Electricity: conductors and insulators – Conduits – cables or conductors – Accessories
Reexamination Certificate
2003-04-03
2004-01-27
Reichard, Dean A. (Department: 2831)
Electricity: conductors and insulators
Conduits, cables or conductors
Accessories
C174S13800J, C174S13800J, C024S0160PB, C024S442000, C024S306000, C024S304000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06683258
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to wire and cable organizing systems that include tie-down devices at intervals along a length of wire or cable. More particularly the present invention provides a detachable binding device comprising a slotted bracket to receive a fastening strip that has means for mechanical fastening of wraps of the fastening strips around a cable and through slots of the slotted bracket to secure the cable to the bracket.
2. Description of the Related Art
Organized wiring systems, for example a wiring harnesses, provide a convenient means for installing electrical circuit structures that supply energy and electrical signals needed for the operation of a vehicle or a machine. An installer of organized wiring systems in vehicles such as automobiles, airplanes, boats and the like, or in appliances such as clothes washers and dryers, may encounter difficulties due to space limitations inside a vehicle or appliance. The installation of power and signal carrying wires and cables inside an automobile, for example, requires the threading of current carriers through relatively narrow spaces between the interior surface of the passenger compartment and the external surface of the automobile. Space limitation restricts the number and diameters of wires that may be included in a wire bundle that forms part of a wiring harness.
Limitation of space is only one condition that affects the development of an organized wiring system. Conventional bundled wiring harnesses generally require laborious and expensive manufacturing and manual installation procedures that increase the time and expense for mounting a wiring harness on a support structure. Vibration or mechanical shock, produced in a support structure, transmits to the wiring harness and associated cables possibly causing undesirable noise, damage to the wiring harness or loosening of wire bundles and cables from the securing mounts used to hold them to the support structure. In many cases, wire and cable mounts, once formed, do not facilitate reentry for repair or modification of the wiring system.
A variety of devices are known for securing wires and cables to a range of different surfaces. U.S. Pat. No. 2,831,049, for example, describes a wiring harness having a pair of wires mounted within a continuous resilient carrier. The bottom surface of the carrier includes an adhesive coating for securing the carrier to a support structure. U.S. Pat. No. 4,874,408 describes a structure for signal carriers of a wiring harness that includes wires extending through at least two pads. Molded pads surround wires and position them in spaced relationship to each other. The pads also provide attachment of the wires to a support.
Wiring fasteners described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,262,663 include fastener combinations for securing wires, tubes, cables and the like articles to a support surface in the form of a sheet metal panel. The fastener is a stud having a head and a shank secured to the surface of the sheet metal panel at the end of the shank opposite the head. This places the head of the stud in a spaced apart condition from the panel with the undersurface on the head facing inwardly toward the surface of the panel. A clip engaging the head of the stud has an elongated slot to permit insertion of a band passing over an article to be secured to the supporting panel. The band includes locking means for anchoring the band adjacent to the stud.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,463,999 provides information of an apparatus for releasably securing mating electrical connectors. The apparatus employs a bracket having a size and shape to enclose portions of a mating connector, The bracket includes a pair of opposed arm portions with at least one slot centrally located on one of the arms and a pair of opposed open ended slots on the other arm. An end portion of a self-locking strap connects to the centrally located slot. After placing the bracket to enclose the mated connector the self-locking strap may be wound tightly around the connector through the two open-ended slots; and locked to itself, by means of hook and loop elements, to retain the mated connector in an engaged condition. The mating parts of the connector may be conveniently separated after removing the strap, using sufficient force to disengage the hook and loop elements and unwinding the strap from the connector. A similar apparatus provides the subject matter of U.S. Pat. No. 4,343,525.
Regardless of number of ways known for tying elongate objects such as wires and cables, particularly organized wiring systems, to support surfaces, there exists the need for simple, low cost means to releasably secure and retain a variety of optional wiring schemes using simple and compact binding structures.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides a detachable binding device comprising a slotted bracket to receive a fastening strip that has means for mechanical fastening of wraps of the fastening strips around a cable and through slots of the slotted bracket to secure the cable to the bracket. A slotted bracket provides an anchorage point for secure retention of one or more elongate objects, such as a wires or cables particularly electrical cables of a wiring harness. The bracket has two main parts of a base and a slotted projection that includes a pair of parallel slots.
A cable may be secured to a slotted bracket using a flexible fastening strip that has a mechanical fastening means for detachable self-engagement. Other suitable means for self-engagement of fastening strips include adhesive engagement. However, there is an advantage of reliable binding using mechanical fasteners that have interference elements like those found on surfaces of hook and loop fasteners. Mechanical fasteners of this type disengage to release a wire or cable, as needed for repair or re-routing of cable systems. Adhesive means for cable retention are typically not designed for easy, convenient re-entry. Binding structures involving cable ties, for example, do not readily form a tight binding and tend to resist disengagement for re-entry for re-routing or repair of a cable system.
Formation of a cable binding according to the present invention begins by positioning a portion of a length of cable in contact with a first wrap of a flexible fastening strip of mechanical fastener that maintains its wrapped condition by interference and engagement between interference elements on both sides of the fastening strip. A tail extending from the fastening strip has a size suitable for insertion into the first slot in a slotted projection to draw the cable against the projection, which is part of a slotted bracket. The tail may then be wrapped upon itself to form a second wrap of the fastening strip around the cable. Interference between mechanical fastening elements of the first and second wraps of the fastening strip provides relatively secure attachment of the cable to the projection. The tension in the tail of the fastening strip and the holding force applied to the cable increases during formation of a third wrap of the fastening strip around the cable. Formation of the third wrap of the fastening strip requires insertion of the tail through the second slot of the slotted projection followed by tightening the tail around the cable and over the second wrap for engagement of mechanical elements between the second and third wraps of the fastening strip. This wrapping procedure tightly binds a length of the cable to a slotted bracket to produce a detachable cable binding according to the present invention.
An exemplary embodiment of the present invention provides a detachable binding device comprising a bracket including a base portion and a slotted projection having a first slot and a second slot aligned in parallel with the first slot between the first slot and the base portion. The binding device further includes a fastening strip including a first gripping surface and a second gripping surface. A loop of the fastening strip is held around an elongate strand by engagement of the fir
Rutherford Gregory Leighton
Tracy David Alan
3M Innovative Properties Company
Ball Alan
Lee Jinhee
LandOfFree
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