WO1998000891A1 - Method of making a contact assembly - Google Patents

Method of making a contact assembly Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1998000891A1
WO1998000891A1 PCT/US1997/011490 US9711490W WO9800891A1 WO 1998000891 A1 WO1998000891 A1 WO 1998000891A1 US 9711490 W US9711490 W US 9711490W WO 9800891 A1 WO9800891 A1 WO 9800891A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
conductive members
connector
mating
contact
contact section
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1997/011490
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Warren C. Hillbish
Earl W. Mc Cleerey
Original Assignee
The Whitaker Corporation
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
Priority claimed from US08/672,707 external-priority patent/US5882214A/en
Application filed by The Whitaker Corporation filed Critical The Whitaker Corporation
Priority to AU35130/97A priority Critical patent/AU3513097A/en
Priority to EP97931519A priority patent/EP0907992B1/en
Priority to DE69709926T priority patent/DE69709926T2/en
Publication of WO1998000891A1 publication Critical patent/WO1998000891A1/en

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01RELECTRICALLY-CONDUCTIVE CONNECTIONS; STRUCTURAL ASSOCIATIONS OF A PLURALITY OF MUTUALLY-INSULATED ELECTRICAL CONNECTING ELEMENTS; COUPLING DEVICES; CURRENT COLLECTORS
    • H01R43/00Apparatus or processes specially adapted for manufacturing, assembling, maintaining, or repairing of line connectors or current collectors or for joining electric conductors
    • H01R43/20Apparatus or processes specially adapted for manufacturing, assembling, maintaining, or repairing of line connectors or current collectors or for joining electric conductors for assembling or disassembling contact members with insulating base, case or sleeve
    • H01R43/24Assembling by moulding on contact members
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01RELECTRICALLY-CONDUCTIVE CONNECTIONS; STRUCTURAL ASSOCIATIONS OF A PLURALITY OF MUTUALLY-INSULATED ELECTRICAL CONNECTING ELEMENTS; COUPLING DEVICES; CURRENT COLLECTORS
    • H01R12/00Structural associations of a plurality of mutually-insulated electrical connecting elements, specially adapted for printed circuits, e.g. printed circuit boards [PCB], flat or ribbon cables, or like generally planar structures, e.g. terminal strips, terminal blocks; Coupling devices specially adapted for printed circuits, flat or ribbon cables, or like generally planar structures; Terminals specially adapted for contact with, or insertion into, printed circuits, flat or ribbon cables, or like generally planar structures
    • H01R12/70Coupling devices
    • H01R12/71Coupling devices for rigid printing circuits or like structures
    • H01R12/72Coupling devices for rigid printing circuits or like structures coupling with the edge of the rigid printed circuits or like structures
    • H01R12/722Coupling devices for rigid printing circuits or like structures coupling with the edge of the rigid printed circuits or like structures coupling devices mounted on the edge of the printed circuits
    • H01R12/724Coupling devices for rigid printing circuits or like structures coupling with the edge of the rigid printed circuits or like structures coupling devices mounted on the edge of the printed circuits containing contact members forming a right angle
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01RELECTRICALLY-CONDUCTIVE CONNECTIONS; STRUCTURAL ASSOCIATIONS OF A PLURALITY OF MUTUALLY-INSULATED ELECTRICAL CONNECTING ELEMENTS; COUPLING DEVICES; CURRENT COLLECTORS
    • H01R13/00Details of coupling devices of the kinds covered by groups H01R12/70 or H01R24/00 - H01R33/00
    • H01R13/62Means for facilitating engagement or disengagement of coupling parts or for holding them in engagement
    • H01R13/627Snap or like fastening
    • H01R13/6271Latching means integral with the housing

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to electrical connectors and more particularly to contacts insertable into a connector housing.
  • the contacts are initially stamped and formed in lead frame form and then insulative material is molded to body sections of the contacts while the contacts are joined to a carrier strip, after which the joints of the contacts to the carrier strip are severed to separate the contacts.
  • the unit thus formed is easily assembled along an assembly face of a housing opposite the mating face, along with a plurality of other such units to define the connector.
  • the present invention provides a contact assembly in an electrical connector in which a plurality of isolated conductive members are fabricated into a discrete contact assembly unit insertable into a connector housing.
  • insulative material is molded about body sections of the pair of now- severed contact halves to join the halves into a physical unit for convenience of manipulation as a unit during connector assembly as well as during service and repair.
  • the contact halves are stamped from a sheet metal blank and remain joined to the carrier strip remote from the body sections during molding.
  • the insulative material also maintains the desired spacing between the contact arms at their bases for assured electrical isolation therebetween when unmated while enabling assured mating with a pin contact of a mating connector, since retention sections of the contacts may be defined by housing-engaging barbs along the bases for force- fit into housing passageways.
  • a contact assembly unit defines a switch that provides an electrical indication whether or not a mated condition exists.
  • the mating indicator is an assembly of two (or more, in certain embodiments) electrically isolated conductive members that may be disposed in a single contact position or in a multi- contact column position of a multi-contact connector, with a first contact section being a socket having two cantilever beam arms, each of the arms being on a separate one of the conductive members.
  • One member containing one of the two arms or beams of the socket contact may also contain commoned therewith a second socket contact and its associated board- engaging contact section and a body section therebetween.
  • Body sections of the conductive members join the arms to respective second contact sections that, when connected to separate circuit paths of a second electrical article such as a circuit board, provide an electrical signal when the arms of the socket are commoned by being engaged by a complementary contact of the mating connector during mating.
  • the conductive members are physically held by insulative material molded about the body sections, for the mating indicator to be manipulated as a unit during assembly.
  • a connector initially having a selected number of socket contacts in rows and columns along the mating face can have its contact density doubled without enlarging the size of the connector or noticeably increasing connector mating forces.
  • Each socket contact is bisected longitudinally such that each conductive member includes a rearward second contact section such as a board-mount post, with a body section joining the post to one beam of the original socket contact section.
  • One contact position can for example be a mating indicator by a conventional pin commoning the two beams of the socket contact assembly, or the beams of the socket contact assembly can be formed to be spring biased to an initially commoned engagement so that mating with a laminated pin separates the previously engaged beams and thus breaks the circuit .
  • FIGURE 1 is an isometric view of the connector containing the present invention
  • FIGURES 2 and 3 are isometric views of a ground contact, and also the conductive members of a mating indicator contact assembly of the connector of FIG. 1
  • FIGURE 4 is an isometric view of the mating indicator contact of FIG. 3 after molding of insulative material thereto;
  • FIGURES 5 and 6 are isometric views similar to FIG. 3, of additional embodiments of the present invention
  • FIGURES 7 and 8 illustrate another embodiment of contact assembly of the present invention, in which each socket contact section is bisected so that the beams are defined on separate conductive members to form two isolated circuits when mated with a complementary pin having two separate and isolated conductive portions; and
  • FIGURES 9 -to 12 illustrate the fabrication of the contact assembly of FIGS. 7 and 8 from stamped blank to fabricated unit.
  • Connector 10 in FIG. 1 includes an insulative housing 12 and an array of signal contacts 14 and ground (or power) contacts 16 (FIG. 2) extending from mating face 18 to board-mounting face 20, and is shown mounted onto a circuit board 22.
  • Signal contacts 14 and ground contacts 16 include socket contact sections 24 exposed along mating face 18 to become mated with respective pin contact sections of contacts of a mating connector (not shown) , and further include posts 26 extending from board-mounting face 20 to become electrically connected with circuits of a circuit board.
  • a conductive shell 28 surrounding housing 12 between mating face 18 and board-mounting face 20.
  • Such a connector is disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,808,125.
  • FIG. 2 is shown a ground contact 16, with body sections 30 extending between each socket contact section 24 and a respective pair of posts 26, and is stamped from a blank.
  • Providing a pair of posts for each socket contact section allows removal of one thereof, if only one is needed to transmit the particular current levels transmitted over the circuit defined by the contact, in order to correspond to the particular positioning of the rows of the corresponding through holes of the circuit board circuit.
  • socket contact sections 24 may be commoned for grounding
  • body section 30 is integrally joined at isthmus 32 for ground contact 16 to be handled as a unit facilitating insertion.
  • each body section 30 also is seen to include an embossment 36 in engagement with one of the walls of the slot to optionally urge the contact against the opposed wall, thus stabilizing the position of the contact laterally.
  • the embossment may also be utilized as a push surface to install the contact into the housing, remaining exterior to the housing cavity.
  • Rearward body portions 38 adjacent pairs of posts 26 will extend rearwardly from the connector housing, and are spaced from each other.
  • the mating indicator 40 of the present invention is stamped from a blank as with ground contact 16, but is also stamped such that two separate pieces are defined.
  • a first piece 42 includes first socket contact section 44 and one set of posts 46 joined by rearward body portion 48 to a body section 50.
  • First piece 42 further includes one cantilever beam 52 that defines half of a second socket contact section 54, with beam 52 being joined to body section 50 by isthmus 56.
  • Second piece 60 includes a second cantilever beam 62 that defines the other half of second socket contact section 54, and second piece 60 further includes a body section 64 joining second cantilever beam 62 to rearward body portion 66 and a second set of posts 68.
  • a gap 70 of selected narrow dimension is defined between bases 72 of cantilever beams 52,62 of the two pieces and between body sections 50,64 to communicate with large recess 74 between rearward body portions 48,66, with the narrow dimension being sufficient to assure electrical isolation of pieces 42,60.
  • a small aperture 76 is stamped through isthmus 56.
  • An embossment 78 is formed on body section 50, as in ground contact 16 of FIG. 2, to stabilize the mating indicator in the housing slot upon assembly, or to be utilized as a push surface to install the contact into the housing, remaining exterior to the housing cavity.
  • Section 80 of body section 64 rearwardly of isthmus 56 is embedded within the insulative material 90 (FIG.
  • FIG. 4 illustrates indicator 40 after molding of insulative material 90 about body sections 50,64 of pieces 42,60 thus defining a physical unit for handling and assembly of the mating indicator into the housing.
  • Insulative material 90 includes side portions 92,94 defining major surfaces parallel to the axes of the contacts of the connector, with the two side portions integrally joined at several locations including gap 70 and large recess 74 between the rearward body portions of the two pieces that extend rearwardly from the rear face of the connector housing. Insulative material is disposed within aperture 76 to form a column of material extending between and joining side portions 92,94 adjacent forward edges 96 of insulative material 80.
  • a narrow flange 98 is also defined between base portions of cantilever beams 52,62 of second contact section 54, for supporting retention barbs 34 of beams 52,62 against wall portions of the forward housing passageway portion within which socket contact section 54 is disposed.
  • the metal utilized to define the conductive members may be for example phosphor bronze plated at the socket contact sections preferably with gold to enhance longevity of the contact during repeated mating cycles during in-service use of the connector, and plated at the board-mounting contact sections preferably with tin/lead to facilitate soldering.
  • Various plastic materials may be used in the molding process, preferably that are temperature- stable, nonhygroscopic such as liquid crystal polymer.
  • a pin contact Upon mating of connector 10 and a mating connector (not shown) , a pin contact becomes electrically engaged with second socket contact section 54 electrically commoning first and second cantilever beams 52,62 thereof and thus completing the circuit between members 42,60 which is detected by the circuitry of the circuit board to indicate the mated condition.
  • a mating indicator may be devised that comprises only a single socket contact portion, with the respective cantilever beam arms joining respective body sections extending to respective ones of the pair of board- engaging posts, such that the posts are connectable to respective circuits paths of the circuit board.
  • Such separate conductive members may easily be insert molded to provide insulative material surrounding the body sections and filling the gap or spacing therebetween.
  • FIGS. 5 and 6 illustrate additional embodiments of the present invention.
  • a mating indicator In FIG. 5, a mating indicator
  • the separate conductive members 402,404 each include one of the beams 406,408 of the lower socket contact section 410.
  • Upper conductive member 402 defines the entirety of the upper socket contact section 412 and the second contact section 414 associated therewith.
  • Lower conductive member 404 includes the second contact section 416 associated with the lower socket contact section 410.
  • Insulative material 430 is molded over body sections 418,420 similarly to what is shown in FIG. 4, and manipulation as a unit would also be similarly enabled during connector assembly as well as during service and repair.
  • Insulative material 430 preferably is molded to extend beyond at least portions of the upper edge 422 of upper conductive member 402 and the lower edge 424 of lower conductive member 404 thereby surrounding and embedding body sections 418,420, as well as fill gap 426 between the conductive members to maintain the members a fixed selected distance from each other for assured electrical isolation.
  • mating indicator embodiment 500 shows three discrete conductive members 502,504,506 formed from a single metal blank with insulative material 550 molded thereto.
  • Central conductive member 504 includes body sections 508,510 joined by an isthmus 512, with body section 508 mechanically and electrically integral with lower beam 514 of upper socket contact 516, upper beam 518 of lower socket contact section 520, forward post 522 of second contact section 524 associated with upper socket contact section 516, and rearward post 526 of second contact section 528 associated with lower socket contact section 520.
  • Upper conductive member 502 comprises upper beam 530 of upper socket contact section 516 and rearward post 532 of second contact section 524, joined by body section 534.
  • lower conductive member 506 comprises lower beam 536 of lower contact section 520 and forward post 538 of second contact section 528, joined by body section 540.
  • Insulative material 550 preferably is molded to extend beyond at least portions of the upper edge 542 of upper conductive member 502 and the lower edge 544 of lower conductive member 506 thereby surrounding and embedding all body sections 534,508,510,540, as well as fill gaps 546,548 between the three conductive members to maintain the members a fixed selected distance from each other for assured electrical isolation.
  • Pin contacts received into upper and lower socket contact sections 516,520 common the upper and lower conductive members 502,506 to central conductive member 504, thus closing the respective circuits on the circuit board to which posts 532,538 and commoned posts 522,526 are electrically connected.
  • a high density connector may be derived from the matable contact assembly embodiment 600 of FIGS. 7 to 12, useful in many industries such as the computer industry wherein space requirements are more and more critical.
  • contact assembly 604 is shown contact assembly 604 being mated with complementary pin contact assemblies 602.
  • Contact assembly 604 includes upper and lower sockets 606,608 each comprising upper and lower cantilever beam arms 610 , 612 ; 614 , 616 ; each socket is matable with a respective composite pin 618,620 each comprising upper and lower conductors 622, 624 ; 626, 628 associated with the respective arms of the sockets.
  • Each pin for example, includes its pair of conductors as discrete stamped and formed members about which insulative material 630,632 is molded such as by using temperature stable, nonhygroscopic liquid crystal polymer having limited shrinkage after molding, and which is sufficiently adherable to the conductors, for contact surfaces 634 to be exposed along the pin in the front, and post sections 636,638 along the rear face for electrical connection.
  • the conductors of the pins are stamped of a stock of sufficient thickness to allow for the insert molding to be accomplished without violating the outside envelope of a pin of standard thickness, thus allowing for the doubling of the number of signal contacts without increasing the required mating forces.
  • the pin contact assemblies may be mounted into a common insulative housing (not shown) or may be mounted onto a circuit element such as a circuit board (not shown) by soldering the posts in through-holes.
  • Each beam 610, 612 ; 614 , 616 is defined at a first end of a respective conductive member 640, 642 ; 644, 646 isolated from the other conductive members.
  • a second contact section 648,650,652,654 is defined at a second end of a conductive member, and the beams and second contact sections are integrally joined by a respective body section 656,658,660,662.
  • Insulative material 670 is molded around the body sections of the conductive members to define an integral assembly manipulatable as a unit during handling facilitating connector assembly and also repair and servicing.
  • Retention barbs 668 are defined along outer edges of bases of all sockets 606,608, for establishing an interference fit within passageway portions of the housing (see FIG. 1) into which contact assembly 604 is inserted.
  • pins 618,620 are received into respective ones of sockets 606,608, with conductors 622, 624; 626, 628 electrically engaged with respective ones of beams 610 , 612 ; 614 , 616 to complete respective circuits within the mated assembly, as illustrated in FIG. 8.
  • FIGS. 9 to 12 illustrate the fabrication procedure for manufacture of contact assembly 604 such as by using progressive dies and a mold apparatus.
  • a blank of the assembly is stamped in FIG. 9 to define sockets 606,608 having beams 610 , 612 ; 614 , 616 , and to have posts 648,650,652,654 for board-mountable second contact sections, and preferably the blank is kept on carrier strip 682 for convenience in manufacture for further stamping and forming and for plating.
  • further stamping has defined a lead frame wherein the body sections 640,642,644,646 are given general form and defining precisely dimensioned gaps 674, but remain joined temporarily at bights 686 at bases of the beams and the posts.
  • FIG. 9 illustrate the fabrication procedure for manufacture of contact assembly 604 such as by using progressive dies and a mold apparatus.
  • a blank of the assembly is stamped in FIG. 9 to define sockets 606,608 having beams 610 , 612 ; 614 , 616 , and to have posts
  • insulative material 670 such as temperature- stable, nonhygroscopic liquid crystal polymer, has been molded about body sections 640,642,644,646 in a manner exposing bights 686 and filling gaps 674 especially forming flanges 672 of insulative material at the bases of the beams
  • Carrier strips 682 are now removed .

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Coupling Device And Connection With Printed Circuit (AREA)
  • Connector Housings Or Holding Contact Members (AREA)

Abstract

A contact assembly (90) includes separate conductive members (42, 54) with insulative material (90) molded about body sections (50, 64) to define an integral unit for handling during connector assembly. The method includes stamping the conductive members (656, 658, 660, 662) from a common blank (680) to have beams (610, 612, 614, 616) associated in pairs to define sockets (606, 608), second contact sections (648, 650, 652, 654) at other ends, and body sections (656, 658, 660, 662) joining the respective beams and second contact sections (648, 650, 652, 654). Final separation of the conductive members may occur after molding of the insulative material (670), prior to which the conductive members may be retained on carrier strip facilitating the stamping, plating and molding processes. One contact assembly (604) provides sockets (606, 608) having pairs of beams (610, 612 and 614, 616) with the beams defined on separate conductive members (640, 642, 644, 646) and is inserted into a housing doubling the contact density of the connector without increasing the size of the housing. Using the method, a mating indicator (40) may be made, where two conductive members (42, 60) having body sections (50, 64) physically joined by molded insulative material (90), include second contact sections (46, 68) connectable to a circuit board and that become commoned upon connector mating to indicate mating.

Description

METHOD OF MAKING A CONTACT ASSEMBLY
The present invention relates to electrical connectors and more particularly to contacts insertable into a connector housing.
Several varieties of electrical connectors are known in which the contact sections of a plurality of contacts of the connector are arrayed in rows and columns along the mating face, and optionally along another interconnection face such as a board-mounting f ce. In one such connector as disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 5,066,236, several contacts include socket contact sections aligned in a column of the mating face and include righ -angle rear portions along the connector's board-mounting face for connection to an array of through-holes of a circuit board to which the connector is to be mounted. The contacts are initially stamped and formed in lead frame form and then insulative material is molded to body sections of the contacts while the contacts are joined to a carrier strip, after which the joints of the contacts to the carrier strip are severed to separate the contacts. The unit thus formed is easily assembled along an assembly face of a housing opposite the mating face, along with a plurality of other such units to define the connector.
It is desired to provide a compact multi- contact connector with simplified assembly.
It is further desired to provide a method of forming multi -contact units for insertion into a housing such that the contacts of the units are multifunctional .
It is also desired to provide a compact high- density connector. The present invention provides a contact assembly in an electrical connector in which a plurality of isolated conductive members are fabricated into a discrete contact assembly unit insertable into a connector housing.
In the present invention, by an insert molding process, insulative material is molded about body sections of the pair of now- severed contact halves to join the halves into a physical unit for convenience of manipulation as a unit during connector assembly as well as during service and repair. Preferably the contact halves are stamped from a sheet metal blank and remain joined to the carrier strip remote from the body sections during molding. The insulative material also maintains the desired spacing between the contact arms at their bases for assured electrical isolation therebetween when unmated while enabling assured mating with a pin contact of a mating connector, since retention sections of the contacts may be defined by housing-engaging barbs along the bases for force- fit into housing passageways.
One embodiment of a contact assembly unit defines a switch that provides an electrical indication whether or not a mated condition exists. The mating indicator is an assembly of two (or more, in certain embodiments) electrically isolated conductive members that may be disposed in a single contact position or in a multi- contact column position of a multi-contact connector, with a first contact section being a socket having two cantilever beam arms, each of the arms being on a separate one of the conductive members. One member containing one of the two arms or beams of the socket contact, may also contain commoned therewith a second socket contact and its associated board- engaging contact section and a body section therebetween. Body sections of the conductive members join the arms to respective second contact sections that, when connected to separate circuit paths of a second electrical article such as a circuit board, provide an electrical signal when the arms of the socket are commoned by being engaged by a complementary contact of the mating connector during mating. The conductive members are physically held by insulative material molded about the body sections, for the mating indicator to be manipulated as a unit during assembly.
In another embodiment, a connector initially having a selected number of socket contacts in rows and columns along the mating face, can have its contact density doubled without enlarging the size of the connector or noticeably increasing connector mating forces. Each socket contact is bisected longitudinally such that each conductive member includes a rearward second contact section such as a board-mount post, with a body section joining the post to one beam of the original socket contact section. Upon mating with a laminated pin of a mating connector having isolated circuits on opposed sides of the pin, two independent isolated circuits are completed when each pin circuit engages a respective socket contact beam. One contact position can for example be a mating indicator by a conventional pin commoning the two beams of the socket contact assembly, or the beams of the socket contact assembly can be formed to be spring biased to an initially commoned engagement so that mating with a laminated pin separates the previously engaged beams and thus breaks the circuit . Embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which
FIGURE 1 is an isometric view of the connector containing the present invention; FIGURES 2 and 3 are isometric views of a ground contact, and also the conductive members of a mating indicator contact assembly of the connector of FIG. 1; FIGURE 4 is an isometric view of the mating indicator contact of FIG. 3 after molding of insulative material thereto;
FIGURES 5 and 6 are isometric views similar to FIG. 3, of additional embodiments of the present invention; FIGURES 7 and 8 illustrate another embodiment of contact assembly of the present invention, in which each socket contact section is bisected so that the beams are defined on separate conductive members to form two isolated circuits when mated with a complementary pin having two separate and isolated conductive portions; and
FIGURES 9 -to 12 illustrate the fabrication of the contact assembly of FIGS. 7 and 8 from stamped blank to fabricated unit.
Connector 10 in FIG. 1 includes an insulative housing 12 and an array of signal contacts 14 and ground (or power) contacts 16 (FIG. 2) extending from mating face 18 to board-mounting face 20, and is shown mounted onto a circuit board 22. Signal contacts 14 and ground contacts 16 include socket contact sections 24 exposed along mating face 18 to become mated with respective pin contact sections of contacts of a mating connector (not shown) , and further include posts 26 extending from board-mounting face 20 to become electrically connected with circuits of a circuit board. Also shown is a conductive shell 28 surrounding housing 12 between mating face 18 and board-mounting face 20. Such a connector is disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,808,125.
In FIG. 2 is shown a ground contact 16, with body sections 30 extending between each socket contact section 24 and a respective pair of posts 26, and is stamped from a blank. Providing a pair of posts for each socket contact section allows removal of one thereof, if only one is needed to transmit the particular current levels transmitted over the circuit defined by the contact, in order to correspond to the particular positioning of the rows of the corresponding through holes of the circuit board circuit. Since socket contact sections 24 may be commoned for grounding, body section 30 is integrally joined at isthmus 32 for ground contact 16 to be handled as a unit facilitating insertion. The ground contact is insertable into a slot of connector housing 12, with contact retention barbs 34 on edges of each body section 30 to achieve an interference fit with side walls of passageway portions of the housing adjacent the mating face and in communication with the vertical slot rearwardly therefrom. Each body section 30 also is seen to include an embossment 36 in engagement with one of the walls of the slot to optionally urge the contact against the opposed wall, thus stabilizing the position of the contact laterally. The embossment may also be utilized as a push surface to install the contact into the housing, remaining exterior to the housing cavity. Rearward body portions 38 adjacent pairs of posts 26 will extend rearwardly from the connector housing, and are spaced from each other.
In FIG. 3 and 4 is shown the mating indicator 40 of the present invention. Firstly, the mating indicator is stamped from a blank as with ground contact 16, but is also stamped such that two separate pieces are defined. A first piece 42 includes first socket contact section 44 and one set of posts 46 joined by rearward body portion 48 to a body section 50. First piece 42 further includes one cantilever beam 52 that defines half of a second socket contact section 54, with beam 52 being joined to body section 50 by isthmus 56. Second piece 60 includes a second cantilever beam 62 that defines the other half of second socket contact section 54, and second piece 60 further includes a body section 64 joining second cantilever beam 62 to rearward body portion 66 and a second set of posts 68. A gap 70 of selected narrow dimension is defined between bases 72 of cantilever beams 52,62 of the two pieces and between body sections 50,64 to communicate with large recess 74 between rearward body portions 48,66, with the narrow dimension being sufficient to assure electrical isolation of pieces 42,60. Preferably a small aperture 76 is stamped through isthmus 56. An embossment 78 is formed on body section 50, as in ground contact 16 of FIG. 2, to stabilize the mating indicator in the housing slot upon assembly, or to be utilized as a push surface to install the contact into the housing, remaining exterior to the housing cavity. Section 80 of body section 64 rearwardly of isthmus 56 is embedded within the insulative material 90 (FIG. 4) , providing for an enhanced physical gripping of the plastic material on the conductive member, and also stabilizing first cantilever beam 52 against lateral stresses during handling and also during in-service use of the connector. Also, side edges of bases 72 are seen to be provided with retention barbs 82, as in ground contacts 16 of FIG. 2. FIG. 4 illustrates indicator 40 after molding of insulative material 90 about body sections 50,64 of pieces 42,60 thus defining a physical unit for handling and assembly of the mating indicator into the housing. Insulative material 90 includes side portions 92,94 defining major surfaces parallel to the axes of the contacts of the connector, with the two side portions integrally joined at several locations including gap 70 and large recess 74 between the rearward body portions of the two pieces that extend rearwardly from the rear face of the connector housing. Insulative material is disposed within aperture 76 to form a column of material extending between and joining side portions 92,94 adjacent forward edges 96 of insulative material 80. A narrow flange 98 is also defined between base portions of cantilever beams 52,62 of second contact section 54, for supporting retention barbs 34 of beams 52,62 against wall portions of the forward housing passageway portion within which socket contact section 54 is disposed.
The metal utilized to define the conductive members may be for example phosphor bronze plated at the socket contact sections preferably with gold to enhance longevity of the contact during repeated mating cycles during in-service use of the connector, and plated at the board-mounting contact sections preferably with tin/lead to facilitate soldering. Various plastic materials may be used in the molding process, preferably that are temperature- stable, nonhygroscopic such as liquid crystal polymer.
Upon mating of connector 10 and a mating connector (not shown) , a pin contact becomes electrically engaged with second socket contact section 54 electrically commoning first and second cantilever beams 52,62 thereof and thus completing the circuit between members 42,60 which is detected by the circuitry of the circuit board to indicate the mated condition.
It may be discerned that a mating indicator may be devised that comprises only a single socket contact portion, with the respective cantilever beam arms joining respective body sections extending to respective ones of the pair of board- engaging posts, such that the posts are connectable to respective circuits paths of the circuit board. Such separate conductive members may easily be insert molded to provide insulative material surrounding the body sections and filling the gap or spacing therebetween.
FIGS. 5 and 6 illustrate additional embodiments of the present invention. In FIG. 5, a mating indicator
400 is shown that is similar to the indicator of FIGS. 3 and 4 after molding insulative material about the separate conductive members stamped from a common blank. However, in FIG. 5 the separate conductive members 402,404 each include one of the beams 406,408 of the lower socket contact section 410. Upper conductive member 402 defines the entirety of the upper socket contact section 412 and the second contact section 414 associated therewith. Lower conductive member 404 includes the second contact section 416 associated with the lower socket contact section 410. Insulative material 430 is molded over body sections 418,420 similarly to what is shown in FIG. 4, and manipulation as a unit would also be similarly enabled during connector assembly as well as during service and repair. Insulative material 430 preferably is molded to extend beyond at least portions of the upper edge 422 of upper conductive member 402 and the lower edge 424 of lower conductive member 404 thereby surrounding and embedding body sections 418,420, as well as fill gap 426 between the conductive members to maintain the members a fixed selected distance from each other for assured electrical isolation.
In FIG. 6 mating indicator embodiment 500 shows three discrete conductive members 502,504,506 formed from a single metal blank with insulative material 550 molded thereto. Central conductive member 504 includes body sections 508,510 joined by an isthmus 512, with body section 508 mechanically and electrically integral with lower beam 514 of upper socket contact 516, upper beam 518 of lower socket contact section 520, forward post 522 of second contact section 524 associated with upper socket contact section 516, and rearward post 526 of second contact section 528 associated with lower socket contact section 520. Upper conductive member 502 comprises upper beam 530 of upper socket contact section 516 and rearward post 532 of second contact section 524, joined by body section 534. And lower conductive member 506 comprises lower beam 536 of lower contact section 520 and forward post 538 of second contact section 528, joined by body section 540. Insulative material 550 preferably is molded to extend beyond at least portions of the upper edge 542 of upper conductive member 502 and the lower edge 544 of lower conductive member 506 thereby surrounding and embedding all body sections 534,508,510,540, as well as fill gaps 546,548 between the three conductive members to maintain the members a fixed selected distance from each other for assured electrical isolation. Pin contacts received into upper and lower socket contact sections 516,520 common the upper and lower conductive members 502,506 to central conductive member 504, thus closing the respective circuits on the circuit board to which posts 532,538 and commoned posts 522,526 are electrically connected.
A high density connector may be derived from the matable contact assembly embodiment 600 of FIGS. 7 to 12, useful in many industries such as the computer industry wherein space requirements are more and more critical. In FIGS. 7 and 8 is shown contact assembly 604 being mated with complementary pin contact assemblies 602. Contact assembly 604 includes upper and lower sockets 606,608 each comprising upper and lower cantilever beam arms 610 , 612 ; 614 , 616 ; each socket is matable with a respective composite pin 618,620 each comprising upper and lower conductors 622, 624 ; 626, 628 associated with the respective arms of the sockets.
Each pin, for example, includes its pair of conductors as discrete stamped and formed members about which insulative material 630,632 is molded such as by using temperature stable, nonhygroscopic liquid crystal polymer having limited shrinkage after molding, and which is sufficiently adherable to the conductors, for contact surfaces 634 to be exposed along the pin in the front, and post sections 636,638 along the rear face for electrical connection. The conductors of the pins are stamped of a stock of sufficient thickness to allow for the insert molding to be accomplished without violating the outside envelope of a pin of standard thickness, thus allowing for the doubling of the number of signal contacts without increasing the required mating forces. The pin contact assemblies may be mounted into a common insulative housing (not shown) or may be mounted onto a circuit element such as a circuit board (not shown) by soldering the posts in through-holes.
Each beam 610, 612 ; 614 , 616 is defined at a first end of a respective conductive member 640, 642 ; 644, 646 isolated from the other conductive members. A second contact section 648,650,652,654 is defined at a second end of a conductive member, and the beams and second contact sections are integrally joined by a respective body section 656,658,660,662. As a result, isolated electrical circuits are created extending from mating face 664 to an other face such as boar -mounting face 666 of the assembly. Insulative material 670 is molded around the body sections of the conductive members to define an integral assembly manipulatable as a unit during handling facilitating connector assembly and also repair and servicing. Retention barbs 668 are defined along outer edges of bases of all sockets 606,608, for establishing an interference fit within passageway portions of the housing (see FIG. 1) into which contact assembly 604 is inserted.
Upon mating, pins 618,620 are received into respective ones of sockets 606,608, with conductors 622, 624; 626, 628 electrically engaged with respective ones of beams 610 , 612 ; 614 , 616 to complete respective circuits within the mated assembly, as illustrated in FIG. 8.
FIGS. 9 to 12 illustrate the fabrication procedure for manufacture of contact assembly 604 such as by using progressive dies and a mold apparatus. A blank of the assembly is stamped in FIG. 9 to define sockets 606,608 having beams 610 , 612 ; 614 , 616 , and to have posts 648,650,652,654 for board-mountable second contact sections, and preferably the blank is kept on carrier strip 682 for convenience in manufacture for further stamping and forming and for plating. In FIG. 10, further stamping has defined a lead frame wherein the body sections 640,642,644,646 are given general form and defining precisely dimensioned gaps 674, but remain joined temporarily at bights 686 at bases of the beams and the posts. In FIG. 11, insulative material 670 such as temperature- stable, nonhygroscopic liquid crystal polymer, has been molded about body sections 640,642,644,646 in a manner exposing bights 686 and filling gaps 674 especially forming flanges 672 of insulative material at the bases of the beams
610,612,614,616 inwardly of retention barbs 668, all defining a "chicklet". Carrier strips 682 are now removed .
In FIG. 12, bights 686 are removed, fully separating the conductive members into discrete separate circuits, defining contact assembly 604.

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS;
1. A method of fabricating a contact assembly (40,400,500,604) for insertion into a housing (12) of an electrical connector (10) having a mating face (18) and an other face (20) for electrical connection of contacts (14,16) thereof to other electrical articles, comprising the steps of: defining at least two conductive members (42 , 60 ; 402 , 40 ; 502 , 504 , 506 ; 640 , 642 ; 644 , 646) extending from respective beams (52 , 62 ;406, 408;514 , 518;530, 536; 610, 612 ; 614, 616) at first ends thereof to contact sections (46 , 68 ; 414 , 416; 524 , 528; 648, 650; 652, 654) at second ends thereof joined by body sections (50, 64; 418, 420 ; 508 ,510 ,-534,540 ; 656, 658; 660, 662) , with said conductive members separated from each other a selected distance therealong; molding insulative material (90,430,550,670) about said body sections at least substantially embedding said body sections forwardly of said contact sections and rearwardly from bases (72) of said beams exposing said beams while separating said beams a selected distance, whereby an integral assembly is defined manipulatable as a unit to include pairs of beams defining socket contact sections (54,410,516,520,606,608) exposed for mating with complementary pin contacts such that free ends of said beams are deflectable apart with bases of said beams resistant to compressive forces urging them toward each other.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the step of defining the conductive members (656 , 658; 660, 662) includes defining temporary bights (686) joining selective portions of adjacent ones of the conductive members .
3. The method of claim 2 further including the step following the molding step of removing the temporary bights (686) and completely isolating the conductive members (656 , 658 ; 660 , 662) from each other.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein said body section (50) of at least one of said conductive members (42) includes a through aperture (76) within which a portion of said insulative material is disposed extending between opposed sides of said one of said conductive members and integrally joins other portions of said insulative material disposed along said opposed sides thereof proximate a base (72) of said cantilever beams.
5. The method of claim 1 wherein the molding step includes defining flanges (98,672) of insulative material in gaps (70,426,546,548,674) between bases (72) of the beams of each said socket contact section.
6. The method of claim 5 wherein the defining step includes defining retention barbs (34,668) along outer edges of the bases (72) of the beams of each said socket contact section.
7. The method of claim 5, further comprising the step of inserting said integral assembly
(40,400,500,604) into a slot of insulative housing (12) such that said beams are exposed along said mating face (18) to define said socket contact sections, and said contact sections (46 , 68 ; 414 , 416 ; 524 , 528 ; 648 , 650 ; 652 , 654) are exposed along said other face (20).
8. An electrical connector (10) of the type being electrically connectable to a mating connector along a mating face (18) and to another electrical article along an other face (20) , the connector (10) having a plurality of contacts disposed in an insulative housing (12) having respective first contact sections arranged in at least two rows of contact -receiving positions along said mating face (18), and at least one of said first contact sections comprises a socket contact section (54,410,516,520,606,608) exposed along said mating face to be electrically engaged by complementary contact section of said mating connector during mating, said socket contact section including two cantilever beam arms (52 , 62 ;406, 408; 514, 518; 530, 536; 610, 612 ; 614,616), characterized in that: said two cantilever beam arms are defined by two electrically isolated conductive members
(42,60;402,404;502,504,506;640,642;644,646) , a first one (42,402,502,506,640,644) of said conductive members having a body section (50,418,534,540,656,660) integrally joining one (52,406,530,536,610,614) of said cantilever beam arms and a second contact section
(46,416,532,538,648,652) exposed along said other face (20) of said housing (12) to become electrically connected to a complementary conductor of said another electrical article, with a second one (60,404,504,642,646) of said conductive members having a body section (64,420,510,658,662) integrally joining the other (62,408,514,516,616) of said cantilever beam arms and an other second contact section (68,414,522,526,650,654) . 9. The electrical connector (10) of claim 8 wherein said body sections (50 , 64 ; 418 , 420; 508 , 510; 534, 540; 656, 658 ; 660, 662) of said first and second conductive members are disposed in a common plane and are separated by a gap (70,426,546,548,674) of minimum selected width within which is disposed insulative material (90,430,550,670) molded to said first and second conductive members prior to assembly of said connector defining a contact assembly (40,400,500,604) assemblable to said connector (10) as a unit. 10. The electrical connector (10) of claim 9 wherein said one and said other of said cantilever beam arms of said socket contact section
(54,410,516,520,606,608) including retention members (34,668) therealong m interference fit with said housing (12) upon full insertion of said contact assembly unit (40,400,500,604) thereinto, and said insulating material (90,430,550,670) defines a flange (98,672) extending forwardly between bases (72) of said one and said other of said cantilever beam arms for supporting said retention members (34,668) to obtain said interference fit. li. The electrical connector (10) of claim 8 wherein one (42,402) of said first and second conductive members defines an additional contact section (44,412) joined by said body section (50,418) thereof to said contact section (46,414) thereof.
12. The electrical connector (10) of claim 11 wherein said additional contact section (44,412) is a socket contact section.
13. The electrical connector (10) of claim 8 wherein one (504) of said first and second conductive members (502,504) defines a first beam (518) of a second socket contact section (520) joined by said body section (508,510) thereof to one contact section (522,526) associated therewith, and a third conductive member (506) defines a second beam (536) of said second socket contact section (520) joined by a respective body section (540) thereof to an other contact section (538) also associated with second socket contact section (520) .
14. The electrical connector (10) of claim 8 wherein said body sections of said first and second conductive members are disposed in a common plane and are separated by a gap (70,426,546,548,674) of minimum selected width within which is disposed insulative material (90,430,550,670) molded to said first and second conductive members prior to assembly of said connector (10) , defining a contact assembly (40,400,500,604) assemblable to said connector as a unit .
15. The electrical connector (10) of claim 8 wherein said body section (50) of said first conductive member (42) includes an elongate stabilizer (80) extending rearwardly from a base (72) of said one of said cantilever beam arms (52) , and portions of said insulative material (90,430,550,670) molded about said elongate stabilizer and is engageable with adjacent surfaces of said slot for preventing movement of said base (72) of said one (52) of said cantilever beam arms after connector assembly.
16. A mating indicator (40,400,500,604) for an electrical connector, the connector (10) being of the type being electrically connectable to a mating connector along a mating face (18) and to another electrical article along an other face (20) , the connector having a plurality of contacts (14,16) disposed in an insulative housing (12) having respective first contact sections arranged in at least two rows along said mating face (18), said mating indicator comprising: at least one of said first contact sections thereof comprising a socket contact section (54,410,516,520,606,608) exposed along said mating face (18) to be electrically engaged by complementary contact section of said mating connector during mating, said at least one socket contact section including at least two cantilever beam arms (52, 62,-406, 408; 530, 536; 610, 612,-614, 616) ; said two cantilever beam arms being defined by two isolated conductive members (42 , 60;.402 , 404 ; 502 , 504 , 506 ; 640, 642;644, 46) , a first one (42,402,502,506,640,644) of said conductive members having a body section (50,418,534,540,656,660) integrally joining one (52,406,530,536,610,614) of said arms to a second contact section (46,416,532,538,648,652654) exposed along said other face (20) of said housing (12) to be electrically engaged by said another electrical article, with a second one (60,404,504,642,646) of said conductive members having a body section
(64,420,510,658,662) integrally joining the other (62,408,514,516,616) of said arms and an other second contact section (68,414,522,526,650,654), whereby when said second contact sections are joined to separate portions of a sensing circuit of said other electrical article and a complementary contact section of the mating connector becomes electrically engaged with said two cantilever beam arms during connector mating, said mating indicator commons said separate portions of said sensing circuit and indicates connector mating.
17. The mating indicator (40,400,500,604) of claim 16 wherein one (42,402) of said first and second conductive members defines an additional socket contact section (44,412) joined by said body section (50,418) thereof to said contact section (46,414) thereof.
PCT/US1997/011490 1996-06-28 1997-06-26 Method of making a contact assembly WO1998000891A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU35130/97A AU3513097A (en) 1996-06-28 1997-06-26 Method of making a contact assembly
EP97931519A EP0907992B1 (en) 1996-06-28 1997-06-26 Method of making a connector and connector itself
DE69709926T DE69709926T2 (en) 1996-06-28 1997-06-26 METHOD FOR PRODUCING A CONTACT ARRANGEMENT AND CONTACT ARRANGEMENT ITSELF

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US67270896A 1996-06-28 1996-06-28
US08/672,707 1996-06-28
US08/672,707 US5882214A (en) 1996-06-28 1996-06-28 Electrical connector with contact assembly
US08/672,708 1996-06-28

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WO1998000891A1 true WO1998000891A1 (en) 1998-01-08

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AU (1) AU3513097A (en)
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DE102004029536A1 (en) * 2004-06-18 2006-01-05 Robert Bosch Gmbh Pin for electrically connecting an inner surface of a metallized plastic housing to a component comprises a connecting section, a fixing section and a contact section for cold electrical contact of the metallized surface
DE602007004950D1 (en) * 2007-04-27 2010-04-08 Tyco Electronics Nederland Bv Manufacturing method of an electrical connector
BE1025493B1 (en) * 2017-08-21 2019-03-25 Phoenix Contact Gmbh & Co. Kg Electrical connector, circuit board and method of making an electrical connector
CN109524813A (en) * 2017-09-20 2019-03-26 泰科电子(上海)有限公司 Connector and circuit board assemblies

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CN1223749A (en) 1999-07-21
DE69709926T2 (en) 2002-08-29
EP0907992A1 (en) 1999-04-14
AU3513097A (en) 1998-01-21
CN1108652C (en) 2003-05-14
EP0907992B1 (en) 2002-01-09
DE69709926D1 (en) 2002-02-28

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