This may prevent relative sliding movement and bending of portions of the screw terminal with respect to each other and may maintain the integrity of the terminal frame so that the side walls of the frame do not bend outwardly and thus may also mitigate tendencies of the captured nut to rotate between the side walls.
The captured nut may include a top wall with an irregular surface. The irregular surface of the captured nut top wall may include multiple ridges. The ridges may extend in a direction that is generally orthogonal to the wire that is held in the screw terminal.
It is thus another object of the invention to provide an electrical screw terminal with a capture nut that includes ridges, grooves, or other surface irregularities that can engage or bite into the wire. This configuration increases the surface area of the interface of the captured nut and wire and may supplement the holding ability of the screw terminal so that a greater pulling force would be required to withdraw the wire from the screw terminal.
The electrical screw terminal may be provided within a terminal block that includes a housing which is made from an insulating material that at least partially covers the electrical screw terminal. The housing of the terminal block includes an opening that aligns with the inner space of the terminal frame. The captured nut is movable between (i) an open position in which a passage extends through the opening of the housing and into the inner space of the terminal frame, allowing the wire to insert through the housing and into the terminal frame, and (ii) a closed position in which the captured nut extends across substantially the entire opening of the housing, preventing the wire from inserting into the terminal frame.
It is thus another object of the invention to provide a terminal block with a captured nut that is tall enough to substantially cover the opening through the housing when the captured nut is tightened without a wire in the screw terminal. This may ensure that the wire is inserted on the appropriate side of the nut and the relatively taller nut may have more threads that can accommodate greater forces in its thread engagement with the screw, allowing the nut to apply greater clamping forces to the wire.
The housing may include a top wall that retains the screw from above. The housing may also include a ledge that supports the screw terminal by an engagement of a tab that extends from the terminal frame and the ledge. The screw terminal is vertically maintained within the housing, between the housing top wall, and the ledge.
It is thus another object of the invention to provide a terminal block that can prevent the screw from being completely removed from the capture nut. It is another object of the invention to provide a terminal block with a robust support that can hold the screw terminal in a vertical direction, allowing move downward force to be applied to the screw when rotating it, which may result in more torque being applied to the screw without the tool slipping out of the screw.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon review of the following detailed description, claims, and drawings in which like numerals are used to designate like features.
Before the embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of the components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein are for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. The use of “including” and “comprising” and variations thereof is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items and equivalents thereof.
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In other embodiments, the height “H” of nut 160 is not large enough to completely cover the opening 18. However, in such embodiments, it is preferred that any gap which is defined between the edges of opening 18 and nut 160, when the nut is in a closed position, is too small for the wire 8 to fit into. This may reduce the likelihood of the wire 8 being installed improperly into the screw terminal 100, with the wire 8 being on the wrong side of the nut 160.
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Ridges 165 are configured to create transversely extending localized deformations in the wire 8. This increases the surface area of the interface between the wire 8 and nut 160 and provides a wavy or toothed mechanical interlock therebetween. Although the ridges 165 can deform the wire 8, the top surfaces of ridges 165 are blunt enough to prevent them from shearing through the wire 8 when clamping the wire 8 into the screw terminal 100.
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Variations and modifications of the foregoing are within the scope of the present invention. It is understood that the invention disclosed and defined herein extends to all alternative combinations of two or more of the individual features mentioned or evident from the text and/or drawings. All of these different combinations constitute various alternative aspects of the present invention. The embodiments described herein explain the best modes known for practicing the invention and will enable others skilled in the art to utilize the invention. The claims are to be construed to include alternative embodiments to the extent permitted by the prior art.
Various features of the invention are set forth in the following claims.
This Non-Provisional Application claims benefit to U.S. Provisional 61/254,092 filed Oct. 22, 2009 and hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61254092 | Oct 2009 | US |