Field of the invention
[0001] The present invention relates to a connector for a printed-circuit board, of the
type comprising:
- a casing; and
- a set of metal terminals inserted within said casing and designed to couple with respective
holes made in said printed-circuit board.
General technical problem
[0002] As is known, coupling between the metal terminals of a traditional connector and
the respective holes of the printed-circuit board on which the connector is to be
mounted is conventionally obtained via a soldering operation. Even though this operation
is by now carried out in an altogether automated way, it has, however, a considerable
effect on the costs and times for production of the final electrical circuit.
Object and summary of the invention
[0003] The object of the present invention is hence to provide a system for connection between
the printed-circuit board and the connector that will not require any soldering operation.
[0004] The above object is achieved via a connector having the characteristics referred
to in the claims.
[0005] The present invention also relates to an electrical circuit comprising a printed-circuit
board and the connector in question.
[0006] The claims form an integral part of the technical teaching provided herein in relation
to the invention.
Brief description of the drawings
[0007] Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will emerge clearly from
the ensuing description with reference to the annexed drawings, which are provided
purely by way of non-limiting example and in which:
- Figure 1 is a perspective view of an embodiment of the connector described herein
in a condition where it is mounted on a printed-circuit board;
- Figure 2 is an exploded perspective view of the connector of Figure 1;
- Figures 3a, 3b, and 3c represent the connector of Figure 1 in a perspective view sectioned
along a transverse plane of section, in three distinct conditions, during assembly
of the connector on the printed-circuit board;
- Figures 4a, 4b, and 4c represent the connector in the conditions of Figures 3a, 3b,
3c in perspective views sectioned along a plane of section parallel to the plane of
section of Figures 3a, 3b, 3c; and
- Figure 5 is a perspective view of a detail of the connector of Figure 1 fixed on the
printed-circuit board.
Detailed description of the invention
[0008] Illustrated in the ensuing description are various specific details aimed at providing
an in-depth understanding of the embodiments. The embodiments may be obtained without
one or more of the specific details, or with other methods, components, or materials,
etc. In other cases, known structures, materials, or operations are not illustrated
or described in detail so that various aspects of the embodiment will not be obscured.
[0009] The references used herein are provided merely for convenience and hence do not define
the sphere of protection or the scope of the embodiments.
[0010] As mentioned previously, the present invention regards a connector for printed-circuit
boards, in particular a signal connector, which can be connected to a printed-circuit
board without any need to carry out any soldering operation.
[0011] The connector in question, designated in the figures by the reference number 100,
comprises a casing 2 having a closed side wall 2A, preferably characterized by a parallelepipedal
geometry, which identifies inside it a seat 2B of corresponding shape, designed to
receive the further elements of the connector.
[0012] The casing 2 is designed to be coupled directly on the printed-circuit board, designated
in the figures by the reference number 200, and has, for this purpose, one or more
pins 21 projecting at the bottom and configured for fitting into corresponding holes
201 made in the printed-circuit board 200 so as to define a correct and precise reference
position of the casing on the printed-circuit board.
[0013] The connector 100 further comprises a body 4, which is designed to fit into the seat
2B and carries a set of electrical terminals 14. These have respective portions 14B'
that project underneath said body so as to be received in a series of holes 202 provided
with electrical contacts (not illustrated), made in the printed-circuit board 200.
As will be seen in what follows, electrical connection of the connector to the printed-circuit
board is established by coupling of the portions 14B' with the electrical contacts
present within the holes 202. In a way in itself known in the art, these contacts
may be constituted by metallized portions of the walls of the holes 202. Preferably,
the metallization is constituted by a gold plating. The same type of metallization
is preferably used also for the portions 14B' of the terminals 14.
[0014] In various embodiments, as in the one illustrated, the body 4 has a shape substantially
corresponding to the seat 2B of the casing 2 - in the example illustrated, a generic
parallelepipedal shape -, and made thereon are a series of through holes in which
the terminals 14 are fixed. In various embodiments, as in the one illustrated (see
in this connection Figure 4), the aforesaid terminals each have an electrical-contact
portion 14a set within a first hole 41 made in the body 4, and a pin portion 14B,
which starts from the portion 14A and traverses a further hole 43, of smaller diameter,
made once again in the body 4, and projects, with a part thereof corresponding to
the aforesaid portion 14B', underneath the body 4. It should be noted that the portion
14A may be either of a female type, as in the example illustrated, where it is constituted
by a bushing, or of a male type. In the condition where the connector is installed
on the printed-circuit board, the electrical wires for transmission of the signal
to/from the printed-circuit board are then fixed in the portions 14A.
[0015] The connector 100 moreover comprises a clamping element 6 configured for engaging
the portions 14B' of the terminals 14 within the casing 2. The element 6 has, in particular,
a plate-like portion 6A having a series of through holes 61, preferably flared at
the ends, which are each traversed by a corresponding portion 14B' of the terminals
14. At least in an initial stage of assembly of the connector, the holes 61 made in
the clamping element must be substantially aligned to the holes 202 made in the printed-circuit
board 200 so as to enable the two sets of holes to be traversed by the portions 14B'.
The element 6 moreover has one or more hook-shaped elements 63, which project underneath
from the portion 6A and are designed to engage corresponding openings 205 made in
the printed-circuit board.
[0016] As will emerge clearly from what follows, the element 6 operates within the connector
in order to establish both a mechanical fixing and an electrical connection of the
connector to the printed-circuit board. Activation of the above element is obtained
in a simple and fast way via its interaction with the body 4.
[0017] In particular, the body 4 and the element 6 are configured for interacting with one
another, within the casing 2 already mounted on the printed-circuit board, so as to
move from a first free condition in which both of them are mobile with respect to
the casing, to a condition in which they, and the connector as a whole, are fixed
to the printed-circuit board.
[0018] With reference now to Figures 3A-C and 4A-C, in the aforesaid free condition, the
body 4 is axially mobile within the seat 2B, i.e., mobile in a direction (designated
by Z in the figures) that is substantially parallel to the respective directions of
extension of the terminals 14. Guide means - such as the rectilinear grooves 45 and
the ribbings 2B' of the example illustrated - may be provided on the mutually coupled
sides of the seat 2B and of the body 4 for guiding the body 4 in said movement. The
axial movement of the body 4 has the function of determining insertion of the portions
14B' of the terminals in the holes 202 of the printed-circuit board.
[0019] As regards the clamping element 6, it is, instead, mobile in a direction (designated
by Y) contained in a plane orthogonal to the direction of movement of the body 4.
[0020] The connector 100 comprises cam means provided on the body 4 and on the element 6,
which are configured for inducing a displacement of the element 6 in the direction
Y, as a result of the axial movement of the body 4 in the direction Z.
[0021] The displacement of the element 6 induced by the cam means is of an extension such
as to bring the holes 61 into a condition slightly out of line with respect to the
holes 202 of the printed-circuit board, such that the portions 14B' of the terminals
come to be imprisoned between the opposed and immediately adjacent edges of the two
sets of holes. In particular, with reference to Figure 4C, as a result of the above
displacement by the element 6, each portion 14B' comes to be gripped between the left-hand
bottom edge 61' of the corresponding hole 61, and the right-hand top edge 202' of
the hole 202. This causes the portions 14B' to be constrained to the printed-circuit
board and to the casing 2 and come perfectly into contact with the electrical contacts
present in the holes 202. Furthermore, as may be seen in Figure 5, the displacement
in question brings the hook-shaped portions 63 of the element 6 into engagement with
the corresponding parts of the underside of the printed-circuit board that are rendered
accessible through the openings 205, this determining fixing of the casing 2 to the
printed-circuit board.
[0022] The cam means in question may be obtained according to different configurations.
In various preferred embodiments, as in the one illustrated (see Figure 2), the aforesaid
means comprise a wall 6B, which is carried by the plate-like portion 6A of the clamping
element and on which one or more cam tracks 64 are provided. In turn, the body 4 has,
on its side facing the element 6, a slit 44, which is designed to receive the wall
6B and has, on one or both of its opposite sides, pins 44' that come to engage the
cam tracks 64. As may be seen in the figures, each path 64 has, with respect to the
direction in which it is traversed by the corresponding pin 44', when the body 4 and
the element 6 pass from their free condition to the clamping condition, a first rectilinear
stretch 64A, configured for not inducing any displacement of the element 6, and a
subsequent curvilinear stretch 64B, configured, instead, for inducing the displacement
described above of the clamping element 6. The length of the rectilinear stretch 64A
is to be such as to guarantee a given degree of insertion of the portions 14B' of
the terminals within the holes 202 before the clamping element comes to grip them
against the edges of the latter.
[0023] Figures 3A-C and the corresponding Figures 4A-C illustrate three different subsequent
steps of the process for clamping the body 4 and the element 6 on the printed-circuit
board 200.
[0024] In particular, Figures 3A and 4A illustrate an initial step, in which the body 4
and the element 6 are in their free condition referred to above. As may be seen in
Figure 3A, in this condition, the portions 14B' are still above the printed-circuit
board 200, out of the holes 202, and the pins 44' are at the start of the rectilinear
stretch 64A of the cam tracks.
[0025] To bring about clamping, from this condition the body 4 is hence pressed and displaced
downwards in the direction Z. Figures 3B and 4B represent a second step in which the
body 4 has been displaced, with respect to the position of Figures 3A and 4a, by a
stretch corresponding to the rectilinear stretch 64A of the cam track, and the pins
44' are in effect located at the end of this stretch and at the start of the curvilinear
stretch 64B. In this position of the body 4, the portions 14b' are already inserted
in the holes 202.
[0026] Starting from this position, the pins 44' enter the curvilinear stretch 64B, and
the interaction between the pins and the path determines displacement of the clamping
element 6 in the direction Y, until the clamping condition illustrated in Figures
3C and 4C is reached, where the portions 14B' of the terminals are gripped between
the two sets of holes 61 and 202, and the hook-shaped portions 63 engage the underside
of the printed-circuit board 200.
[0027] With reference just to Figures 4A-C, it should be noted how, in the passage from
the free condition to the clamping condition, the portions 14B' of the terminals undergo
deformation by bending so that their parts that traverse the two sets of the holes
61 and 202 are deflected from the main direction of extension of the terminals. In
particular, in the example illustrated, the deformed parts of the terminals are received
in the countersinking of the holes 61.
[0028] This enables exploitation of the elastic properties of the above portions, i.e.,
the elastic force exerted by these as a result of their deformation, tending to bring
back the body 4 and the element 6 into their free condition in order to determine
a contact pressure between the portions 14B' themselves and the electrical contacts
present in the holes 202. The contact pressure thus determined guarantees that the
contact between these parts is kept constant and stable even in the presence of vibrations
and/or in the case of thermal jumps.
[0029] The elastic force exerted by the portions 14b' must in any case clearly be countered
in order to keep the body 4 and the element 6 in the clamping condition. For this
purpose, the connector 100 has clamping means provided on the casing 2 and designed
to engage the body 4.
[0030] In various embodiments, as in the one illustrated (see Figures 1 and 2), these clamping
means comprise at least one pair of opposed flexible tabs 22, which are provided on
the wall 2A of the casing and project above the top edge thereof. On the respective
mutually facing faces of these tabs, a projection 24 is provided, which identifies
an inclined surface 24A, which faces the outside of the casing, and a contrast surface
24B, which faces the inside and is designed to engage a top edge 4' of the body 4.
[0031] During the movement of the body 4 described above for reaching the clamping condition,
the body 4 presses on the surfaces 24A and keeps the two tabs 22 bent outwards. Once
the clamping condition is reached, the body 4 passes beyond the projections 24, and
the two tabs snap shut, bringing the surfaces 24B up against the edge 4' of the body
4. In this condition, the surfaces 24B act on the edge 4' to prevent the body 4 from
returning into its raised position under the elastic action exerted by the portions
14B'.
[0032] In the light of the foregoing, it may thus be noted how the simple snap-action insertion
of the body 4 into the casing 2 determines, on the one hand, fixing of the casing
2 to the printed-circuit board, by way of the hook-shaped portions 63 of the element
6, and on the other hand, electrical and mechanical connection between the terminals
14 and the holes 202 of the circuit, by way of the plate-like portion 6A once again
of the clamping element 6.
[0033] In a way in itself known in the art, the printed-circuit board then envisages the
usual paths (not illustrated) configured for distribution of the signals from the
connector 100 to the other electronic components mounted on the circuit.
[0034] The casing 2, the body 4, and the clamping element 6 must clearly be made of an electrically
insulating material, preferably a plastic or polymeric material, for example polybutylene
terephthalate (PBT). However, they may present some portions made of metal, such as,
for example, the hook-shaped portions 63, the pins 21, etc., with the advantage that
these portions may also be of smaller dimensions than in the case where they are made
of plastic material.
[0035] Of course, without prejudice to the principle of the invention, the details of construction
and the embodiments may vary, even significantly, with respect to what has been illustrated
herein purely by way of non-limiting example, without thereby departing from the scope
of the invention, as defined by the annexed claims.
1. A connector for a printed-circuit board (200), comprising:
- a casing (2); and
- a set of electrical terminals (14) inserted within said casing (2) and designed
to couple with respective holes (202) made in said printed-circuit board, said connector
being characterized in that it comprises:
- a body (4) on which said set of terminals is fixed, where said terminals have projecting
portions (14B') that project out of one side of said body and are designed to couple
with said holes (202) of said printed-circuit board;
- a clamping element (6) mounted within said casing (2), for gripping said portions
of said terminals against edges of said holes (202) of said printed-circuit board;
and
- cam means (64, 44, 44') provided on said body (4) and on said clamping element,
which are configured for activating said clamping element as a result of a movement
of said body within said casing.
2. The connector according to Claim 1, wherein said cam means (64, 44, 44') are configured
for inducing a displacement of said clamping element (6) towards a position for gripping
said terminal portions as a result of a displacement of said body (4) in a first direction
(Z), substantially parallel to the direction of extension of said terminals within
said body, wherein said displacement of said clamping element (6) is in a second direction
(Y), contained in a plane substantially orthogonal to said first direction (Z).
3. The connector according to Claim 2, wherein said clamping element (6) comprises one
or more hook-shaped portions (63) configured for fitting into corresponding openings
(205) made in said printed-circuit board and for engaging the underside of said printed-circuit
board, which is rendered accessible through said openings when said clamping element
is in said gripping position.
4. The connector according to Claim 3, wherein said cam means (64, 44, 44') are configured
for inducing said displacement of said clamping element (6) as a result of the displacement
of said body (4), with respect to said casing (2), from an extracted position to a
retracted position.
5. The connector according to Claim 4, wherein said casing (2) has means for preventing
return of said body from said retracted position to said extracted position.
6. The connector according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said clamping
element (6) has a plate-like portion (6A) having a series of through holes (61) that
are each traversed by a corresponding portion of said projecting portions (14B') of
said terminals.
7. The connector according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said cam means
comprise a cam track (64) and a pin (44'), which slides in said cam track as a result
of said displacement of said body (4).
8. The connector according to Claim 6, wherein said cam means comprise a wall (6B) carried
by said plate-like portion (6A) of said clamping element (6), and a slit (44), which
is made in said body, on a side thereof facing said clamping element (6), and is designed
to receive said wall, wherein a cam track (64) is provided on one between said wall
(6B) and a side that delimits said slit (44), and wherein on the other between said
wall (6B) and said side that delimits said slit (44) a pin (44') is provided, which
slides in said cam track as a result of the movement of said body (4).
9. The connector according to Claim 2, wherein said clamping element (6) is configured
for pushing said portions (14B') of said terminals laterally during said displacement
into said gripping position.
10. An electrical circuit comprising:
- a connector (100) according to any one of the preceding claims; and
- a printed-circuit board (200) having a first series of holes (202) designed to receive
the projecting portions of the electrical terminals of said connector.
11. The electrical circuit according to Claim 10, wherein said printed-circuit board has
an opening (205) designed to receive the hook-shaped portion (63) of said connector
(100), wherein said opening has a size such as to enable movement of said hook-shaped
portion (63) so that it will engage a corresponding part of the underside of the printed-circuit
board accessible through said opening (205).
12. The electrical circuit according to Claim 10 or Claim 11, wherein said printed-circuit
board has a second series of holes (201) designed to receive corresponding pins (21)
provided on the underside of said casing.