Radio frequency cable housing solution with self aligning and reconfiguration capability
11217935 · 2022-01-04
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01R13/5841
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01R13/58
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method and apparatus is presented for strain relief for mil-spec RF cabling connectors. When the RF signals are carried on the cables, they are either attached to connectors to increase their lengths or they get attached to hardware assembly that receives and transmits RF signals. At connections, strain relief is provided so that any movement of the cables does not convey stress and strain to the points where cable joins the connector or its mate. A concise, space restricted strain relief solution is provided by use of clamp, cover or shrink tubing to transfer cables in all four directions. The concentric cables line up in small dimensions and are replaceable individually as opposed to discard of entire mesh of cables on single cable failure.
Claims
1. A RF cable connector assembly, comprising: a back shell attached to a connector with a plurality of holes and; a clamp, shrink tubing or cover attached to back shell and; a plurality of cavities between the back shell and the clamp, shrink tubing or cover are used to pass a plurality of RF cables with a plurality of pins attached to a plurality of connectors.
2. The RF cable connector assembly of claim 1 where the back shell can be reoriented to provide the clamping in any desired direction.
3. The RF cable connector assembly of claim 1 where the back shell remains attached to the connector solely by the plurality of cables passing through.
4. The RF cable connector assembly of claim 1 where the back shell is physically attached to the plurality of connectors.
5. The RF cable connector assembly of claim 1 where the back shell is used for improved alignment between the plurality of connected cables at the connector.
6. The RF cable connector assembly of claim 1 where a thickness of the back shell, the shrink tubing and the clamp is used to provide accommodation to small spaces leading to better integration.
7. The RF cable connector assembly of claim 1 where the cable is individually repairable or replaceable.
8. A RF cable connector assembly method, comprising: a back shell attached to a connector with a plurality of holes and; a clamp, shrink tubing or cover attached to back shell and; a plurality of cavities between the back shell and clamp, shrink tubing or cover are used to pass a plurality of RF cables with a plurality of pins attached to a plurality of connectors.
9. The RF cable connector assembly method of claim 8 where the back shell can be reoriented to provide the clamping in any desired direction.
10. The RF cable connector assembly method of claim 8 where the back shell remains attached to the connector solely by the plurality of cables passing through.
11. The RF cable connector assembly method of claim 8 where the back shell is physically attached to the connector.
12. The RF cable connector assembly method of claim 8 where the back shell is used for improved alignment between the plurality of connected cables at the plurality of connectors.
13. The RF cable connector assembly method of claim 8 where a thickness of the back shell, the shrink tubing and the clamp is used to provide accommodation to small spaces leading to better integration.
14. The RF cable connector assembly method of claim 8 where the cable is individually repairable or replaceable.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAIL DESCRIPTIONS OF THE INVENTION
(10) All illustrations of the drawings are for the purpose of describing selected versions of the present invention and are not intended to limit the scope of the present invention.
(11) In the following description specific details are set forth describing certain embodiments. It will be apparent, however, to one skilled in the art that the disclosed embodiments may be practiced without some or entire specific details mentioned herein. The specific embodiments presented are meant to be illustrative, but not limiting. One skilled in the art may realize other material that, although not specifically described herein, is within the scope and spirit of this disclosure.
(12) In one embodiment of the apparatus, in the design of electrical and mechanical systems, one important component among a plurality of the components is a printed circuit board (PCB). The printed circuit board could be a single instantiation in the electrical system or it may exists in multiple instantiations of the same printed circuit board. In another embodiment, the electrical system may comprise of multiple printed circuit boards that the functionally and physically different, communication with each other through a backplane connector or through cables carrying network or communication signals. In one embodiment, such signals may be RF signals. In another embodiment, this communication could be through ribbon or other cables or wires secured or otherwise used within the system. In another embodiment, a printed circuit board may connect to one or more daughter cards which are typically smaller in size than the printed circuit board (also sometimes referred as a mother board). For remote electrical signals, the cables are attached to hardware assembly, including printed circuit boards through connectors. In another apparatus, a certain length of cables may attach to another cable through a connector. For RF signals, the cable may involve concentric wires, with the connector ensuring alignment.
(13) In a typical electrical system, a printed circuit board provides a platform or space where electronic components are placed and populated. These components include but are not restricted to Application Specific Integrated Circuits (ASIC), Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA), a plurality of memory chips or modules, capacitors, resistors, connectors and interconnect among others. Connectors are used where remote signals are brought to this apparatus through cables of various kinds. For a printed circuit board used in a set top box for dish TV reception, a set of RF cables are brought from the dish antenna to the set top box's printed circuit board and connected to the radio on the printed circuit board through connectors. While connection is made or after that, it is natural that the long distance cables shall move for various reasons. Without any strain relief, the movement of the long distance cable will generate a strain or torque, which tends to disrupt the connection between the cable and the radio on the PCB. A strain relief apparatus is used to isolate the cable movement and the actual electrical joint between the connector and the cable. Various kinds of strain relief solutions are available. The strain relief apparatus for RF cabling involving mil-specifications provides special challenges and requires advanced solutions.
(14) An embodiment of the present invention provides a solution that does a couple of things different than current products. It solves the centering of the contacts within the cavity and allows minimum movement of the contact in case the cables are moved or routed to one side to the other. It also reduces the amount of space verse the standard strain relief products. In another embodiment of this solution, an improvement is achieved in the capability of reworking a failed cable assembly. There is no more requirement to scrap the completed cable assembly. In one embodiment of the present invention, one has to just remove the failed cable and replace it with a new one. This design also is much smaller and can be adapted for smaller spaces. It also utilizes the existing mounting hole of the connector. In one embodiment, there is no need to screw on a strain relief back shell.
(15) In order to restrict the movement around the points of joining of the connector and the cable, or where connector joins a cable to another cable, the traditional solution is a “potted” version. The strain relief apparatus is potted or joined through epoxy materials which includes the multi cable apparatus. If there is a failure, there is no way to remove the “potting” materials. The materials setups to a very solid state, that requires a “grinder” to remove, ensuring again that there is no way to replace a failed cable. The present embodiment does not use any type of “potting” process. Therefore, having to rework a failed cable is just a matter of removing, sliding the strain relief back to allow an insertion/extraction tool to be used. The method merely involves removing the failed cable and replacing it with a new one. The sliding clamp (strain relief) is part of the new invention. It replaces the standard strain relief (back shell) that is used for the “potting” process.
(16) In one embodiment, in order to accommodate small spaces, it's a matter of changing the “thickness” of the new invention. In one application, one embodiment of the invention involves thickness of approximately 1.75 inches, which is the smallest to date. In other embodiments of the invention, the thickness ranges from 1.75 to 3.00 inches. In one latest embodiment, the invention has a cable clamp, which allows the cables to be secured to one of four directions.
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(27) This invention makes the RF cabling strain relief, as some embodiments, much more compact and flexible. The key differentiator is that no potted or epoxy materials are used and this allows for a single cable replacement on failures rather than discarding the entire mesh of cables. It is stated that while for illustrative purpose, an RF cable connector is chosen for strain relief, it can be used for any such or other cables or wires. It is also apparent to those skilled in the art, that is, to those who have knowledge and experience in this area of technology that the description above explains just one to two of many possible design variations. The examples provided above are exemplary only and are not intended to be limiting. One skilled in the art may readily devise other systems consistent with the disclosed embodiments which are intended to be within the scope of this disclosure.