Self-Aligning Electrical Connector System
20230056007 ยท 2023-02-23
Assignee
Inventors
- Martin Wolter (Dortmund, DE)
- Erik ROLF (Wermelskirchen, DE)
- Benedikt SPECHT (Sundern, DE)
- Guido Eberhardt (Hagen, DE)
- Stefan AMELUNG (Dortmund, DE)
Cpc classification
H01R13/20
ELECTRICITY
H01R13/629
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01R13/629
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A self-aligning electrical connector system for data and/or energy transmission includes first and second connector parts and a support frame. The first connector part includes positioning pins, flat elements, and a ball socket positioned between the flat elements. The second connector part is attachable to the first connector part and includes positioning chambers engageable with the positioning pins to achieve a coarse positioning of the connector parts relative to one another. The support frame has a flat central bar including spring arms. A ball is supported by the ball socket. The first connector part is supported on the support frame by spring forces of the spring arms acting on the flat elements and is supported on the ball with the ball being rollable on the central bar whereby the first connector part is floatingly arranged on the support frame and is shiftable and tiltable relative to the support frame.
Claims
1. A self-aligning electrical connector system for data and/or energy transmission, the connector system comprising: a first connector part including first low-load contact elements and/or first high-load contact elements; a second connector part attachable to the first connector part and including second low-load contact elements and/or second high-load contact elements that are complementary to the first low-load contact elements and/or the first high-load contact elements; the first connector part further including positioning pins and the second connector part further including positioning chambers, the positioning pins being engageable in the positioning chambers to achieve rough positioning of the first and second connector parts relative to one another; a flat support frame having spring arms formed thereon; the first connector part being floatingly arranged on the support frame with three rotational and at least two translational degrees of freedom; wherein the first connector part includes flat elements that protrude laterally in opposite directions and that are loaded with a spring force by the spring arms in a direction of the support frame; and the first connector part further includes a ball socket positioned between the flat elements, the ball socket supporting a ball which rests against the support frame.
2. The connector system of claim 1 wherein: the positioning pins have cone-shaped end sections.
3. The connector system of claim 1 wherein: the positioning chambers have cone-shaped cavities.
4. The connector system of claim 1 wherein: the support frame further includes boundary struts associated with the spring arms for limiting tilting movement of the first connector part while the flat elements of the first connector part are subjected to the load by the elastic force in the direction of the support frame by the spring arms of the support frame.
5. The connector system of claim 1 wherein: an attachment of the second connector part to the first connector part is fixed via a screw.
6. The connector system of claim 1 wherein: the first connector part includes the first low-load contact elements and the first high-load contact elements; and the second connector part includes the second low-load contact elements and the second high-load contact elements.
7. A self-aligning electrical connector system for data and/or energy transmission, the connector system comprising: a first connector part including positioning pins, flat elements that protrude in opposite directions, and a ball socket positioned between the flat elements; a second connector part attachable to the first connector part and including positioning chambers engageable with the positioning pins to achieve a coarse positioning of the first and second connector parts relative to one another; a support frame having a flat central bar including spring arms; a ball supported by the ball socket; and the first connector part being supported on the support frame by spring forces of the spring arms acting on the flat elements and being supported on the ball with the ball being rollable on the central bar whereby the first connector part is floatingly arranged on the support frame and is shiftable and tiltable relative to the support frame.
8. The connector system of claim 7 wherein: the first connector part further includes first contact elements; and the second connector part further includes second elements that are complementary to the first contact elements.
9. The connector system of claim 7 wherein: the first connector part further includes first low-load contact elements and/or first high-load contact elements; and the second connector part further includes second low-load contact elements and/or second high-load contact elements that are complementary to the first low-load contact elements and/or the first high-load contact elements.
10. The connector system of claim 7 wherein: each spring arm includes two pin-like bars and a retaining tab which connects end faces of the pin-like bars together.
11. The connector system of claim 10 wherein: the flat elements are pushed beneath the retaining tabs which function to hold down the flat elements for the first connector part being supported on the support frame by spring forces of the spring arms acting on the flat elements.
12. The connector system of claim 10 wherein: the support frame further includes a boundary strut between the two pin-like bars of each spring arm.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] One exemplary embodiment of a self-aligning electrical connector system in accordance with the present invention is illustrated with reference to the drawings and explained in greater detail below, in which the drawings include the following:
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0026] Detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale; some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention.
[0027] Referring now to
[0028] As shown in
[0029] Multiple electrical contact elements 11, 12, 21, 22, which at the two connector parts 10, 20 in each case have a complementary design with one another as plugs and push-on sleeves, and which may be electrically as well as mechanically connected to one another by joining the two connector parts 10, 20, are situated at the first and at the second connector part 10, 20 at a first and at a second contact carrier 15, 25, respectively. In the drawings, electrical contact elements 11, 12, 21, 22 are illustrated in a simplified manner only by a housing in each case. An illustration of metal plugs and push-on sleeves inside this housing has been omitted.
[0030] In addition to single-pole high-load contact elements 12, 22 for energy transmission from the charging device to the vehicle, the connector system at each connector part 10, 20 includes, for example, two multipole low-load connectors 11, 21, respectively. Low-load connectors 11, 21 are suitable, for example, for transferring control signals or data between the vehicle and the charging device.
[0031] Attaching second connector part 20 to first connector part 10 by hand or via robot requires a certain precision, in particular in order to not damage the smaller and thus more mechanically sensitive low-load contact elements 11, 21 during the insertion operation. However, it is difficult to achieve an exact alignment during the attachment process due to the size and the complex design of connector parts 10, 20. Consequently, as a rule, slight shifting and/or tilting of the two connector parts 10, 20 relative to one another upon their mutual approach is practically unavoidable.
[0032] To still allow a smooth connection and to prevent damage to contact elements 11, 12, 21, 22 due to non-coaxial joining, first connector part 10 is floatingly arranged on support frame 30, so that first connector part 10 may shift and tilt relative to support frame 30 and thus be able to align with second connector part 20 during the attachment operation.
[0033]
[0034] Contact carrier 15 of first connector part 10 includes two pairs of laterally protruding flat elements (flat projections) 14. The two flat elements 14 in each pair of flat elements 14 extend in opposite directions. In this embodiment, contact carrier 15 includes four flat elements 14 in total. Two flat elements 14 are illustrated in
[0035] First connector part 10 further includes multiple positioning pins 13. Second connector parts 20 further includes multiple positioning chambers 23. Positioning pins 13 of first connector part 10 are engageable in positioning chambers 23 of second connector part 20 when the two connector parts 10, 20 are joined, in order to achieve rough (coarse) positioning of the two connector parts 10, 20 relative to one another.
[0036] Positioning pins 13 of first connector part 10 preferably have conical end sections 19. Positioning chambers 23 of second connector part 20 are preferably designed in each case as a conical cavity. Positioning pins 13 engage with positioning chambers 23 by end sections 19 of the positioning pins being inserted into the conical cavities of the positioning chambers. The conical shapes simplify inserting positioning pins 13 into positioning chambers 23, and together with a floating bearing of first connector part 10 on support frame 30 (described in further detail below), result in a simple pre-centering of the two connector parts 10, 20 relative to one another.
[0037] Prior to first and second connector parts 10, 20 being joined together, first connector part 10 is connected to support frame 30 in a floating manner. As shown in
[0038] Situated at each of the two narrow sides of support frame 30 are two elastic spring arms 31. Spring arms 31 are each formed from two pin-like bars 38, whose end faces are connected via a flat section referred to as a retaining tab 32. The relatively thin pin-like bars 38 are connected in one piece to the narrow sides of support frame 30.
[0039] Delimiting braces (boundary struts) 33 are formed on support frame 30 in each case between the two pin-like bars 38 of each spring arm 31. Delimiting braces 33, due to their more massive design, are relatively rigidly connected to support frame 30.
[0040] As shown in
[0041] For connecting first connector part 10 to support frame 30, a ball 40 is inserted into ball socket 16 and is also mounted on central bar 36 (
[0042] 100421 A floating bearing (floating mounting) of first connector part 10 on support frame 30 is now achieved in that flat elements 14, formed on the bottom side of first connector part 10, are loaded with an elastic or spring force by spring arms 31 that are integrally molded onto support frame 30 in the direction of support frame 30, and in that first connector part 10, also carried on ball 40, is supported on support frame 30.
[0043] Flat elements 14 are thus situated beneath the elastic retaining tabs 32. Elastic retaining tabs 32 with their elastic or spring force hold down flat elements 14 in the direction of the base surface 39 and balance them out due to the bearing on ball 40. This is explained by the schematic illustration in
[0044] The centrally situated ball 40 supports first connector part 10, situated on a vehicle as an example, in the attachment direction of second connector part 20 to support frame 30, and allows tilting and shifting movements of first connector part 10 about the support or contact point of ball 40 on support frame 30. Flat elements 14 situated around ball 40 at first connector part 10 are pressed in the direction of the support frame surface by spring arms 31 that are formed on support frame 30. Spring arms 31 thus fix first connector part 10 to support frame 30 in a floating manner, while allowing rotational and displacement movement.
[0045]
[0046] The bearing of first connector part 10 on ball 40 and spring arms 31 of support frame 30 allows translational movements of first connector part 10 in the x and y directions, tilting movements about the x and y axes, and rotational movements about the z axis. The amplitude of the tilting movements is limited by delimiting braces 33, which act as stops. To limit the amplitude of rotational movements about the z axis, a vertically protruding stop element 37 may be formed on central bar 36 of support frame 30 (
[0047] Due to the comprehensive movement options between first and second connector parts 10, 20 and the centering by positioning pins 13 that engage in positioning chambers 23, initial misalignments between the two connector parts 10, 20 are quickly compensated for, thus ensuring easy joining of the contact elements 11,12, 21, 22 of the two connector parts 10, 20. After the joining operation is completed, the connection of the two connector parts 10, 20 may be easily secured using a single, centrally inserted screw 60 (
LIST OF REFERENCE SYMBOLS
[0048] 10 first connector part
[0049] 11 low-load contact elements
[0050] 12 high-load contact elements
[0051] 13 positioning pins
[0052] 14 flat elements (flat projections)
[0053] 15 contact carrier
[0054] 16 ball socket (ball cup)
[0055] 17 feed lines
[0056] 18 terminals
[0057] 19 cone-shaped end sections (tapered end portions)
[0058] 20 second connector part
[0059] 21 low-load contact elements
[0060] 22 high-load contact elements
[0061] 23 positioning chambers
[0062] 25 contact carrier
[0063] 27 feed lines
[0064] 28 feed lines
[0065] 30 support frame (carrier frame)
[0066] 31 spring arms
[0067] 32 retaining tab
[0068] 33 delimiting braces (boundary or limiting struts)
[0069] 34 support arms
[0070] 35 latching hook (detent hook)
[0071] 36 central bar
[0072] 37 stop element
[0073] 38 pin-shaped bars
[0074] 39 base surface
[0075] 40 ball
[0076] 50 cover
[0077] 60 screw
[0078] x, y, z coordinate axes
[0079] While exemplary embodiments are described above, it is not intended that these embodiments describe all possible forms of the present invention. Rather, the words used in the specification are words of description rather than limitation, and it is understood that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Additionally, the features of various implementing embodiments may be combined to form further embodiments of the present invention.