The present invention relates to an antenna. More particularly this invention concerns a high-frequency antenna that can be mounted in a vent of a motor vehicle in particular for use by a mobile radio set or telephone.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,686,888 describes a high-frequency antenna for use with a mobile radio that is mounted in the vent grill. The antenna comprises a monopole and ground plane (or balancing antennas) all formed as conductive traces on flat T-shaped printed-circuit board. The board is fitted to the plastic vent grille and acts as a so-called slit antenna, particularly usable in the 2.4 GHz range. The ground plane extends at a right angle to the monopole, and there may be in fact two ground planes.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved antenna.
Another object is the provision of such an improved antenna which is of simpler and more durable construction than the prior-art devices.
A motor-vehicle antenna has according to the invention a monopole formed by a rigid circuit-board having a conductive trace, a socket for connecting a coaxial cable to the monopole, and a ground plane formed of rigid sheet metal or a circuit board and fixed to the monopole.
When the ground plane or balancing antenna is formed of sheet metal, the antenna is very rugged and it has fewer parts than the prior-art such antennas. As a result such an antenna can be made very inexpensively. A sheet-metal ground plane can be made simply by stamping.
When the ground plane or balancing antenna is formed of a printed-circuit board, the resultant structure is still quite durable and fairly light. The use of a printed-circuit board makes it easy to mount the antenna in a motor vehicle without having to provide insulated supports engaged between the ground plane and the grounded vehicle body, as the connection can be made to the phenolic board of the printed circuit in a location where it has not conductive traces. A printed-circuit ground plane can be provided with clips or fasteners allowing it to be screwed or riveted in place in, for example, a motor-vehicle vent.
According to a further feature of the invention, the monopole and the ground plane are permanently bonded together, typically by soldering. This produces a very solid mechanical connection that conducts electricity well. Of course, instead of solder it would be possible to use a strong conductive adhesive for the bonding.
The ground plane in accordance with the invention, in particular when of sheet metal, is formed with an edge flange to which the monopole is fixed. This flange is formed with a groove or seat into which the circuit board of the monopole fits for a strong connection. The flange is central so the resultant structure has the standard T-shape of a monopole with a pair of ground planes. Thus the ground plane and monopole are both substantially planar and extend generally perpendicular to each other. Such a structure can easily be integrated into the grill of a motor-vehicle vent so it is safe but virtually invisible.
The socket includes jaws crimpable to the coaxial cable. Hence the cable can be solidly connected to the antenna by a standard cable crimper.
The socket according to the invention is fixed to the monopole or to the ground plane. When the ground plane is made of sheet metal, the socket can even be unitarily formed with the ground plane. If not unitary, the socket can have tabs set in the monopole or ground plane so the cable connection is very strong.
According to a further feature of the invention, a splitter is provided having a pair of sockets connectable via respective coaxial cables to two such monopoles and another socket connectable to a receiver or transmitter, so that this splitter can be used to feed a signal from a transmitter to two antennas, or can combine the signals from two antennas on opposite sides of the vehicle and feed them to a receiver. Either way the splitter has a housing holding the printed-circuit board of the splitter, and in which the board can actually be potted, along with inner ends of the sockets. Such a splitter can be mounted anywhere in the vehicle.
The above and other objects, features, and advantages will become more readily apparent from the following description, it being understood that any feature described with reference to one embodiment of the invention can be used where possible with any other embodiment and that reference numerals or letters not specifically mentioned with reference to one figure but identical to those of another refer to structure that is functionally if not structurally identical. In the accompanying drawing:
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103 15 641 | Apr 2003 | DE | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040212539 A1 | Oct 2004 | US |