An apparatus for terminating a controlled-impedance cable using compliant electrical contacts to provide an interface to another device. The terminator includes an anchor block for securing the cable. Optionally, the anchor block is electrically non-conductive. A conductive ferrule is installed on the cable shield and the cable end is dressed. The ferrule/cable assembly is installed in a through hole in the anchor block so the cable end is flush with the anchor block face. An insulating or conductive plate mounted to the anchor block holds the signal contact that electrically connects the center conductor to the device and optional ground contacts that electrically connect the ferrule to the device. The ground contacts surround the signal contact in a pattern that closely mimics the impedance environment of the cable. When using a conductive plate, the signal contact is insulated from the plate by an insulating centering plug or a non-conductive coating.
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1. A controlled-impedance cable termination for a controlled-impedance cable, the cable comprising at least one center conductor, a dielectric surrounding the at least one center conductor, and a ground shield surrounding the dielectric, the termination comprising:
(a) an anchor block having a face and at least one cable through hole, the cable through hole having an opening in the face;
(b) a electrically-conductive ferrule adapted to be installed on the ground shield at the end of the cable, the ferrule adapted to be captured in the cable through hole such that the at least one center conductor and the dielectric are flush with the face of the block;
(c) a plate attached to the face, the plate having a face surface abutting the face and a device surface, the plate including at least one signal through aperture extending between the face surface and the device surface, the signal through aperture having a signal block opening adjacent to and aligned with the cable through hole opening, the signal through aperture having a signal device opening in the device face surface; and
(d) an electrically-conductive compliant signal contact captured within each of the at least one signal through aperture, the signal contact having a signal block contact point extending from the signal block opening and a signal device contact point extending from the signal device opening.
8. A controlled-impedance cable termination assembly comprising:
(a) at least one controlled-impedance cable having at least one center conductor, a dielectric surrounding the center conductor, and a ground shield surrounding the dielectric;
(b) an anchor block having a face and at least one cable through hole, the cable through hole having an opening in the face;
(c) an electrically-conductive ferrule installed on the ground shield at the end of the cable to form a ferrule/cable assembly, the ferrule/cable assembly captured in the cable through hole such that the cable end is center conductor and the dielectric are flush with the block face;
(d) a plate attached to the face, the plate having a face surface abutting the face and a device surface, the plate including at least one signal through aperture extending between the face surface and the device surface, the signal through aperture having a signal block opening adjacent to and aligned with the cable center conductor, the signal through aperture having a signal device opening in the device face surface; and
(e) an electrically-conductive compliant signal contact captured within each of the at least one signal through aperture, the signal contact having a signal block contact point extending from the signal block opening into electrical contact with the center conductor and a signal device contact point extending from the signal device opening.
2. The cable termination of
3. The cable termination of
4. The cable termination of
5. The cable termination of
(a) the plate including a plurality of ground through apertures spaced from and surrounding the at least one signal aperture, each of the ground apertures extending between the face surface and the device surface, the ground apertures each having an anchor block opening in the face surface and a ground device opening in the device face; and
(b) an electrically-conductive compliant ground contact captured within each of the ground apertures, the ground contact having an anchor block contact point extending from the anchor block opening into electrical contact with the ferrule and a ground device contact point extending from the ground device opening.
6. The cable termination of
7. The cable termination of
(a) the plate including a plurality of ground through apertures spaced from and surrounding the at least one signal aperture, each of the ground apertures extending between the face surface and the device surface, the ground apertures each having an anchor block opening in the face surface and a ground device opening in the device face; and
(b) an electrically-conductive compliant ground contact captured within each of the ground apertures, the ground contact having a ferrule contact point extending from the anchor block opening into electrical contact with the ferrule and a ground device contact point extending from the ground device opening.
9. The cable termination of
10. The cable termination of
11. The cable termination of
12. The cable termination of
(a) the plate including a plurality of ground through apertures spaced from and surrounding the at least one signal aperture, each of the ground apertures extending between the face surface and the device surface, the ground apertures each having an anchor block opening in the face surface and a ground device opening in the device face; and
(b) an electrically-conductive compliant ground contact captured within each of the ground apertures, the ground contact having an anchor block contact point extending from the anchor block opening into electrical contact with the ferrule and a ground device contact point extending from the ground device opening.
13. The cable termination of
14. The cable termination of
(a) the plate including a plurality of ground through apertures spaced from and surrounding the at least one signal aperture, each of the ground apertures extending between the face surface and the device surface, the ground apertures each having an anchor block opening in the face surface and a ground device opening in the device face; and
(b) an electrically-conductive compliant ground contact captured within each of the ground apertures, the ground contact having an anchor block contact point extending from the anchor block opening into electrical contact with the ferrule and a ground device contact point extending from the ground device opening.
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This application is a Reissue Application of U.S. Pat. No. 9,160,151 issued on Oct. 13, 2015 from Application Ser. No. 14/534,241 filed on Nov. 6, 2014. The entirety of the above-mentioned patent application is hereby incorporated by reference herein and made a part of this application.
Not Applicable
Not Applicable
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to electrical cable terminations, more particularly, to controlled impedance cable terminations which are generally used to transmit high-frequency signals in electronic equipment.
2. Description of the Related Art
The purpose of a cable termination is to provide an interconnect from the cable to the electrical device and to provide a separable electrical interconnection between the cable and its operating environment. The characteristic of separability means that the cables are not interconnected by permanent mechanical means, such as soldering or bonding, but by temporary mechanical means.
Currently cables are terminated using a conventional type connector which is also controlled-impedance, such as an SMA (SubMiniature Version A) connector, or the cables are soldered to a printed circuit board (PCB) which is then separably connected to the working environment. The SMA connectors, while being generally the same impedance environment as the cable, have impedance mismatches which cause high-frequency attenuation at the point of interface between the cable and the connector and the connector and its working environment, such as like a PCB. Additionally, these cable terminations often require through holes in PCB's for mounting and, consequently, it can be difficult to design the best possible controlled impedance environment. These types of cable terminations are generally for a single cable and require a substantial amount of PCB area to terminate, thus decreasing the density capability of connections.
Another form of prior art is a system which uses two independent parts to mate several cables to its electrical environment. This system uses one part that is generally soldered to a printed circuit board and another part that is generally mated to several cables. The two pieces can be plugged together to form the controlled impedance interconnection. These systems are better-controlled impedance environments but are limited in the densities at which the cables can be used. That is, the cables require a minimum space between them to achieve the controlled impedance environment and thus only a small number of cables can be terminated in a given area.
Another form of prior art, disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,544,093, is a system which employs removable cables that are held to the device by means of a spring. The cable has a terminal end which makes the signal conductor protrude from the cable terminal end. The terminal is then pressed to the device by means of a spring and the ground shield of the cable is connected to the device by a conductive rubber ground shield that shorts the terminal ground to the device ground.
The present invention is an apparatus and method for terminating a controlled-impedance cable that uses a compliant contact element at the point of termination minimizes detrimental electrical effects of the termination.
The present invention includes a cable terminator that employs compliant electrical contacts to provide an interface between the controlled-impedance cable (hereinafter, simply “cable”) and another device. The assembly is removably attached to the electrical device by a compression force in a direction of compression typically provided by jack screws that may not compress the assembly and device together linearly. Compliant contacts compensate for noncoplanarities between the conduction points of the electrical device.
Each embodiment of the terminator includes an anchor block for securing the cable, one or more compliant signal contacts for making the electrical connection between the cable center conductor(s) and the electrical device, optional compliant ground contacts for making the electrical connection between the cable shield and the ground plane of the device, and a plate mounted to the anchor block that holds the contacts.
The anchor block can be either electrically conductive or nonconductive. When conductive, the ground shield of all of the cables are electrically connected to the anchor block. The present invention contemplates several different methods to accomplish this including soldering the cable ground shield, crimping the ground shield, potting with a conductive adhesive, insert molding, press fitting a rigidized ground shield, threading, and twist-lock. Once the cables are anchored in the anchor block, the anchor block face and cable ends are dressed to make a reliable electrical contact with compliant contacts. Dressing may include polishing by some mechanical means, such as by milling, grinding, or sanding, in order to make sure that the cable center conductor is positioned at a known depth with respect to the anchor block face.
When the anchor block is nonconductive, a conductive ferrule is installed on the ground shield of each cable. The cable ends are dressed to make a reliable electrical contact with compliant contacts and the ferrule/cable assemblies are installed into holes in the anchor block. The present invention contemplates several different methods to accomplish this including, press fitting, threading, and twist-lock.
Example compliant contacts for use with the present invention include spring probes, electrically-conductive rubber contacts, fuzz button contacts, stamped metal contacts, chemically etched contacts, and skewed coil contacts.
The plate holds the contacts. Features of the plate include a face surface that abuts the anchor block face, a device surface that generally abuts the device, and at least one through aperture for the contacts. Each aperture has an anchor block face opening and a device face opening. The apertures for the signal contacts are aligned with the corresponding cable hole in the anchor block.
The cable center conductor is connected to the signal conduction point of the electrical device by the compliant signal contact. In most configurations, the signal contacts are surrounded by a number of ground contacts that connect either the conductive anchor block or the cable shield to the device in a pattern that closely mimics the impedance environment of the cable. The impedance of the system can be changed by changing the position of the ground contacts with respect to the signal contact or by changing the insulating material.
The skewed coil contact is captured in a through aperture in the plate. The aperture has a larger center section that narrows to a smaller block opening at the side adjacent to the anchor block and to a smaller device opening at the other end. The length of the contact leads is such that the leads extend from the openings. Alternatively, the block opening is as wide as the center section. Optionally, the contact area between the center conductor and device and the corresponding contact lead can be increased by a pair of conductive bosses that the contact is captured in that is as wide as the cable center conductor. Optionally, the remaining space of the aperture is filled with a compliant, electrically conductive elastomer that adds resiliency and aids in electrically shorting the coil loops.
The fuzz button contact is cylindrical and forced into an aperture that is narrower at the center than the ends. The contact ends extend from the plate.
The conductive rubber contact for the signal contact can be cylindrical with a centrally-located annular depression that fits on an annular protrusion in the aperture. The contact ends extend from the plate. The conductive rubber contact for the ground contact can be the same structure as the signal contact or can be circular, surrounding the signal contact.
The etched or stamped contact is a strip of conductive material in a C shape that is captured in a C-shaped aperture.
The electrical connection between the center conductor and the signal contact and the electrical connection between the ground block/cable shield ferrule and the ground contacts are compression connections. With the contacts installed in the plate, the plate is mounted to the anchor block with mechanical attachments, thereby forcing the end of the signal contact against the end of the center conductor and the ends of the ground contacts against the anchor block/cable shield ferrule. Alternatively, the electrical connection between the center conductor and the signal contact is a solder connection. Alternatively, the end of the center conductor is formed into a compliant spring like the skewed coil contact.
The plate can be either insulating or conductive. The insulating plate is made of a non-electrically-conductive material. A conductive plate is preferably composed of an electrically-conductive metal that couples the ground contacts, thereby providing more precise impedance matching to the signal contact. Alternatively, the conductive plate is composed of a non-conductive material plated with a conductive coating. The signal contact is insulated from the conductive plate by an insulating centering plug or a non-conductive coating.
Alternatively, the signal contact aperture is within a conductive boss. The boss is surrounded by an insulating annulus that insulates the boss from the conductive plate.
Also disclosed is a method and apparatus for assembling cables to the anchor block so that the cables are the same length to within a very small tolerance. To facilitate the method, a soldering fixture is used that has a frame, a connector jig, a block jig, and legs. The frame is generally rectangular and stands vertically. The connector jig is mounted to the lower cross piece of the frame. The block jig is mounted to the upper cross piece of the frame. Four legs extend from the bottom corners of the frame in generally opposite directions at an angle of at least 10° from horizontal so that they prevent the frame from falling over but allow the user to tilt the frame.
The connector jig locks the cable connectors at a fixed distance away from where the other end of the cable will be soldered to the anchor block. The connector jig locks the connectors in an upwardly open arc so that the cables are the same length to the anchor block.
The anchor block is secured to the block jig, face up, which is secured to the upper cross piece. A tensioning plate is mounted to the upper cross piece. Jack screws are threaded into holes at the end of the tensioning plate.
The cable sheath is stripped and the stripped portion is fed through the hole in the anchor block and a corresponding cable hole in the tensioning plate. A coil spring is placed on each cable and a collar is tightly secured to the cable.
After putting the connectors in the connector jig, the jack screws are tightened until there is adequate tension on the cables. Each cable shield is soldered to the anchor block. The angled legs allow the user to tilt the fixture for easier access to each side of the anchor block. After the solder and anchor block have cooled sufficiently, the jack screws are loosened, and the collars, springs, and tensioning plate are removed. The anchor block is removed from the frame and the connectors are removed from the connector jig.
The anchor block face is finished smooth and evenly flat by sanding, milling, planing, skiving, broaching, or any other appropriate method.
Objects of the present invention will become apparent in light of the following drawings and detailed description of the invention.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and object of the present invention, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The present application hereby incorporates by reference in its entirety U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/238,215, on which this application is based.
The present invention is an apparatus and method for terminating a controlled-impedance cable that minimizes detrimental electrical effects of the termination by using a compliant or compressible contact element at the point of termination. With the present invention, impedance mismatches are minimized, allowing the cable to be more useful in high-frequency signal ranges. The present invention can be used with any cable structure where the impedance between the inner conductor(s) and the ground shield is controlled.
In addition, the present invention increases the density at which the controlled-impedance cables can be used. That is, with the present invention, more cables can be terminated in a given amount of space than with terminations of the prior art. Further, the interface between the components of the present invention may not require through-hole mounting, which may further enhance density capability.
The present invention calls for proper dressing of the cable end so that small, compliant contacts can be used for separably interconnecting the controlled-impedance cables to whatever electrical device the user desires. A prime example is connecting two printed circuit boards which must communicate with each other at high frequency, such as connecting a computer central processing PCB with its random access memory PCB or another central processing PCB.
As shown in
The present invention is for use with controlled-impedance cables having one or more center conductors. A coaxial cable 30 has a center conductor 32 surrounded by a dielectric 34 with a ground reference shield 36 outside the dielectric 34. Optionally, a sheath 38 covers the shield 36. A twin-axial cable 30 has two center conductors 32 surrounded by a dielectric 34 with a ground reference shield 36 outside the dielectric 34 and a sheath 38 covering the shield 36. Cables with more than two center conductors are available. Although not specifically described, the present invention can be adapted to accommodate cables having more than two center conductors.
The terminator 10 of the present invention has several embodiments. Each embodiment includes an anchor block 16 for securing the cable 30, one or more compliant signal contacts 12 for making the electrical connection between the cable center conductor(s) 32 and the electrical device 2, optional compliant ground contacts 14 for making the electrical connection between the cable shield 36 and the ground plane of the device 2, and a plate 18 mounted to the anchor block 16 that holds the contacts 12, 14.
In one embodiment, the anchor block 16 is conductive and provides a common ground for the cables 30, as in
Alternatively, the cable 30 may be crimped into the anchor block hole 40. After the sheath 38 is stripped back, the cable 30 is inserted into the hole 40. The hole 40 may have the path through which the cable 30 runs geometrically altered after insertion of the cable 30 to a point where the size of the path is smaller than the size of the cable 30, thereby anchoring the cable 30 to the anchor block 16 and electrically connecting the shield 36 to the anchor block 16.
Other methods of anchoring the cable 30 to the anchor block 16 include potting the ground shield 36 with a conductive adhesive once it is placed in the hole 40, insert molding the anchor block 16 with the cable 30 in place at the time of molding, and press fitting a rigidized, for example, pretinned, ground shield into the hole 40.
Once the cables 30 are anchored in the anchor block 16, the face 20 of the anchor block 16 and cable ends 136 are properly dressed to make a reliable electrical contact with small compliant contacts. The cable ends 136 and the anchor block face 20 may need to be polished and planarized by some mechanical means, such as by milling, grinding, or sanding, in order to make sure that the cable center conductor 32 is positioned at a known depth with respect to the anchor block face 20, in this case flush with the anchor block face 20. The cable ends 136 and face 20 may also require noble metal plating to prevent the polished surface from oxidizing or otherwise degrading so as to inhibit acceptable electrical connection to the center conductor 32 and the anchor block 16.
Methods of removably attaching the cable 30 to the anchor block 16 are shown in
In the configuration of
The second method of removably attaching the cable 30 to the anchor block 16 calls for the use of a twist-lock attachment 300, as shown in
The cable end 308 is inserted into a hole 310 in the anchor block 16. Protrusions 312 from the twist-lock component 302 slide down opposed notches, not shown, in the sides of the hole 310 until they align with an annular depression 316 in the hole 310. With this alignment, the spring 304 is compressed so that it presses the center conductor 32 to the signal contact 12 in order to produce an electrical connection between the center conductor 32 and the signal contact 12. The twist-lock component 302 is turned so that the protrusions 312 are captured by the annular depression 316, thereby retaining the cable 30 in the hole 310.
In another embodiment, the anchor block 16 is nonconductive and merely provides an anchor for the cables 30, as in
The cable end 332 is then dressed by polishing so as to achieve a flat surface on the cable end 332. The ferrule 330 is then inserted into a hole 334 in the anchor block 16 until the center conductor 32 is pressed to the signal contact 12 and the ferrule 330 is pressed against the ground contacts 14.
The present invention contemplates a number of different ways for the ferrule/cable assembly to be retained in the anchor block 16. Two such methods are described above with reference to removable cables and
Another method is via a press fit. Optionally, the side 340 of the ferrule 330 is knurled or otherwise roughened. The ferrule/cable assembly is forced into the hole 334, which is slightly smaller, until the cable end 332 is flush with the block face 338.
Another method is shown in
In some designs, particularly with removable attachments, the cable end may not be exactly flush with the anchor block face 20, that is, it may be slightly recessed into or protruding from the anchor block face 20. That recession or protrusion can be as much as 0.05 inch. The present specification and claims use the term, “flush”, to indicate that the cable end is actually flush with, slightly recessed into, or slightly protruding from the anchor block face 20 by as much as 0.05 inch.
In most of the present figures, the anchor block 16 is generally a rectangular solid where the cables 30 are perpendicular to the anchor block face 20. However, the anchor block 16 can have other shapes.
These are only examples of other anchor block shapes. The present invention contemplates that the anchor block 16 can have any shape that works for a particular application.
Example compliant contacts for use with the present invention include spring probes, electrically-conductive rubber contacts, fuzz button contacts, stamped metal contacts, chemically etched contacts, and skewed coil contacts.
A typical spring probe consists of a hollow barrel with a spring and one or two plungers. The spring is housed in the barrel with the end of the plungers crimped in opposed open ends of the barrel at the ends of the spring. The spring biases the plungers outwardly, thereby providing a spring force to the tip of the plungers.
Conductive elastomer bumps are made of rubber and/or silicones of varying types with embedded conductive metal elements. The elastomer bump can work when the device conduction point is elevated off the device, thus sometimes requiring a protruding feature from the device or the addition of a third conductive element to the system to act as a protruding member.
Alternatively, the contact can be made of a single sheet of anisotropic conductive elastomer which is an elastomeric sheet that only conducts electricity through its thickness.
A fuzz button is a wire that is crumpled into a cylindrical shape. The resulting shape looks very much like tiny cylinder made of steel wool. When the cylinder is placed within a hole in a sheet of nonconductive material, it acts like a spring that is continuously electrically shorted. Like elastomer bumps, the fuzz button can be used with a third element needed to reach inside the hole of the nonconductive sheet to make contact with the fuzz button.
Skewed coil contacts of various types and configurations are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,126,062 and Re41,663, both of which are incorporated herein by reference. Briefly, the skewed coil contact includes a coil of conductive, inherently elastic wire with a pair of oppositely extending leads. The leads extend in a direction angled from the coil axis. During compression, the coil loops are electrically shorted together while they slide along each other.
The figures illustrate the use of skewed coil contacts, fuzz button contacts, conductive rubber contacts, and stamped metal or a chemically etched contacts. As indicated above, the plate 18 holds the contacts 12, 14. The structure of the plate 18 depends on the type of contact. Regardless of the type of contact, the plate 18 has several common features. These features are shown in
When there are two or more cables 30 and a conductive anchor block 16, there may be ground contacts 14 that are “shared” between cables 30. For example, in the coaxial structure of
As shown in
An alternative configuration is shown in
Because of the very small size of the wire used to make the skewed coil contact 42, the contact area between the skewed coil signal contact 12 and the cable center conductor 32 is small. This can cause a capacitive reactance at the interface of the contact leg 56 and the cable center conductor 32 which can cause reflections at high frequencies. To help alleviate this problem, the through aperture 44 is wide for its entire length, as in
In
Optionally, in any skewed coil contact configuration, after the contact 42 is installed, the remaining space of the aperture 44 is filled with a compliant, electrically conductive elastomer that adds resiliency and aids in electrically shorting the coil loops.
As shown in
As shown in
The conductive rubber contact for the ground contact 14 can be of the same structure as the signal contact 12. Alternatively, the conductive rubber contact 112 for the ground contact 14 is circular, surrounding the signal contact 12, as in
In
An alternate terminator assembly 10 using the anchor block of
The electrical connection 80 between the center conductor 32 and the signal contact 12 and the electrical connection 82 between the anchor block 16 and the ground contacts 14 are compression connections. With the contacts 12, 14 installed in the plate 18, the plate 18 is mounted to the anchor block 16 with mechanical attachments 28, such as screws, rivets, and the like. Installing the plate 18 forces the end of the signal contact 12 against the end of the center conductor 32 and forces the ends of the ground contacts 14 against the anchor block 16.
Alternatively, the electrical connection 80 between the center conductor 32 and the signal contact 12 is a solder connection while the electrical connection 82 between the anchor block 16 and the ground contacts 14 is a compression connection.
Alternatively, as shown in
The plate 18 can be either insulating or conductive.
A conductive plate 88, shown in
The plug 90 may be press fit into a through hole 92 in the conductive plate 88 or it may be bonded into the hole 92 with an adhesive. Alternatively, as shown in
Alternatively, the signal contact 12 can be insulated from the conductive plate 88 by a non-conductive coating such as powder coating. In this case the signal contact aperture may be made larger such that the coating reduces the aperture size to the appropriate size for use. As with the plug 90, the impedance of the system can be changed by either changing the thickness of the coating or by changing the coating material, thereby changing the dielectric constant of the material.
The center conductors 32 of the cable 30 are connected to the signal conduction points 4 of the electrical device 2 by the compliant signal contacts 12. As shown in
As with the coaxial cable configurations, the plate 18 can be either insulating or conductive.
The present specification describes a number of different compliant contacts that can be used in the present invention. These are merely examples. The present invention contemplates that any form of compliant contact that has the appropriate characteristics for the particular application can be used. In addition, the present specification contemplates that different types of contacts can be use in the same assembly. For example, a skewed coil contact can be used as the signal contact and a circular conductive rubber contact can be used as the ground contact.
The present invention produces a controlled-impedance, compliant cable to device interface which can be less than 1 mm thick (the length of the compliant contacts 12, 14) and mimics the controlled-impedance environment of the cable 30, thereby ensuring the highest possible signal rates through the termination.
The present invention can also produce a controlled-impedance device to device interface because the cables 30 can have terminators 10 at both ends.
When working with very high frequencies, for example, frequencies in the Gigahertz range and above, electrical cable lengths are very critical. In order to maintain phase synchronization between signals on different cables, the cables must have as close to the exact same length, mechanically and electrically, as is practical. The present specification describes a method and apparatus for assembling cables 202 to the anchor block 200 so that the cables 202 are the same length to within a very small tolerance, on the order of 0.001 inch for cables 202 that are 6 inches long from the cable connector 204 to the block face 206. The present method can be used for cables of any length. Longer cables result in larger tolerances. At a given temperature, a cable length can be controlled to within 0.03% to 0.05% of the cable's overall length.
To facilitate the method, a soldering fixture 210 is used. The fixture includes a frame 212, a connector jig 214, a block jig 216, and legs 218.
The frame 212 is generally rectangular and stands vertically. The connector jig 214 is mounted to the lower cross piece 222 of the frame 212 inside the frame 212. The block jig 216 is mounted to the upper cross piece 224 of the frame 212 outside of the frame 212. Four legs 218 extend from the bottom corners of the frame 212 in generally opposite directions. The legs 218 are angled from the frame 212 by at least 10° from horizontal so that they prevent the frame 212 from falling over but allow the user to tilt the frame 212. The preferred angle is about 20° so that the frame can be tilted between 70°, 90°, and 110° from vertical to facilitate use, as described below. The present invention contemplates that the angle of the legs 218 can vary from application to application.
The fixture 210 locks the connector 204 of each cable 202 at a fixed distance away from where the other end of the cable 202 will be soldered to the anchor block 200. The connector jig 214 locks the connectors 204 and can be designed appropriately for any particular type of connector 204.
Because the distance (pitch) between cables 202 at the anchor block 200 is smaller than the diameter of the connectors 204, the cables 202 cannot be secured parallel to each other to achieve equal length. To solve this problem, the connector jig 214 locks the connectors 204 in an upwardly open arc 240 so that the cables 202 are the same length to the anchor block 200.
As shown in
A tensioning plate 252 is mounted to the upper cross piece 224. There are threaded holes 254 at each end of the tensioning plate 252 into which the jack screws 256 are threaded. The tensioning plate 252 is placed over the anchor block face 206 and the jack screws 256 are turned into the holes 254 so that the tensioning plate 252 rests on the anchor block face 206. The tensioning plate 252 has a cable hole 258 for each cable 202 that is aligned with the anchor block cable hole 248 for the same cable 202. Optionally, the tensioning plate 252 is machined out above the anchor block 200, as at 270, to facilitate access to the face 206.
Each cable 202 is trimmed so that it is at least 1.4 inches longer that the assembled length of the cable 202. The cable 202 is stripped at the end so that the length from the connector 204 to the stripped portion remains constant. The non-stripped portion of the cable 202 extends into the anchor block hole 248 approximately 0.06 inches.
As shown in
As shown in
The connectors 204 are placed into the corresponding securement 228 and the two jack screws 256 are tightened until the cables 202 have enough tension to be pulled against their securements 226, making sure that the cables 202 are straight between the connector 204 and the anchor block 200 with no kinks or bends. Optional stops 266 prevent the jack screws 256 from being tightened too much. In the illustrated configuration, the stops 266 are spacers 292 on the jack screws 256 between the tensioning plate 252 and the jack screw heads 294, as shown in
The springs 260 independently keep each cable 202 tight so that the distance from the connector 204 anchor block face 206 remains consistent for all of the cables 202.
Each cable shield 208 is soldered to the anchor block 200 such that the solder flows into the hole 248. The angled legs 218 allowing the user to tilt the fixture 210 permit easier access to each side of the anchor block 200 for soldering.
After the solder and anchor block 200 have cooled sufficiently, the jack screws 256 are loosened until tension on the springs 260 is released. The collars 262, springs 260, and tensioning plate 252 are removed. The anchor block 200 is removed from the frame 212 and the connectors 204 are removed from the connector jig 214. The excess cable is cut off.
Next, the anchor block face 206 is finished smooth and evenly flat. There are a number of ways known in the art to accomplish this, including sanding, milling, planing, skiving, and broaching. Once the cables 202 are secured in the anchor block 200, any conceivable method can be used to dress the face 206 of the anchor block 200 which achieves the desired surface finish and/or planarity.
Thus it has been shown and described a controlled-impedance cable termination and a method and apparatus for attaching controlled-impedance cables to the termination. Since certain changes may be made in the present disclosure without departing from the scope of the present invention, it is intended that all matter described in the foregoing specification and shown in the accompanying drawings be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
Diaz, Sergio, Vinther, Gordon A
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