The present invention concerns a wiring harness end connector for an electronic module or an electronic card. It especially finds application in the case of connection of electronic modules contained in insulating cases, for example for vehicle headlights.
In the prior art, such electronic modules are connected for example to a central computer, by means of a wiring harness, generally comprising a protective sheath, and a group or set of conductors, sometimes themselves insulated. Most often, the protective sheath also encloses an electromagnetic shielding braid and, in certain applications which can have an effect on the electromagnetic environment, a ferrite or plastoferrite core surrounds part of the extension of the harness.
The problem at the root of the invention consists of providing a shielded connection between an electronic module, such as an assembly containing a Xenon lamp and a high-voltage electronic module, and an electronic control module, whilst complying with the high-voltage insulation constraints, the constraints related to the electromagnetic standards, and the mechanical space requirement constraints.
In particular, the problem arises in that the wiring harness must comprise at each of these ends a connector intended to fit mechanically and electrically with a reciprocal connector on the electronic module to which it is connected. This characteristic of the presence of a connector on the harness leads to an increase in the space requirement and, depending on the mutual orientations of the connectors and the harness itself, the space requirement may increase considerably.
With this aim of reducing the space requirement of the assembly comprising harness and connector, it is known how to produce connectors which are mounted in line with the harness in various orientations, which are chosen so as to reduce this space requirement in the passenger compartment of a vehicle for example. Unfortunately, in each particular study for a given electronic module and an environment in which the module is placed, such as in a motor vehicle, it is necessary each time to redesign the connector and, at the very least, the interface area between the end of the harness and the connector itself.
In the prior art, for the same harness/electronic module pair, it is conventional to have a first part number for a harness with right-hand output and a second part number for a harness with left-hand output. This is the case in particular for the equipment of a vehicle headlight which is intended to equip a right-hand headlight or a left-hand headlight. The increase in the number of component part numbers is a source of difficulties and costs for the production and maintenance of assemblies using such wiring harnesses.
In particular, the choice of an orientation optimising the space requirement can also be constraining through an additional requirement for reducing the length of the wiring harness, which contributes in particular to decreasing the electrical losses, the electromagnetic radiation, the overall cost of the connection, and its weight in the vehicle. It is therefore particularly advantageous to provide a connector structure which makes it possible, throughout the design of the harness and the connector itself, to retain a freedom of choice of the relative orientation of the wiring harness and the connectors which are associated with its ends.
In order to solve the aforementioned problems of the prior art and achieve the objectives indicated, the present invention concerns an end connector for a shielded wiring harness, comprising a connector body comprising a shielding case made of conductive material, and characterised in that it comprises an orientation component capable of making the case and the body cooperate with means of shielding the wiring harness and of providing a relative orientation of the end of the harness and of the connector which can be selected so as to reduce the space requirement of the wiring harness, of the connector and of an electronic module or electronic card to which the connector is connected.
According to one aspect of the invention, the orientation component comprises an anchoring part fixed to the body of the connector.
According to one aspect of the invention, the anchoring part consists of a tab going into a passage in the body of the connector.
According to one aspect of the invention, the body of the connector comprises a case.
According to one aspect of the invention, the case surrounds an electrical contact area or tab support.
According to one aspect of the invention, the case is made up of two parts equipped with fixing means.
According to one aspect of the invention, the case comprises a projection on the side where the electrical wires of the wiring harness interface with the connector.
According to one aspect of the invention, the wiring harness comprises a shielding braid.
According to one aspect of the invention, the connector cooperates with a ferrule intended to grip the shielding braid and a corresponding part of the connector body.
According to one aspect of the invention, the ferrule and/or the shielding braid cooperate with a shielding device associated with the connector body.
According to one aspect of the invention, the shielding device cooperates with at least one electrical contact area or tab.
According to one aspect of the invention, the connector comprises at least one first and one second connection part.
According to one aspect of the invention, the orientation component makes two half-shells of the case and the body cooperate with the shielded braid.
Other characteristics and advantages of the present invention will be better understood with the help of the description and the accompanying figures amongst which:
FIGS. 3 to 5 depict variants of the same connector in three different orientations with different orientation components;
FIGS. 6 to 8 depict three variants of an embodiment of a connector according to the invention;
FIGS. 10 to 12 depict three views explaining another embodiment of a connector according to the invention.
The connectors 2 and 3 have a substantially parallelepipedal shape, the largest dimension of which is oriented in the direction VC1 for the first connector 2 and in the direction VC2 for the second connector 3. Each end of the harness has an orientation along the vector VF1 and the vector VF2. It should be noted that the orientations VF1 and VC1 of the first connector 2 and of the first end of the wiring harness 1 are identical. It should also be noted that the orientations VF2 and VC2 of the second connector 3 and of the second end of the wiring harness 1 are in the same plane and orthogonal.
The first connector 2 and second connector 3 are similar and comprise two half-shells 5 and 6 which are assembled together by means of fixing means known to persons skilled in the art. Each half-shell such as the half-shell 5 has a spring 7 which is intended to guarantee continuity of the shielding of the connector 2 with the electronic module (not depicted) with which it is mechanically and electrically associated.
The first connector also comprises an orientation component 4 which is intended to become fixed to the upper part of the assembly consisting of the two half-shells 5 and 6. In order to carry out this fixing, the orientation component 4 is provided with tabs 8 and 9, and with two other tabs which are not visible in the drawing, but are symmetrical with the first two mentioned, and which go into housings provided for that purpose on the half-shells 5 and 6. In one particular embodiment, the orientation component 4 contributes to the fixing of the two half-shells to one another.
It should be noted that the orientation component has lateral openings so that four sides can be used for output of the harness 1. In particular, the orientation component has two large parallel sides and two small parallel sides. The wiring harness 1 leaves the first connector 2 through a small side. The wiring harness 1 leaves the second connector 3 through a large side.
In particular, on the second connector 3 in
FIGS. 3 to 5 depict three particular embodiments of an orientation component useful for the connector of the invention. In
In
For better understanding of the arrangement of the invention, an exploded view of a connector according to the invention has been depicted, but in an embodiment where it comprises more orientation components and in which the orientation of the wiring harness is perpendicular to the directions depicted in the preceding embodiments. The shielded braid at the end of the wiring harness 20 goes in underneath the ferrule so as to grip part 48 of the support of the electrical tabs 48 of the connector. As already described, the connector case consists of two half-shells 46 and 44 which have extensions 46a and 44a (
In one particular embodiment, the ferrule 22 is implemented by a mechanical part made from flexible aluminium.
In one particular embodiment, the case 60 has conductive extensions as depicted in
In one particular embodiment, the invention uses a shielding device, the connector of the invention being connected on the one hand to a link conveying signals which interfere weakly in electromagnetic radiation terms, and on the other hand to a link conveying radiating signals which interfere sufficiently to interfere with the neighbouring signals on their contact areas. In this case, the shielding element is intended to surround only the set of interfering contact areas of the first link allowing connection with a shielding braid. As a result, in this case, it is not essential to shield the different sets of contact areas of the electronic card to which the connector is subsequently connected.
In such an arrangement, the connector of the invention comprises a first set of contact areas associated with the first electrical link connected to a receiving connector on the associated electronic card or module. The connector of the invention next comprises a second set of contact areas associated with the second electrical link and connected to another receiving connector on the associated electronic card or module. In this case, the shielding part is applied only to the first set of contact areas.
The first set of wires 70 is intended for an electrical link of strongly interfering signals. This set of wires 70 is therefore surrounded in a shielding braid 66 and ends at a first set of contact areas 70 on the support 60 of the contact areas or tabs.
The second set of wires 72 is intended for an electrical link of weakly interfering signals. This set of wires 72 is therefore not inserted in the shielding braid 66, but can be combined in a single harness, in particular by means of bindings, or else by means of an insulating sheath coming above both the shielding braid 66 inside which the first set of wires 70 is located and the second set of wires 72. By virtue of the orientation component 64, the wiring harness, as explained with the help of the previous figures, takes an orientation perpendicular to the orientation of insertion of the wires on the support 60 of the contact areas or tabs.
In particular, a ferrule 68 is disposed around a protruding part of the case 60 so as to grip the shielding braid 68 and, if applicable, which is not depicted here, with a shielding device which does not need to be extended as far as the second set of wires 72.
In order to provide the electrical connection of the harness with an electrical module or an electronic card, the support case for the electrical contact areas or tabs 60 comprises:
FIGS. 10 to 12 depict another embodiment of a connector according to the invention in which the orientation component makes the two parts of the case cooperate with the body and the braid.
The present description does not describe any particular way for connecting the conductive end of an electrical wire with a contact area or tab inserted in the support case for the contact area or tabs such as the support 48 (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0407724 | Jul 2004 | FR | national |