[0001] The invention relates to a branch connector for coaxial cable having at least one
inner conductor surrounded by an inner insulation sheath, said inner sheath being
surrounded by at least one outer conductor and an outer insulation sheath respectively,
said branch connector comprising an elongated housing of electrically conductive
material, at least one end of which is provided with a feed-through channel for receiving
the cable and at least one electrically conductive tooth adapted for contacting the
outer conductor of the cable, an electrically conductive penetration pin axially arranged
in the housing, said penetration pin being electrically insulated from the housing,
at least one end of said penetration pin having a point radially penetrating in the
one feed-through channel and adapted for contacting the inner conductor of the cable
and with an insulation sheath for preventing electrical contact with the outer conductor
of the contacted cable, and a at least one clamping element for retaining the contacted
cable in the one feed-through channel.
[0002] A branch connector of this type is known from U.K. Patent application GB-A-2 082
850.
[0003] Due to the great increase in the use of microcomputers, home computers, word processing
equipment and their accompanying visual display terminals, printer units, memory equipment
etc., it is often necessary, for the transfer of information between the various users
in practice, to have a local connection network by means of which this equipment can
be interconnected. In office environments in particular, it is often necessary, for
the connection of equipment, to have the possibility of branching off this connection
network at any desired points.
[0004] A large number of units can be interconnected by means of coaxial cable and for that
purpose have suitable coaxial junction boxes. These local interconnection networks
are therefore largely built up of coaxial cable.
[0005] In the current networks the equipment is still generally connected by means of terminal
boxes. This means a T-shaped interconnection element, which is provided with coaxial
junction boxes, and to each end of which a coaxial cable is connected by means of
a coaxial plug. This manner of connection is fairly expensive for building up a local
connection network, and it is not possible with it to make branches in a cable in
use without interrupting the stream of information flowing through it.
[0006] With the branch connector disclosed by the above-mentioned U.K. patent application,
branching of a cable in use can be achieved, but this requires two succesive operations.
First, the coaxial cable to be branched must be confined in the feed-through chanel
using finger pressure, in which for contacting said cable an adequate amount of force
is required. Particularly for a stiff cable, i.e. a cable with insulation sheats
of a mechanically hard to penetrate material or a cable with relative thick conductors,
a considerable amount of force may be required.
[0007] After the cable is seated in the feed-through channel, a connector cover has to be
slideably fitted over the feed-through channel, to prevent the cable from being pressed
out of the feed-through channel. In order to fit this connector cover, it is required
that the cable is completely received in the feed-through channel, as seen in longitudinal
direction of the housing of the connector. When part of the periphery of the cable
protrudes the feed-through channel, it is not possible or just very difficult to fit
this connector cover, in which there is also a possibility that the outer insulation
sheat of the cable may be damaged by the connector cover sliding over the cable. Further,
the connector cover provides no relieve against tensile forces in longitudinal direction
of the cable. These tensile forces will be fully transferred to the penetration pin
and the at least one tooth, which is not favourable to the reliability and durability
of the electrical connections.
[0008] In view of the above-described disadvantages, the object of the invention is to
provide a branch connector of the type referred to in the preamble, with which coaxial
cables can be durably and reliably branched in one rapid and simple operation. The
branch connector according to the invention is characterized in thart said housing
is circular cylindrical in shape, the penetration pin is locked inside the housing
on a transverse supporting disc of insulation material, while the at least one clamping
element consists of a screwed sleeve with a corresponding feedthrough channel at
one end thereof and adapted to be fitted over the jacket of the cylindrical housing,
and a screw cap for coupling with said screwed sleeve for contacting and firmly retaining
the cable in the one feed-through channel.
[0009] By coupling together the screwed sleeve and the screw cap, a force is exerted radially
on the coaxial cable. Under the influence of this force, the penetration pin and the
at least one tooth successfully penetrate into the cable for contacting the inner
and the outer conductor, respectively. In contacted state, the cable is firmly confined
between the screw cap and the screwed sleeve, as a result of which the electric al
connections are relieved of tensile forces in longitudinal direction of the cable.
A further embodiment of the invention is characterized in that the housing and the
screwed sleeve are provided with means for retaining and positioning the screwed
sleeve in such a way that in the fitted state the one feed-through channel is open
for receiving to coaxial cable, as a result of which displacement of the cable in
longitudinal direction of the housing is also excluded.
[0010] As before mentioned, in the U.K. patent application the coaxial cable has to be received
and contacted in the feed-through channel by finger pressure. Such uncontrolled push-in
can lead to deformation of the cable, and the possibility that the penetration pin
penetrates not exactly radially in the cable, as result of which the inner conductor
can be insufficiently contacted so that no reliable connection will be established,
or the penetration pin may even arrive in the inner inslation sheat adjacent the
inner conductor, without contacting the latter.
[0011] In order to obtain an evenly distributed force on the cable for avoidance as far
as possible of deformation of the cable during contacting, according to a prefered
embodiment of the invention, a tubular pressure element is provided concentrically
inside the screw cap, said pressure element being adapted to fit into the housing,
and one closed end face of said pressure element coincides with the open end of the
screw cap. Further, an approximatley U-shaped supporting surface is pro- vided inside
the screwed sleeve, said U-shaped supporting surface having openings for feeding through
the penetration pin and the at least one tooth, said supporting surface together with
U-shaped notched in the one screw-threaded end of the screwed sleeve forming the corresponding
feed- through channel.
[0012] In contacted state the penetration pin may make contact by means of its conducting
point only with the inner conductor of the coaxial cable. In order to avoid faulty
contacts as much as possible, one must also prevent the penetration pin from moving
in axial and/or radial direction inside the housing. According to a preferred embodiment
of the invention, the penetration pin is attached to a carrier strip on which the
insulation material of the transverse supporting disc grips for the purpose of preventing
axial and radial shifting of the penetration pin within the supporting disc, and the
end of said penetration pin which is to penetrate into the cable is enclosed over
a part by the insulation material of the supporting disc, in order to prevent electrical
contact with the outer conductor of the contacted coaxial cable.
[0013] By designing the other end of the penetration pin as a contact socket or contact
pin, one forms together with the other end of the circular cylindrical housing, not
provided with the one feed-through channel, either a coaxial coupling socket or a
coaxial plug for connecting in a simple manner the cable or equipment to be connected.
It will be clear that the branch connector designed in this way according to the invention
can also advantageously be used as the end connector for a coaxial cable.
[0014] Because, according to a further embodiment of the invention the supporting disc with
the penetration pin is detachably locked inside the housing, it is with one type of
housing and clamping means possible to form a branch connector with either a coaxial
coupling socket or a coaxial plug output, simply by replacing the suporting disc
with the penetration pin.
[0015] If a branch with a plug connection is not desired or necessary, for example if an
additional coaxial cable has to be used between the branch point and the equipment
for connection, a further embodiment of the branch connector according to the invention
is characterized in that at the other end of the housing a second feed-through channel
of the same type with at least one tooth is provided, and the other end of the penetration
pin is also designed as a point, whereby a second coaxial cable can be received in
said second feed-through channel, contacted and retained with a second clamping element
of the same type.
[0016] The invention will now be explained in greater detail with reference to the examples
of embodiments shown in the drawings.
Fig. 1 shows a drawing in perspective with disassembled parats of a preferred embodiment
of the housing and the penetration pin of the branch connector according to the invention;
Fig. 2 shows in perspective the housing of the branch connector according to Fig.
1, with the penetration pin fitted therein, partially shown by dotted lines;
Fig. 3 shows a drawing in perspective with disassembled and "cutaway" parts of a
preferred embodiment of a clamping element of the branch connector according to the
invention, together with the fitted branch connector from Fig. 2;
Fig. 4 shows a drawing in perspective with "cutaway" parts of the preferred embodiment
of the branch connector according to Fig. 3, in which part of the clamping element
is fitted over the housing;
Fig. 5 shows on an enlarged scale with "cutaway" parts a preferred embodiment of the
branch connector according to the invention, with a contacted coaxial cable confined
therein;
Fig. 6 shows in various stages and views the structure of the penetration pin and
the supporting disc according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention;
Fig. 7 shows a further embodiment of a branch connector according to the present invention;
Fig. 8 shows a drawing in perspective with disassembled and "cutaway" parts of a
further preferred embodiment of the branch connector according to the invention for
contacting of two coaxial cables;
Fig. 9 shows a drawing in perspective with "cutaway" parts of the preferred embodiment
of the branch connector according to Fig. 8, in the partially fitted state; and
Fig. 10 shows a branching of a coaxial cable by means of branch connectors according
to Fig. 4 and Fig. 9.
[0017] The preferred embodiment of the branch connector according to the invention illustrated
in Fig. 1 shows a cylindrical housing 1 of springloaded electrically conducting material
with a longitudinal seam 2. This longitudinal seam is closed under the influence of
the spring force of the housing itself. Formed at one end of the housing by U-shaped
notches 3 is a feed-through channel 4 running through in the radial direction. Formed
at the base of each U-shaped notch is a tooth 5 which projects into the feed-through
channel and has a pointed end 6 and sharp edges 7. The housing is provided along its
periphery with circular rows of openings 8 and 9 which are displaced relative to
each other in the longitudinal direction. From the two ends of the housing, provision
is made in the longitudinal direction thereof for several slits 10 and 11, which preferably
coincide with the longitudinal seam 2 as shown in Fig. 1. The slits are widened over
a length at the ends of the housing.
[0018] The penetration pin 12 of electrically conducting material to be fitted in the housing
1 is provided, at the end penetrating into the coaxial cable to be contacted, with
a sharply tapering conducting point 13, in such a way that this point together with
the through-running insulation material 14 - conically tapering round the pin - of
the transverse supporting disc 15 forms an externally smooth surface. In the embodiment
shown in Fig. 1 the other end of the penetration pin is designed as a socket 16 with
at least one slit 18 in the longitudinal direction thereof.
[0019] The penetration pin with the supporting disc fitted around it is subsequently fitted
therein, overcoming the spring force of the housing, in such a way that the radially
outward projecting bosses 17 of the sup porting disc engage with the openings 9 of
the housing, which correspond thereto as regards shape and dimensions, as shown in
Fig. 2. The openings 9 and the projecting bosses 17 are provided in such a way that,
after fitting of the penetration pin in the housing, the conducting point 13 as a
whole projects further outwards into the feed-through channel 4 than the teeth 5.
[0020] It will be clear that the spring force of the material of the housing has to have
such strength that, on the one hand, the supporting disc can be fitted easily by hand
and, on the other, the supporting disc is locked by means of the bosses 17 engaging
in the openings 9, against axial and tangential displacement through forces acting
thereon during normal use of the branch connector. Although the bosses 17 and the
openings 9 are designed as circular in shape, it will be clear that other shapes
(rectangular, square etc.) can also be used.
[0021] As can be seen clearly from Fig. 2, the socket 16 together with the end of the housing
not provided with a feed-through channel forms a coaxial coupling socket. It will
be clear that, instead of being designed as a socket, the end of the penetration pin
can also be designed as a contact pin, as a result of which a coaxial plug is formed
(not shown). A coaxial cable contacted by the penetration pin and the teeth of the
housing can in this way be connected simply to a coaxial junction box of a piece of
equipment to be connected. By means of the slits 11, 18, tolerance differences occurring
can be overcome in a simple manner.
[0022] Fig. 3 shows in perspective the fitted branch connector of Fig. 2 and a preferred
embodiment of the clamping element according to the invention, in which a part thereof
is "cut away" for the purpose of showing clearly the internal layout of the clamping
element. Shown on the left of the mounted housing are the two separate parts of the
clamping element for confining in the feed-through channel the coaxial cable to be
contacted, namely the screwed sleeve 19 and the screw cap 20. The internal diameter
of the screwed sleeve is slightly larger than the external diameter of the housing.
The screw cap 20 contains internal screw thread 21 which can mate with the external
screw thread 22 of the screwed sleeve 19. At the end provided with screw thread, the
screwed sleeve has a corresponding feed-through channel 25, which is formed by U-shaped
notches 23 and an approximately U-shaped supporting surface 24, for accommodation
and through-feed of the coaxial cable to be contacted. In the supporting surface 24,
along the periphery, are openings 26 and in the centre thereof an opening 27 through
which - after the screwed sleeve is fitted over the housing - the teeth 5 and the
penetration pin 12 project into the corresponding feed-through channel 25.
[0023] Formed on the inside at the end of the screwed sleeve which is not provided with
screw thread are radially projecting trapezoidal bosses 28, of which one slanting
side 29 rests against the open end of the screwed sleeve, and of which the other straight
side 30 is adjacent to the convex side of the supporting surface 24. Only one of such
trapezoidal bosses 28 can be seen in the drawing in Fig. 3.
[0024] These trapezoidal bosses 28 can mate with rectangular openings 8 provided in the
jacket of the housing along the periphery thereof, in such a way that when the screwed
sleeve is fitted from the end of the housing provided with the feed-through channel
the bosses 28 engage with the openings 8, as shown in Fig. 4. Through the straight
side 30 of the respective trapezoidal bosses 28 and the convex side of the supporting
surface 24, te fitted screwed sleeve is prevented from being displaced in the logitudinal
direction of the housing under the effect of the forces acting thereon during normal
use. The relative placing and dimensions of the trapezoidal pins 28 and the openings
8 in the housing are chosen in such a way that the screwed sleeve can be locked to
the housing only in that position in whcih the feed-through channels 4 and 25 of the
housing and the screwed sleeve respectively lie opposite each other. The convex side
of the supporting surface 24 and the U-shaped notches 3 of the housing have such dimensions
that the convex part of the supporting surface fits into these notches. Together with
the trapoezoidal bosses 28, this in an effective manner prevents the screwed sleeve
from turning in the tangential direction as a result of the screw cap being screwed
on the screwed sleeve.
[0025] The projecting bosses 17 on the supporting disc 15 and the accompanying openings
9 in the housing 1 are chosen in a different shape compared with the projecting bosses
28 of the screwed sleeve 19 and the accompanying openings 8, in order to prevent the
penetration pin from being fitted wrongly into the housing through the projecting
bosses 17 engaging in the openings 8.
[0026] The openings 70 along the periphery of the supporting surface 24 are produced for
manufacturing reasons during the formation of the trapezoidal bosses 28. The grooves
71 in the wall of the screwed sleeve 19 serve purely to save material.
[0027] The screw cap contains a pressure element 31 which fits concentrically in tubular
form in the interior of the screwed sleeve, and whose closed end face 32 coincides
with the face bounded by the edge 33 of the open end of the screw cap.
[0028] When in the assembly shown in Fig. 4 a coaxial cable is inserted into the corresponding
feed-through channel 25, through tightening of the screw cap on the screwed sleeve,
the cable can be moved in the longitudinal direction of the housing under the effect
of the pressure exerted through the pressure face 32 and the edge 33. First of all
here, the conducting point 13 of the penetration pin penetrates into the insulating
outer sheath 34 of the coaxial cable, shown in Fig. 5. Further tightening of the screw
cap results in the point 13 successively penetrating through the outer conductor
35 and the insulating inner sheath 36 to the inner conductor 37 of the coaxial cable.
After some time the teeth 5 also penetrate into the outer sheath, the outer conductor
and the inner sheath.
[0029] If it is now ensured that the distance between the pointed end 6 of the tooth 5 and
the base of the point 13 is greater than the thickness of the outer conductor 35 of
the coaxial cable to be contacted, the point 13 and the tooth 5 cannot make contact
simultaneously with the outer conductor, so that short-circuiting of the tooth and
the penetration pin is prevented. In the final situation shown in Fig. 5 the cable
sits, under the influence of the clamping action of the screwed sleeve and the screw
cap, firmly retained in the feed-through channel 25.
[0030] It will be clear that the cable is both contacted and clamped in the feed-through
channel in one operation, namely tightening of the screw cap on the screwed sleeve.
Through the pressure element 31 and the shape of the feed-through channel 25 corresponding
to the round cable and the curved supporting face 24 in the screwed sleeve 19, the
cable is prevented from being deformed during the contacting, in such a way that
the conducting point 13 of the penetration pin does not penetrate radially into the
cable and consequently will not make contact with the inner conductor 37 of the cable.
[0031] The screwed sleeve and the screw cap are provided with external ridges 38, 39 respectively,
in order to have sufficient grip for fixing the screw cap on the screwed sleeve by
hand. The screw cap and the screwed sleeve can be made of either metal or (injection-moulded)
plastic.
[0032] The teeth 5 of the housing must be sufficiently rigid to be able to penetrate without
deformation through the insulating outer sheath 34 and the outer conductor 35 -generally
made up of a braided wire screen and/ or a thin copper foil- of the coaxial cable.
Making the tip 13 of the penetration pin pointed means that both coaxial cables with
a solid inner conductor 37 and also an inner conductor 37 consisting of stranded wires
can be contacted. 0f course, the penetration pin must also have sufficient rigidity
to enable it to pass through the cable without deformation.
[0033] Fig. 6 illustrates how the penetration pin 12, the socket 16 and the supporting disc
15 are connected together in the preferred embodiment of the present invention. In
the carrier strip 40 of electrically conducting material an opening 41 is provided
in such a way that lips 42 which are bent from the position shown by the dotted line
perpendicular to the plane of the drawing in Fig. 6a are thereby formed. The electrically
conducting penetration pin 12 is clamped between these bent-over lips 42 at a distance
from the carrier strip 40. The socket 16, the development 43 of which is shown by
dotted lines in Fig. 6a, is fixed with the lips 44 - bent inwards perpendicular to
the plane of the drawing - on the end opposite the pointed end 13 of the penetration
pin around the latter. Fig. 6b shows the top view of the system thus formed, seen
from the point 13 of the penetration pin.
[0034] Subsequently, by means of, for example an injection-moulding process, the supporting
disc 15 is formed round the penetration pin and part of the socket 16, as shown in
Fig. 6c. Material of the supporting disc penetrates in the process into the opening
41 of the carrier strip and the holes 45 of the socket, which provides in an eficient
manner a barrier against axial shifting of the socket and the penetration pin in the
supporting disc. The whole is then separated from the adjacent carrier strips on
either side at the level of the side faces 46 which were produced during formation
of the supporting disc such that they lie inwards relative to the periphery thereof.
The surfaces of fracture of the carrier strip are indicated by 47 (see also Fig. 1).
The fact that the surfaces of fracture 47 lie inwards relative to the periphery of
the supporting disc means that they are prevented in the mounted state from making
electrical contact with the housing.
[0035] Fig. 7 shows another partially "cutaway" embodiment of the branch connector according
to the invention. At one end of the cylindrical housing 48, as in the embodiment according
to Fig. 1, provision is made for U-shaped notches which form a feed-through channel
49 with projecting teeth 72 therein. The supporting disc 50 with the penetration
pin 51 projecting into the feed-through channel 49 is held clamped here between rows
- displaced relative to each other in the longitudinal direction of the housing -
of spring-loaded lips 52 projecting inwards radially along the periphery thereof
and elevations 53. These lips and elevations are formed as bent-through parts of the
cylindrical jacket of the housing. At the end of the housing 48 which is provided
with the feed-through channel provision is made for short radially outward projecting
lips 54. The penetration pin 51 is insulated in the same way as in Fig. 1 at the end
which is to penetrate into the cable, and at the other end is provided with a socket
55. The screwed sleeve 56 is cylindrical in shape, with an internal diameter which
is slightly larger than the external diameter of the housing 48. The screwed sleeve
has at the end provided with the screw thread 59 a corresponding feed-through channel
57, formed by U-shaped notches, but without internal supporting surface 24 as in
the embodiment according to Fig. 3. Provided on this same end internally in the longitudinal
direction of the screwed sleeve around the periphery thereof are short grooves 58,
of such dimensions that the lips 54 of the housing 48 fit into these grooves 58. These
lips and grooves work together in such a way that when the screwed sleeve is slid
over the housing, from the end of the housing not provided with the feed-through channel,
the screwed sleeve is held and positioned in such a way that the feed-through channels
49 and 57 of housing 48 and screwed sleeve 56 respectively lie opposite each other
and form a feed-through channel which is open for receiving the coaxial cable. The
screw cap 60 is the same shape as the screw cap 20 according to the embodiment of
Fig. 3, the diameter of the pressure element inside the screw cap 60 being such that
the pressure element fits in the interior of the housing 48. A cable inserted in the
feed-through channel is contacted in the same way as described in connection with
the preferred embodiment of the invention. When the screw cap 60 is screwed onto the
screwed sleeve 56, the latter is locked by means of the lips 54 and the grooves 58
against turning in the tangential direction.
[0036] A further embodiment of a branch connector according to the invention for contacting
two separate coaxial cables is shown in perspective in Fig. 8. The other end of the
housing is here also provided with a similar second feed-through channel 61 with tooth
62 and openings 67, as in the case of the branch connector with a single feed-through
channel 4, tooth 5 and openings 8 in Fig. 1. The penetration pin 64 supported by the
transverse supporting disc 63 is now formed in such a way that it has two pointed
conducting points 65, 66, which each project into a feed-through channel at the two
ends of the housing. The supporting disc 63 can be locked in the housing in the same
way as in the branch connector according to Fig. 1. The screwed sleeves 19 are locked
to the houseing in the same way as shown in Fig. 4.
[0037] A coaxial cable can now be inserted in both feed-through channels 4, 61, and is contacted
in the same way as that described for the branch connector for a single cable. The
fitted assembly of two of the same screwed sleeves 19 with the screw thread ends facing
away from each other is shown in Fig. 9.
[0038] Fig. 10 shows how a branching can be achieved according to the invention with the
branch connector built up in a simple and universal manner. The coaxial cable 68,
designed for example as a ring circuit, is branched by means of a branch connector
according to Fig. 8, while the cable 69 for connection is provided at the other end
with a branch connector according to Fig. 3 or Fig. 7. This end can then be connected
to a coaxial junction box of an apparatus to be connected.
[0039] It goes without saying that the invention is not restricted to the embodiments discussed
above and shown in the figures, but that modifications and additions can be provided,
for example in the numbers of teeth, the locking of the penetration pin in the housing,
or the way in which the separate parts of the clamping element are connected together,
for example instead of screw thread, by means of a "snap connection" etc., without
going beyond the scope of the invention.
1. A branch connector for coaxial cable, having at least one inner conductor surrounded
by an inner insulation sheath, said inner sheath being surrounded by at least one
outer conductor and an outer insulation sheath respectively, said branch connector
comprising an elongated housing of electrically conductive material, at least one
end of which is provided with a feed-through channel for receiving the cable and at
least one electrically conductive tooth adapted for contacting the outer conductor
of the cable, an electrically conductive penetration pin axially arranged in the housing,
said penetration pin being electrically insulated from the housing, at least one
end of said penetration pin having a point radially penetrating in the one feed-through
channel and adapted for contacting the inner conductor of the cable and with an insulation
sheath for preventing electrical contact with the outer conductor of the contacted
cable, and a at least one clamping element for retaining the contacted cable, in the
one feed-through channel,characterized in that said housing is circular cylindrical in shape, the penetration pin is locked inside
the housing on a transverse supporting disc of insulation material, while the at least
one clamping element consists of a screwed sleeve with a corresponding feed-through
channel at the one end thereof and adapted to be fitted over the jacket of the cylindrical
housing, and a screw cap for coupling with said screwed sleeve for contacting and
firmly retaining the cable in the one feed-through channel.
2. A branch connector according to Claim 1, in which the one feedthrough channel
is accessible from said one end of the housing and the at least one tooth projects
a distance less than the point of the penetration pin into the feed-through channel,
characterized in that said one feed-through channel is defined by two approximately U-shaped notches disposed
opposite each other in the jacket of the cylindrical housing, on at least one narrow
edge of which notches the at least one tooth is provided.
3. A branch connector according to claim 2, characterized in that the housing and the screwed sleeve are provided with means for retaining and positioning
the screwed sleeve in such a way that in the fitted state the one feedthrough channel
is open for receiving the coaxial cable.
4. A branch connector according to claim 3, characterized in that an approximately U-shaped supporting surface is provided inside the screwed sleeve,
said U-shaped supporting surface having openings for feeding through the penetration
pin and the at least one tooth, said supporting surface together with U-shaped notches
in the one screw-threaded end of the screwed sleeve forming the corresponding feed-through
channel.
5. A branch connector according to Claim 4, characterized in that at least one projecting trapezoidal boss is provided internally along the periphery
of the screwed sleeve between the end thereof not provided with screw thread and the
convex side of the supporting surface, said at least one trapezoidal boss being adapted
to engage with at least one corresponding opening provided at the end of the housing
provided with the one feed-through channel.
6. A branch connector according to at least one of the preceding claims, characterized in that a tubular pressure element is provided concentrically inside the screw cap, said
pressure element being adapted to fit into the screwed sleeve or the housing, and
one closed end face of said pressure element coincides with the open end of the screw
cap.
7. A branch connector according to at least one of the preceding claims, characterized in that the penetration pin is attached to a carrier strip on which the insulation material
of the transverse supporting disc grips for the purpose of preventing axial and radial
shifting of the penetration pin within the supporting disc, and the end of said penetration
pin which is to penetrate into the cable is enclosed over a part by the insulation
material of the supporting disc, in order to prevent electrical contact with the outer
conductor of the contacted coaxial cable.
8. A branch connector according to at least one of the preceding claims, in which
inside the housing locking means are provided, in order to prevent displacement of
the penetration pin in the axial and tangential direction, characterized in that said locking means are formed such, that the supporting disc with the penetration
pin is detachably locked inside the housing.
9. A branch connector according to Claim 8, characterized in that the locking means includes at least one boss which projects radially outwards on
the periphery of the supporting disc and is adapted to engage in at least one corresponding
opening provided in the jacket of the cylindrical housing.
10. A branch connector according to at least one of the preceding claims, in which
the other end of the conductive penetration pin is designed as a socket, characterized in that said socket together with the other end of the circular cylindrical housing not provided
with the feedthrough channel forms a coaxial coupling socket.
11. A branch connector according to Claims 1 to 9, characterized in that the other end of the conductive penetration pin is designed as a contact pin, and
together with the other end of the circular cylindrical housing not provided with
the one feed-through channel forms a coaxial plug.
12. A branch connector according to Claims 1 to 10, characterized in thatat the other end of the housing a second feed-through channel of the same type with
at least one tooth is provided, and the other end of the penetration pin is also designed
as a point, whereby a second coaxial cable can be received in said second feed-through
channel, contacted and retained with a second clamping element of the same type.