The present invention relates to a control device for an electronic apparatus, in particular a device of the type commonly referred to as a “trackball”.
The invention relates to a control device of the type comprising a plastic housing in which are arranged two orthogonal revolving coding shafts driven in rotation, each in both directions, by a control member in the form of a spherical ball mounted rotatably in the housing, and of the type in which each shaft is tied in rotation to a mobile element belonging to a generator of control signals, in particular for the displacement of a cursor over a screen of an electronic apparatus of the type in which the generator of control signals comprises:
The mobile contact rod is tied in rotation to the last turn of a first axial end of a spiral torsion spring, made of metal wire and of horizontal axis, the cylindrical body of which is accommodated in the housing and the second axial end of which is immobilized in rotation in such a way that the mobile contact rod is mounted to tilt about a horizontal axis parallel to the axis of the associated coding shaft.
According to the design proposed in this document, the upper span of the mobile contact rod is a 180° bent span which joins the mobile contact rod to the last turn of the first axial end of the spring and which lies in a vertical plane parallel to the axis of the spiral spring and substantially tangential to the periphery of the body of the spring.
The second end of the spring is blocked in rotation by its last turn which extends via a strand of axial orientation which itself extends via a free end strand which is of semicircular shape lying in a downwards vertical plane in such a way as to be received vertically in a complementary slot which is formed in the lower part of the housing and open vertical towards the top.
Each lateral lower contact element is a fixed contact lug of vertical orientation.
The contact lug can consist of a conducting lug belonging to a span of a flat flex cable which lies along a block of insulating material of the housing. It can also consist of a metal fixed contact around which the insulating material block is overmolded. Ball-type coding devices such as this are particularly compact and high-performance, and the present invention is aimed at improving certain aspects thereof.
The design of each coding spring affording several functions is indeed complex, thereby entailing a relatively lengthy forming cycle time, in particular so as to guarantee good parallelism between the plane of the fixed loop for rotationally immobilizing the spring and the plane of the mobile loop comprising the mobile contact rod.
In a prior solution, any defect of parallelism between the planes of the fixed and mobile loops gives rise to a defect of positioning in the rest state of the mobile contact rod with respect to a vertical plane of the housing, a recess of which receives the fixed loop.
The invention is aimed in particular at proposing a new design for the rotational immobilizing of the coding spring about its axis.
With this aim, the invention proposes a control device of the abovementioned type in which the mobile contact rod is tied in rotation to the last turn of a first axial end of a torsional spiral spring, made of metal wire and of horizontal axis, the cylindrical body of which is accommodated in the housing and the second axial end of which is immobilized in rotation in such a way that the mobile contact rod is mounted to tilt about a horizontal axis parallel to the axis of the associated coding shaft, characterized in that the span of second axial end of the spring is accommodated in a duct of the housing with at least one turn of this span which is thermowelded into the concave wall of the duct so as to immobilize it in rotation.
According to other characteristics of the device according to the invention:
The invention also proposes a process for fixing a metal element, made of a conducting material, in a plastic body of an electrical and/or electronic component of the type in which at least one span of the metal element is accommodated in a duct of the body, characterized in that the said at least one span is fixed by thermowelding into the concave wall of the duct.
According to other characteristics of the process:
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will become apparent on reading the derailed description which follows for the understanding of which reference may be made to the appended drawings, in which:
FIGS. 4 to 6, 7A, 7B and 8 are sectional views of the device according to the invention, through the vertical sectional planes 4-4 to 8-8 indicated in
FIGS. 10 to 13 are views similar to that of
FIGS. 14 to 16 are isometric views corresponding to the views of
Limited Description of the Invention
The turning of a coding shaft is detected by a contact rod 70 of a corresponding one of two springs 50L, 50T. The upper end of each contact rod lies between teeth of the pinion 44. When a coding shaft and its pinion turns, the upper end of the contact rod is repeatedly deflected and released, and the contact rod pivots back and fourth. The lower end of the contact rod at its lower span 78 then repeatedly engages and disengages one terminal pin of a pair of terminal pins 134L or 134T. Electricity passes though one of the springs 50T or 50L and though one of the terminal pins 134L, 134T to complete a circuit.
In this description a part such as contact rod 70 will sometimes be referred to as 70L or 70T to show the element to which it belongs.
Each spring has a main portion that lies in a spring recess such as 46T of the housing.
The contact rod initially assumes the undeflected, or untilted or released position of
When the pinion turns in the opposite direction, such as counterclockwise in
While terms such as “top”, “bottom”, etc. have been used to describe the control device as illustrated, the control device can be used in any orientation.
More Complete Description of the Invention
For the description of the invention, we shall in a nonlimiting manner adopt the vertical, longitudinal and transverse orientations according to the V, L, T reference frame indicated in
By convention, we shall also adopt the terms lower, upper, front, rear, and left, right with reference to
In the description which follows, identical, similar or analogous elements belonging to the embodiments according to the invention or according to the state of the art will be designated by the same numerical or alphanumerical references.
The first part of the description will describe chiefly the elements common to the embodiments of the invention.
The device 20 (
The device essentially comprises a central trackball or sphere 30 which drives in rotation, here by friction, two orthogonal coding shafts 32T, 32L, each of which is part of a signal generator.
The two shafts and the signal generators are of the same construction and of overall symmetric design, and arranged symmetrically, with respect to a vertical plane of symmetry corresponding to the line S-S of
Thus the identical, similar or analogous elements associated with the coding shaft of longitudinal axis and with the coding shaft of transverse axis will be designated by the same reference numerals indexed “L” and “T” respectively.
Each coding shaft 32L, 32T (
Each body 34 comprises a drive drum or roller 42 whose peripheral surface cooperates by friction with that of the ball 30, and a toothed coding pinion 44 which are fixed to the shaft.
Beneath each coding shaft 32L, 32T, the lower part 24 of the housing 22 comprises a recess of semicylindrical general duct 15 shape 46L, 46T open towards the top (see
Each recess 46L, 46T receives the cylindrical main body 48L, 48T of a torsional spiral spring 50L, 50T made of metallic wire wound around an axis 52L, 52T.
In the embodiment of
The spring of
Thus, the shaping of this end of each spring is such that the joining strand 66L, 66T, the contact rod 70L, 70T and the bent strand 68L, 68T (which constitutes the upper end span of the contact rod) lie in a vertical plane substantially tangential to the periphery of the cylindrical body 48L, 48T of the spring 50L, 50T.
The vertical orientation of the contact rod 70L, 70T, in the rest position results from the design of each spring 50L, 50T with its contact rod 70L, 70T and its bent strand 58L, 58T, the latter being guided vertically in the slot 62L, 62T in such a way as to position the spring 50L, 50T angularly and to rotationally immobilize its end comprising the turn 54L, 54T.
The lower part 24 (
The height of each vertical contact rod 70L, 70T (
Each lower contact span 78L, 78T is also received with lateral play between two vertical abutment surfaces 80L, 80T and 82L, 82T (
As a function of the rotation of the ball 30, each control rod 70L, 70T is capable of tilting with respect to its vertical position with a corresponding displacement of the lower contact span 78L, 78T towards the abutment faces 80L-82L, 80T-82T.
For the rotational mounting of each coding shaft 32L, 32T, the lower part 24 of the housing 22 comprises, in proximity to its horizontal upper face 25, recesses open vertically towards the top, 84L, 84T and 86L, 86T, which respectively receive the free ends 36L, 36T and 38L, 38T of the body 34L, 34T of each coding shaft 32L, 32T.
The horizontal width of the recesses 84L, 84T is substantially equal to the diameter of the end pivots 36L, 36T while the recesses 86L, 86T are open laterally towards the inside of the housing, each recess being supplemented with an elastic pin in the shape of a hairpin 90L, 90T which is mounted vertically in a complementary recess 88L, 88T (
The device 20 also comprises an entry switch which consists in essence of an elastic triggering member 94 (
The triggering member 94 (
The angular positioning of the triggering member 94 in the lower part 24 of the housing is ensured by means of the pair of recesses 104T (
As may be seen in particular in
The cover 26, illustrated in particular in
The lower face 27 comprises cylindrical arc-shaped indentations to allow free passage and rotation of the rollers 42 and of the pinions 44.
The cover 26 also comprises a vertical partition 110 complementary to the opening 108 (
In the assembled position, and as will be seen for example in
The electrical linking of the control device 20 is ensured by means of a flat flexible cord or cable 28, also known as a flex cable, whose design and technology are known.
The height of the partition 110 (
In all the figures, except
The flex cable 28 thus comprises a body in the shape of a band 29 (
The rear free end span 120, on the right when considering for example
To make the entry switch, in association with the triggering member 94, the upper face 122 of the rear span 120 comprises a central conducting lug P1 in the form of an inset, joined to a wire F1, which is situated vertically plumb with the central part 98, and two lugs P2, joined together and to a wire F2, which are situated longitudinally on either side of the central lug P1 and on each of which bears a lower contact edge 102L of the triggering member 94.
Conducting lugs are also provided for the transmission of the coding signals produced by the signal generators associated with the contact shafts 32L and 32T.
The body of each spring 50L, 50T is joined to a wire F4L, F4T, by way of a lug P4L, 25 P4T, on which the free end 60L, 60T of the corresponding bent arm 58L, 58T bears elastically.
Thus, each mobile contact rod 70L, 70T is joined, via the body 48L, 48T of the spring 50L, 50T, to a conducting lug P4L, P4T, and hence to a corresponding wire F4L, F4T.
The lower contact span 78L, 78T (
By placing the span 120 of the flex cable 28 in position in the bottom 72, 74 of the lower part 24 of the housing 22, the various fixed contacts consisting of the conducting lugs Pi are made, while the part of the flex cable 28, 29 which exits the housing 22 via the opening 108 (
The manner of operation of the signal generators will now be described.
This description will be given with reference to the coding shaft 32L, the manner of operation of the other shaft being analogous insofar as all its components are identical, with the exception of the spring 50T which, for load balancing reasons, is of symmetric design with respect to the vertical plane S-S.
In the rest position represented in FIGS. 4 to 6, the mobile contact rod 70L is vertical and its bent upper span 68L is received, with lateral play along the direction T, between the opposing flanks 45L of two consecutive teeth of the coding pinion 44L.
By causing a rotation of the ball 30 about its center C, and here about a horizontal axis of longitudinal orientation, a rotation of the shaft 32L is caused about its axis of rotation 40L.
This rotation causes the contacting of the flank 45L of the right-hand tooth which will then push the upper span 68L transversely, from right to left.
By virtue of the possibility of torsional elastic deformation of the body 48L of the spring 50L to which the rod 70L is tied and which functions as restoring spring for returning the rod 70L to its rest position, the latter tilts overall about the axis 52L until its lower contact span 78L comes into electrical contact against the lug P5L, and into abutment against the abutment surface 80L (
The clockwise rotation of the roller 32L continues and this rotation causes, in the manner of a mechanism of the “Maltese Cross” type, the automatic escapement of the upper span 68L (
If the rotational movement of the ball 30 is continued in the same direction, the rod 70L will again tilt with the same orientation represented in
Conversely, if the ball 30 is driven in rotation in the other direction and the tooth 45L causes the tilting of the contact rod 70L until its lower contact span 78 comes into contact against the conducting lug P6L and into abutment against the vertical surface 82L.
This coming into contact then establishes an electrical contact between the lugs P6L and P4L, generating a signal which is different from that resulting from the linking across the spring 50L of the lugs P5L and P4L.
This differentiation of the two types of signals, established between P4L and P5L or P4L and P6L, makes it possible to distinguish the direction of rotation of the relevant coding shaft, and hence the direction of rotation of the ball, doing so by means of a single mobile contact, 70L or 70T, for each signal generator.
Of course, depending on the type of manipulation applied to the ball 30 by the user, the latter can cause the simultaneous rotation of both coding shafts 32L and 32T in one or other of their opposite directions of rotation.
The ball practically always revolves about a horizontal axis. and. as a function of the orientation of the plane of rotation of the ball, the numbers of pulses generated by the two generators are respectively proportional to the X and Y components of investigation of the cursor on the screen.
The driving of the rollers 42L, 42T carried by the shafts 32L, 32T is ensured by friction with the outer surface of the trackball 30.
The shafts together with the rollers are urged under elastic hearing against the ball by the hairpin springs 90L-92L and 90T-92T (
Entry is effected by applying to the trackball 30 a vertical load F oriented globally in the direction parallel to the direction V.
This action has the effect of causing its downwards vertical displacement with respect to the lower part 24 of the housing and of causing a change of state of the monostable triggering member 94 until its central part 98 (
Owing to the positioning of the center C (
Various steps of assembling the components of the device 20 may be seen in succession in
The positional holding of the span 120 of the flex cable 28 in the bottom 72, 74 of the lower part 24 of the housing 22 is ensured through the contact pressure of the four edges 142L and 142T of the member 94 and, according to the state of the art, of the strands 58L and 58T (
This pinching is compounded with that by the lower edge 11 of the partition 110 of the cover which can be completed with complementary shapes (not represented) such as bumps and/or complementary hollows, formed in the edge 111 and/or in the facing part of the facing bottom 74.
The various aspects of the invention will now be described in particular.
Overall, each spring 50, 50T is simplified by eliminating the loop-shaped free end strand 58L, 58T (
The lower part 24 is simplified to the same extent.
In accordance with the invention, in order to afford the functions previously fulfilled by the loops 58L, 58T, the second axial end of the spring 50L, 50T, comprising the last turn 54L, 54T (
For example, it is possible to thermoweld the eight or nine end turns, on the right when considering
The thermowelding operation, represented diagrammatically in
The passing of the current between the electrodes E1, E2 through the turns causes, by Joule effect, instantaneous heating of the corresponding wound metal wire span of the spring that constitutes the turns.
The two electrodes E1 and E2 moreover exert a bearing force directed vertically downwards on the span of the spring.
The heating obtained by Joule effect then causes localized melting of the concave wall 47L, 47T of the duct 46L, 46T.
Moreover, a “suction” and/or capillarity phenomenon occurs, by virtue of which the molding skin of the concave surface 47L, 47T of the plastic duct 46L, 46T hugs the entire external peripheral surface of the group of heated turns, while also lying between the heated turns.
After halting the passage of the current, cooling is rapid and the plastic, which has previously been melted, solidifies and hugs the periphery of the group of turns, with moreover excellent adherence.
The intensity of the current and the time for which it passes are chosen as a function of the ohmic resistance of the wire from which the spring 50L, 50T is made and of the melting temperature of the constituent plastic of the lower part 24 of the housing.
By way of example, the intensity is between 1A and 2A, and the heating time is of the order of a few tenths of a second.
Owing to the elastic deformation properties of the turns, each in its plane substantially perpendicular to the axis 52L, 52T of the body 48L, 48T, the application of the electrodes may cause a slight deformation of the turns, giving them an elliptical shape.
This deformation is advantageous since it increases the penetration of the corresponding parts of the turns into the local molten concave surface 47L, 47T of the duct.
To afford electrical linking of the body 48L, 48T of the spring 50L, 50T, the flex cable 29 comprises a conducting lug P4L, P4T which lies vertically above the plane of the bottom of the lower part 24 so as to be positioned opposite the surface 130L, 130T (
During the thermowelding operation, the bearing force exerted vertically downwards by the two electrodes E1 and E2 applies the corresponding portions of the periphery of the turns against the conducting lug P4L, P4T (
Owing to the elastic properties of the turns in a vertical plane perpendicular to the axis 52L, 52T, the bearing force of the group of turns on the conducting lug P4L, P4T, itself bearing on the surfaces 130L, 130T, is maintained after the end of the thermowelding operation, that is to say when the electrodes no longer exert any load on the spring.
To guarantee good positioning of the lugs P4L and P4T under the corresponding groups of turns to be thermowelded, the flex cable can comprise a positioning hole in which is inserted a stud 132L, 132T (
The stud 132L, 132T can also be hot crimped so as to further improve the positional holding of the tag of the flex cable 29 which comprises the lug P4L, P4T.
The number of thermowelded turns depends on the value that one wishes to obtain for the stiffness of the torsional couple of the spring affording the function of restoring the mobile contact rod 70L, 70T to its vertical rest position, as well as the mechanical strength desired for the holding and the fixing of the thermowelded span of the spring 50L, 50T.
The vertical angular orientation of the mobile contact rod 70L, 70T of the spring is obtained by means of a jig, not represented, belonging to the tooling used for the thermowelding operation.
Each duct-shaped recess 46L, 46T is designed in such way as to avoid any radial clamping of the turns of the corresponding spring and there is thus no risk of inducing torsional stresses in the turns during the operations of placement and fixing of the spring by thermowelding.
Thus, after the operation of fixing the spring, there are no risks of spurious angular displacement of the mobile loop comprising the mobile contact rod when the jig is removed.
In the design illustrated in particular in
It is, in particular, necessary to guarantee high accuracy in the length of the rod 70L, 70T, and perfect burr-free sectioning of the lower free end 76L, 76T.
Moreover, the establishing, repeated hundreds of thousands of times, of electrical contact between the sectioned edge of the lower end and the facing surface of the conducting lugs, might cause premature wear of the precious metal layer that covers these latter parts.
In order to remedy these drawbacks, the invention proposes a design aimed at producing a fixed electrical contact which is elastically deformable.
For this purpose, the lower span 78L, 78T (
The two fixed contact rods 134L or 134T of a contact pair associated with a mobile rod 70L or 70T are identical.
Thus, the invention advantageously calls upon four identical rods.
As may be seen in
The body 138L, 138T and the loop 142L, 142T are received in corresponding vertical slots 144L, 144T (
Thus, each fixed contact rod 134L, 134T is built-in in the manner of a beam, with the exception of its free end contact span 140L, 140T which lies freely, each on either side of the vertical mobile contact rod 70L, 70T.
Each free end span 140L, 140T is thus free to deform elastically laterally in a horizontal plane, the two parallel and opposed rods of a fixed contact pair preferably being aligned in the same horizontal plane.
Each vertical loop 142L, 142T (
In order to immobilize each fixed contact rod 134L, 134T in the corresponding vertical slot 144L, 144T of the housing, it may be received in this slot with slight lateral clamping between the opposed walls of the slot.
In the same manner as for the turns of the springs, the fixing of each fixed contact rod can be improved through an operation of thermowelding by localized heating of a span of the straight body 138L, 138T with the aid of two electrodes that come to bear for this purpose.
In the same manner as for the springs, the hearing force exerted by the electrodes during the passage of the current then applies a heating force to the loop 142L, 142T, on the associated fixed conducting lug, which is maintained after the application of the electrodes.
The electrical contact established (see
Moreover, each free end span 140L, 140T exhibits a capacity for elastic deformation allowing “accompaniment” of the free end span 78L, 78T.
This phenomenon of accompaniment makes it possible to absorb any dimensional variations of the coding springs, thereby avoiding large variations of the snap-fastening loads.
Moreover, it dampens the mechanical impact between the spans 78L, 78T and the spans 140L, 140T.
In so far as, in the case of rapid rotation of the ball 30, the period between two impacts may be less than 2 ms, the risks of spurious bounce are thus reduced.
Moreover, the accompaniment by elastic deformation achieves a self-cleaning effect between the cylinders in contact.
The mobile and fixed contact rods may be produced from a metal wire made of steel or of copper alloy previously plated with gold or silver.
The electrical contact no longer depends on an accurate length of the mobile contact rod 70L, 70T, nor on the quality of the sectioning of its free end 78L, 78T.
The bulkiness of the new fixed contacts is particularly reduced, this allowing a large increase in the total number of turns of each spring, and hence a proportional reduction in the snap-fastening couple when fitting the loop 68L, 68T into the pinion 44L, 44T.
Hence, it is thus possible to reduce the diameter of each roller 42L, 42T without modifying the frictional forces and hence the possible risks of slippage between each elastomer roller 42L, 42T and the surface of the trackball 30.
With respect to the state of the art, the diameter of each roller is for example reduced by ⅓. This reduction makes it possible to increase the number of pulses per revolution of the ball in a ratio of 3/2.
It is also possible to reduce the eccentricity of the ball with respect to the center of the upper face of the device.
The total height of the housing is reduced without modifying the total height of the device, that is to say the height between the lower face of the lower part 24 of the housing and the apex of the trackball 30.
It is thus possible to increase the height of the part of the ball that emerges beyond the upper face 144 of the housing 22, thereby making it possible to install the device in equipment whose housing walls are larger.
According to a variant (not represented), it is also possible to double the number of fixed contacts for each coding spring, by providing two intermediate contact rods, of slightly different height, placed one above the other in the same slot and hearing on separate conducting lugs.
Such a solution allows independent doubling of the outputs of the device providing simultaneous signals.
Finally, the reduction in the eccentricity of the ball allows a better arrangement of the internal components of the device and in particular of the light-emitting diodes 150L, 150T (
The embodiment represented in
The lugs P4L and P4T are bowed lugs of the electrical linking “grid” which replaces the flex cable 28.
The contact springs and rods 50L,50T-70L,70T can be realized in the form of a single element which is symmetrical and which can be used either as a longitudinal or transverse one 50L,T-58L,T-68L,T-70L,T.
Depending upon the size of the housing, the general length of the spring-rod element might be more or less important. When the ratio between this length and the diameter of the wire it is made of, is greater than 75 (seventy-five), it is possible to replace the torsion spiral spring 50L, 50T by a torsion bar spring, i.e. a torsion spring made of wire and whose external diameter is equal to the diameter of the wire.
It is sufficient that the elastic momentum or torque resulting from the cooperation between the loop 68L, 68T and the associated pinion 44L, 44T remains inferior to the driving momentum or torque of the trackball on the roller 42L, 42T.
The spring is thus greatly simplified, as well as the corresponding receiving portions of the lower part, and its overall length is reduced as can be seen in FIGS. 23 to 29 of this document.
In this case, it is a corresponding span of the second axial end of the torsion bar spring which is thermowelded into a complementary concave wall of the housing.
According to another solution, such a wire or bar spring can be a torsion and flexion spring especially when the guided length of the “bar” span is very short and dose to the oscillating or tilting loop 68L, 68T.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0211394 | Sep 2002 | FR | national |
This is a continuation-in-part of PCT application PCT/EP2003/050605 filed 2 Sep. 2003 which designated the US and claimed priority from French application 0211394 filed 13 Sep. 2002.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP03/50605 | Sep 2003 | US |
Child | 11076678 | Mar 2005 | US |