CA1184263A - Connector for printed circuit boards for effecting a resilient pressure contact with at least one conductive surface - Google Patents

Connector for printed circuit boards for effecting a resilient pressure contact with at least one conductive surface

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Publication number
CA1184263A
CA1184263A CA000403206A CA403206A CA1184263A CA 1184263 A CA1184263 A CA 1184263A CA 000403206 A CA000403206 A CA 000403206A CA 403206 A CA403206 A CA 403206A CA 1184263 A CA1184263 A CA 1184263A
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
blade
connector according
conductive
contact
rigid structure
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
CA000403206A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Luc Pechard
Jean-Claude Bouley
Bernard Logerot
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Allied Corp
Original Assignee
Allied Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Allied Corp filed Critical Allied Corp
Priority to CA000403206A priority Critical patent/CA1184263A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1184263A publication Critical patent/CA1184263A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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  • Coupling Device And Connection With Printed Circuit (AREA)

Abstract

ABSTRACT
CONNECTOR FOR PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARDS
FOR EFFECTING A RESILIENT PRESSURE
CONTACT WITH AT LEAST ONE CONDUCTIVE SURFACE

The present invention concerns a connector for effecting a resilient pressure contact with a printed circuit board 106.

It comprises a housing 101 provided with connection means 102 and 103, containing a contact constituted by an insulating supple strip 107 carrying, on its outside surface, two series of metal tracks 108 and 109, and a series of spring blades 110 and 111 comprising swellings 119 and 120 intended to apply, on metal tracks 108 and 109, constant pressure.
In this way, when the printed circuit board 106 is introduced in passageway 117, the metal tracks 104 and 105 are connected electrically to connection means 102 and 103.

Description

CONNECTUR FOR PRINT~D CIRCUIT BOARDS FOR EFFECTING
A RESILIENT PRESSURE CONTACT ~ITH AT LEAST ONE CONDUCTIVE SURFACE

Jhe present invention concerns a connector for printed circuit boards for effecting a resilient pressure contact with at least one conductive surface on at least one face of a rigid structure, said connector comprising :
S - a housing having guiding means for directing the rigid structure along a path in an insertion direction, - and at least a resilient contac~ located in the housing and having a first end portion initially positioned in said path, and movable along said path, a second end portion integral with a connexion means mounted on said housing, and a central part positioned outside said path, - said first end portion comprising means for being displaced with said rigid structure moving along said path in said insertion direction, in such a manner to incurve said contact and to create a rolling pressure against the conductive surface on the rigid structure.
~rench patent application 2,395,676describes a connector Or this type, in which the resilient contact has the form of a conductive metal blade9 whose resilience creates sufficient pressure, exerted by the rounded part of this blade on the conductive surface of the rigid structure, in order tc ensure gooo elertrical contact between the two conductive parts.

However it has been noticed that in practice this contact pressure is too week, because soft coatings, for example tin-lead electrolytic coat~
ings, do not give homogeneous contact resistance. These defects become notably serious when the device is submitted to vibrations. ~n increase of the thickness of the blades diminishes their flexibility and causes them to break.

An object of an aspect of the invention is to ~void the above mentionedinconveniences by making a connector such as that defined previously, in which the contact comprises at least one resilient blade made from electrically good conductive material, and at least a spring component 34 made frrm material having good elasti~ properties, the said spriny
- 2 J~ 3 -component being adapted to lean against the said resilient blade in order to ensure substantially constant elastic pressure nf the said central portion of the resilient blade against the conductive surface.

According to an aspect of the invention, the contact blade is fixed by one of its ends to the said connexion means. The preferred fixing method is soldering, notably soldering by points effected by laser.

For connecting printed circuit boards provided with a series of parallel conductive tracks, constituting the said rigid structure comprising a series of conductive surfaces, the connector according to the invention comprises preferably a series of contacts, each provided with a resi-lient blade made from electrically good conductiYe material, and a spring component, preferably a blade made from material having good elastic properties, the said resilient blades and said spring blades being respectively parallel to each other, each spring blade comprising a resilient blade, these two elements constituting a couple of elements which co-operate to ensure substantially constant elastic pressure and good electrical contact of each resilient blade on the corresponding conductive surface of the rigid structure.

Accord~ng to an aspect of the invention, the connexion means and spring blade are made from one piece. The lower part of this piece constitutes the connexion means which may appear under different known specific forms. The upper part of this piece constitutes the spring blade to which is fixed the contact bladeO

In certain cases, notably when the number of couples : connexion means conductive blades is high, the assembly by soldering by laser can be complicated due to difficulties in placing low dimension pieces which are fragile, which stick together and whose handling is thereby extre-mely delicate.

~lith the airn of sirnplifying assembly workl the connector according to anothcr objcct of thc prescnt invcntion is ch-lractcri7ed in that the contact cornprises a resilicnt insulating support in strip form, at lcast 37 one mctal track applicd on onc face of thc said support, the spring _ 3 _ means being adapted to lean against the D~her face Df the said insulat-ing support, in such a way as to apply the said central portion of the said contact, with a substantially constant pressure, against the said conductive surface of the said rigid structure.

According to a particularly advantageous embodlment of the present invention, the conductive track comprises an electrically good conduct-ive metal blade, integral with the said support. The conductive track consists preferably of a blade made from a copper material, covered on its free surface, by a protective layer~ made for example, out of a tin-lead alloy applied by a known galvanic process.

The insulating support is preferably a sheet of synthetic material, for example, of a polyimide type. The thicl<ness of the insulating support and the conductive blade is such that the whole is extremely resilient and flexible in order that the conductive track leans firmly against the conductive surfaces of the rigid structure.

According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the connector com-2û prises a series of conductive tracks corresponding respectively to a series of conductive surfaces of the rigid structure, these tracks be-ing placed parallel on a face of the insulating support strip, and a collection of spring blades adapted to apply individually the central portions of the said conductive tracks, with a substantially constant pressure, on the conductive surfaces of the rigid structureO The conduc tive tracks are preFerably connected electrically to the connection means integral with the housing by crimping.

The spring means, which are preferably parallel blades9 are preferably 3û attached by their base to a continuous transversal strip in such a WBy that a comb structure is obtained. The upper free ends of these blades comprise a swelling intended to lean against the central portions of the conductive tracks of the rigid structure.

~Jhen the flat rigid structure comprises conductive tracks on its two opposed flat faces, the spring blades are adapted to form a double comb 37 structure, the blades being placed on two rows parallel to each other -- 4 ~

and being attached by their base to a continuous transversal ~trip, which comprises means for fixing this double comb inside the housing, in the extension of the said path in the insertion direction of the rigid structure.

The contact comprises a supple strip portion having, before being mounted in the housing, a form appreciably rectangular, comprising two opposed series of conductive tracks parallel to each other, the strips of one series being separated from those of the other by an insulating zone, this strip being folded in "M" shape to be introduced into the housing, the free ends of the two arms of the M being connected by clamping to corresponding connection means, and the insulating means being placed in the central part of the M, and surrounding the end o the runner which moves along said path du~ing insertion of the rigid structure.

The present invention and its principal advantases will be better under-stood with reference to the description of a different embodiment there-from and to the various drawings on which :
~0 Figure 1 represents a schematic view of a first embodiment oF the connector according to the invention, before introduction of a printed circuit board, Figure 2 represents the connector of figO 1 when the printed circuit board is in place, Figure 3 represents a flat view of a second embodiment of the connector according to the invention, before insertion of the rigid structure, Figure 4 represents a flat view of the connector according to fig. 3, after inSertiDn of the rigid structure, and Figure 5 represents a flat view of the insulating support and the metal tracks of the contact.

37 ~Jith reference to figures 1 and 2, the connector described includes a _ . _ _ _ i3 housing 1 at the base of which are mounted two series of connexion means 2 and 3, intended to be connected to the conductive tracks ~ and 5 of a printed board 69 by means of contacts which will be described in more detail below.

These contacts are made up essentially of a supple blade 7, respectively 8, and a spring blade 9, respectively 10. The supple blades 7 and 8 are made from an electrically good conductive material such as copper or its alloys, and comprlsing an outside layer 11, respectively 12, of a lû protecting material such as a tin-lead alloy. The spring blades 9, res-pectively 10, comprise a swelling 13, respectively 14, by which they apply a substantially constant pressure on the inside surface of the conductive blade 7, respectively 8. The opposed ends oF the spring blades 9 and 10 are respectively connected to the connection means 2 and 3. According to a preferred embodiment, the spring blades and corresponding connection means are made from one piece. The supple conductive blades 7 and 8 are fixed, preferably by soldering by points by laser (see references 15 and 16) to a branch appreciably rectilinear o~ the corresponding spring blade 9, respectively 10. When the spring blades are not made from one piece with the corresponding connection means, the conductive blade can also be joined to a branch of the cor-responding connection means. The other end of the conductive blades 7, respectively 8J is pre~erably fixed, by any appropriate means~ notably by soldering by points by laser (see references 17 and lB), to the lateral walls of a runner 19, capable of adopting two positions repre-sented respectively by figures 1 snd 2.

Connection means 2 and 3 comprise respectively an elastic tongue 20 and 21, intended to slide under shoulders 22 and 23 provided in a wall de-fining the interior cavities of the housing 1. The connection means canbe introduced at the too of the housing 1~ until these elastic tongues slip under the corresponding shoulders 22 and 23.

When printed circuit board 6 is introduced, runner 19 is pushed down until it is in the stop position against the base of housing 1. During insertion of the printed circuit board in the passageway 24 provided in 37 housing 1 and whose lateral walls serve as guiding means, the conductive blades 7 and 8 are applied without friction against the metal tracks 4 and 5 of printed circuit board 65 unoer a substantially constant press-ure due to resilient pression of the swellings 13 and 14 DF the spring blades 9 and 10.

Thanks to this device, is thus solved the problem set by the prior art, by ensuring resilient support with a-substantially constant pressure of the conductive blade on the metal tracks of the printed circuit board.

Printed circuit boards 6 comprise in general a series of parallel metaltracks, placed on each of these two flat faces. To ensure contact with these differen~ tracks, the connector comprises a series of couples each made up of a conductive blade 7 (respectively 8) and a spring blade 9 (respectively 10), each one of these couples being respectively asso-ciated with connection means 2 and 3. These couples of elements togetherconstitute a double series of contacts which assure electric contact between the double series of connection means and the double series of metal tracks of the printed circuit board.

2û With reference to figures 3 to S, the connector described represents a housing lûl containing at least one contact adapted for ensuring contact between connection means lOZ and 103, and metal tracks 104 and 105 of a flat rigid structure constituted for example of a printed circuit board 106.
The contact is made up, in the present case, of a supple insulating support 107 cornprising at least two metal tracks 108 and 109 placed on the exterior surface of the said supple support, and two spring blades 110 and 111 joined to their base by a central transversal strip 112.
In practice, the printed circuit board comprises a series of parallel tracks lû4 on one of its faces, and a series of parallel tracks 105 on its opposed flat face. To ensure contact respectively with each of tracks 104 and 105, the supple insulating support 107 comprises a first series of rnetal tracks 10~ parallel to each other and a second series of rnetal tracks 109, equally parallel to each otller and parallel to 37 tracks 10~ of the first series. To each track 108 corrcsponds a spring blade 110 and to each track 109 corresponds a spring blade 111. Each one of these blades is joined by its basP to the continuous transversal strip 112, which comprises a series of openings 113 intended to be fixed to the body 101 uf the connector, for example by rivets 114. The collection of the sprinc3 blades 110 and 111 presents a double comb structure.

If the printed circuit board comprises only one series of metal tracks, the double comb structure could be replaced by a simplified structure9 comprising only one series of spring blades 110 or 111.

The upper ends of the connection means 102 and 103 comprise crimping means 115 and 116 already known, comprising crimping means capable of crossing the insulating support 107 and producing electric contact with the corresponding metal track 108 or 109.

The housing 101 comprises, in its centre, a passageway 117, whose late-ral walls constitute guiding means which direct the printed circuit board 106 according to a fixed path in its insertion direction into the housing. A runner llB, describedinmore detail in theabove~renchappln.
is permanently introduced in the passageway 117 and moves between a first position trepresented by figure 3~ and a second position (repre-sented by figure 4). In the first position, the printed circuit board 106 is being inserted in the connector. In the second position9 this board is totally inserted in the co~nector9 and contact is established between tracks 104 and 105, respectively with the connection means 102 and 103, through the intermediary of the respective metal tracks 108 and 109.

Thanks to swellings 119 and 120 of the upper ends of the spring blades 110 and 111, metal tracks 108 and 109 are applied9 with a substantially constant pressure, against the metal tracks 104 and 105 of the printed circuit board 106. As support 107 of the metal tracks 108 and lD9 is insulating~ the spring blades 110 and 111 can be joined to cach other without risking a short circuit bctween the metal tracks of tile same 36 series (104 or 105~ or the two series (104 and 105~.

As in the device described in the above mentioned French application, the metal tracks 108 and 109, which constitute the contact blades, roll without friction on the corresponding metal tracks 104 and 105 of the printed circuit board.

Figure 5 represents a flat view of the insulating support 107 compris-ing, on its outside surface, a first series of metal tracks 108 parallel to each other, and a second series of metal tracks 109 parallel to each other and, in the present case9 placed in the extension oF the metal tracks 108. The two series of tracks 108 and 109 are separated by a neutral insulating zone 121. The production of metal tracks 108 and 109 is carried out by a photochemical procedure9 identical to the techniques used for producing printed circuits. The supple support 121 is prefer-ably made of a synthetic material of the polyimide family.
When placing the insulating support 107 carrying the metal tracks 108 and 109 in the housing 101 of the connector 9 the supple strip is folded into an "M" shape, in such a way that the neutral zone 121 corresponds to the lower end of the runner 118, and that the respective ends of the metal tracks 108 and 109,opposite the neutral zone 121, correspond to the crimping means 115 and 116 of the connection means 102 and 103.

The metal tracks 108 and 109 are preferably made of copper or copper alloy covered with a layer of protective tin-lead alloy.
Of course different production variants can be foreseen. Notably, metal tracks 108 and 109 can be arranged differently in order to be adapted to an arrangement corresponding to metal tracks 104 and 105 of the printed circuit board lû6. Moreover the ends of metal tracks lû8 and 109 could be connected by different means from connection means 102 and 103. Nevertheless, the realization such as that described seems to be that which gives the best results for relatively modest manufacturing 33 costs~ and relatively easy assembly conditions.

Claims (21)

Claims
1. Connector for effecting a resilient pressure contact with at least one conductive surface on at least one face of a rigid structure, said connector comprising :
- a housing having guiding means for directing the rigid structure along a path in an insertion direction, - and at least a resilient contact located in the housing and having a first end portion initially positioned in said path, and movable along said path, a second end portion integral with a connection means mounted on said housing, and a central part positioned outside said path, - said first end portion comprising means for being displaced with said rigid structure moving along said path in said insertion direction, in such a manner to incurve said contact and to create a rolling pressure against the conductive surface on the rigid structure, characterized in that the contact comprises at least one resilient blade made from elec-trically good conductive material, and at least a spring component made from material having good elastic properties, the said spring component being adapted to lean against the said resilient blade in order to ensure substantially constant elastic pressure of the said central por-tion of the resilient blade against the conductive surface.
2. Connector according to claim 1, characterized in that the contact blade is fixed, by one of its ends, to said connection means.
3. Connector according to claim 2, characterized in that the contact blade is fixed to the connection means by soldering.
4. Connector according to claim 3, characterized in that the contact blade is fixed to the connection means by soldering by points effected by laser.
5. Connector according to claim 1, characterized in that the spring means is constituted by a spring blade adapted to lean against the in-side surface of the contact blade.
6. Connector according to claim 5, characterized in that it comprises a series of contacts, each one comprising a supple blade made out of material having good resilient properties, the said supple blades and said spring blades being respectively parallel to each other, each spring blade corresponding to a supple blade, these two elements cons-tituting a couple of elements which co-operate to ensure a substantially constant elastic pressure and a good electric contact of each supple blade with the corresponding conductive surface of the rigid structure comprising a series of conductive surfaces, whose number is equal to that of the series of contacts.
7. Connector according to claim 1, characterized in that the spring blade and the connection means are made from one piece.
8. Connector according to claim 1, characterized in that the contact comprises a supple insulating support in strip form, at least one metal track applied on one face of the said support, the spring means being adapted to lean against the other face of the said insulating support, in such a way as to apply the said central portion of the said contact, with a substantially constant pressure, against the said conductive sur-face of the said rigid structure.
9. Connector according to claim 8, characterized in that the said con-ductive track comprises an electrically good conductive metal blade, integral with the said support.
10. Connector according to claim 9, characterized in that the said me-tal blade is covered with a protective coating.
11. Connector according to claim 109 characterized in that the said protective coating is constituted by a layer of tin and lead alloy.
12. Connector according to claim 8, characterized in that the support is constituted by a supple sheet of synthetic material.
13. Connector according to claim 6, characterized in that the support is made from a material of the polyimide type.
14. Connector according to claim 9, characterized in that the metal blade is made from a copper alloy.
15. Connector according to claim 14, characterized in that the metal blade is treated on its free face by a galvanic process.
16. Connector according to claim 7, characterized in that it comprises a series of conductive tracks corresponding respectively to a series of conductive surfaces of the rigid structure, the said tracks being placed parallel on the face of the insulating support strip, and a collection of spring blades adapted for applying the central portions of the said conductive tracks, with a substantially constant pressure, on the corresponding conductive surfaces or the rigid structure.
17. Connector according to claim 16, characterized in that the spring means are constituted by parallel blades and are fixed by their lower end to a continuous transversal strip, these blades together presenting a structure of comb form, the free upper ends of these blades comprising a swelling in-tended to be leant against the said central portions of the said conductive tracks of the rigid structure.
18. Connector for effecting resilient pressure contact with a series of conductive surfaces placed on the two opposite flat faces of a flat rigid structure according to claim 17, characterized in that the spring blades together present a double-comb structure, each blade being attached by its lower end to a continuous strip comprising means for fixing the said double-comb inside the said housing, in the extension of the said path in the insertion direction of the rigid structure.
19. Connector according to claim 18, characterized in that the contact comprises a supple strip having, before being mounted in the housing, a substantially rectangular shape, comprising two opposed series of conductive tracks parallel to each other, the strips of one series being separated from those of the other by an insulating zone, this strip being folded in "M" shape in order to be introduced in the housing, the free ends of the two arms of the "M" being connected by crimping to cor-responding connection means, and the insulating zone being placed in the central part of the "M", and surrounding the end of the runner which moves along the said path during insertion of the rigid structure.
20. Connector according to claim 7, characterized in that the conductive tracks are applied on a face of the said support by a photograve technique.
21. Connector according to claim 7, characterized in that the spring blades are connected to said conductive tracks by crimping, by means of crimping means which pierce the insulating support.
CA000403206A 1982-05-18 1982-05-18 Connector for printed circuit boards for effecting a resilient pressure contact with at least one conductive surface Expired CA1184263A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA000403206A CA1184263A (en) 1982-05-18 1982-05-18 Connector for printed circuit boards for effecting a resilient pressure contact with at least one conductive surface

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA000403206A CA1184263A (en) 1982-05-18 1982-05-18 Connector for printed circuit boards for effecting a resilient pressure contact with at least one conductive surface

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA1184263A true CA1184263A (en) 1985-03-19

Family

ID=4122807

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA000403206A Expired CA1184263A (en) 1982-05-18 1982-05-18 Connector for printed circuit boards for effecting a resilient pressure contact with at least one conductive surface

Country Status (1)

Country Link
CA (1) CA1184263A (en)

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