Electrical connector

Electrical connectors – With coupling movement-actuating means or retaining means in... – Coupling part for receiving edge of planar board moving...

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C439S325000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06655976

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is related to an electrical connector having rows of conductors to receive an edge of a printed circuit board and electrically connect thereto by means of the conductors, especially to an electrical connector having a support portion for the retention of the printed circuit board the connector is connected to.
2. Description of the Related Art
After years of development, the computer industry becomes more and more technically mature and competitive. The leading trends of manufacturing any computer-related products include cheap prices, compact size, light weight and customer orientation. Especially, functions of these computer-related products are renewing and freshening quickly and new-developed technology usually changes the main need to these products. 3-Dimention graphic technology and wireless communication are the most famous examples to explain the changes. Therefore, in order to seek the balance of the product price and orientation of the specialized customer need, functional extension devices are always designed in all kinds of these products, like PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect) and AGP (Accelerated Graphics Port) extension slots of desktop computers, PCMCIA card and memory extension slots of laptops, and storage card slots of digital cameras, etc. In some computer equipment, extension card slots are provided by a plurality of card edge connectors, which are usually mounted on a motherboard of the computer equipment in a parallel relationship and arranged close to the peripheral connection port panel set at the back of the computer chassis. Usually every extension daughter card with a leading edge inserted into the slot of the corresponding connector has a complementary panel piece mounted on another edge adjacent to the leading edge of the card. Screws can be used to fix the card to the port panel with the complementary panel piece. Therefore, in the situation of shipping, moving the computer equipments or vibration, the screwed complementary panel piece of the card will provide enough supporting force to hold the card in its original connection position with the card edge connector. However, only a very small, restricted area on the motherboard is available for use and is prior to be utilized by the extension daughter cards which has to connect with necessary peripheral devices, like graphic cards connecting to monitors, etc. And precise mounting positions for the motherboard and connectors thereon become very important for designing so that the complementary panel piece of the extension card can reach the panel of the chassis to be fixed thereon. Especially, as shown in
FIG. 5
, in some computer architectures, a functional riser card is used to connect with more extension cards due to the horizontal parallel arrangement of the cards, which are difficult to be locked by the same method mentioned above.
Therefore, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,573,706, 3,970,353 and 4,006,955, a locking clip installed inside a connector is introduced to fix the extension card to the connector when the card is inserted into a mating slot of the connector. And the clip can further be locked on the motherboard if it is necessary. Other mechanisms introduced in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,216,580, 4,198,024 and 5,660,557 show an additional locking part is provided by the motherboard where a connector is mounted so that the mating extension card of the connector can be fixed by the preset locking part. Similar examples can be found in the applications of AGP connectors, as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,045,386, and CPU (Central Process Unit) integrated card connectors, as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,650,917. Providing additional locking parts obviously costs more than other applications. Thus, as introduced in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,781,612, 4,713,013 and 6,368,124, an integrated connector having locking latches formed thereon is provided to fix a mating card at the same time when the card is mated with the connector. Apparently, methods introduced above show their own effective ways to fix extension card to their mating connectors so as to ensure the successful electrical connection between the cards and connectors. However, most of them also show undesired restrictions to the size of extension cards, positions of holes or recesses formed in advance on extension cards and specialized installation for latching parts. For example, the length of an extension card mated with a connector has to equal the distance between two branches of a specialized latching mechanism. Almost all of these methods need some corresponding features, like holes, recesses, etc., disposed at predetermined portions of extension cards. The result of the inflexible arrangement to these corresponding features sometimes affects the arrangement of the components or circuitry on the same extension cards.
Referring to
FIG. 4
, recently a quite different arrangement for card retention is developed. A card edge connector
1
mounted on a printed circuit board
3
, usually a motherboard, has an elongated parallelepiped housing
10
and a mating groove formed thereon to receive a leading edge of a card
4
. And a ridge
13
with a triangular section projects from one side surface of the housing
10
and near one lengthwise edge along the top surface of the housing
10
. Besides, a retention clip
5
having a holding post
51
extending from the upright standing body
50
of the clip
5
is attached to the card
4
in advance by using its post
51
inserted into and through a hole (not shown) defined on the card
4
. It is understandable the hook shaped edge
52
formed at the bottom of the body
50
can be latched on the ridge
13
of the connector housing
10
when the card
4
attached by the clip
5
is mated with the connector
1
. Due to the retention ridge
13
extending along the length of the connector housing
10
, the bottom edge
52
of the clip
5
can be hooked on any portion of the ridge
13
along the connector
1
. Therefore, either the size of the card
4
or the setting position of the hole on the card
4
becomes flexible and changeable so as to make the card design much easier. And the size or width of the clip
5
can be changeable and flexible too because the clip
5
can be latched on the connector
1
regardless of the place where the clip
5
falls along the length of the connector housing
10
.
However, forming a solid ridge on the originally thin side wall of the connector housing is a difficult job. When the melted raw material is injected into a mold to form the housing with the ridge, fibers gradually formed inside the housing or ridge in the cool-down forming process are usually uniformly arranged along the lengthwise direction of the housing. The uniform arrangement for the housing material generates a strong and undesired inner stress applying on the thin side wall of the housing and usually make the wall become warped. Referring to
FIG. 6
, a solution is considered to avoid the above situation. A card edge connector
6
has a housing
60
with contacts
61
installed therein. A mating groove
62
is formed on one side of the housing
60
to receive the leading edge of a card and contacts
61
inside the housing can be electrically engaged with the card in the groove
62
. A plurality of serrations
63
arranged in a row is formed on another side of the housing
60
along the length of the housing
60
and adjacent to the side with the mating groove
62
. Obviously, the injected forming material of the housing
60
cannot be arranged uniformly anymore due to the discontinuous serrations
63
. That reduces the risk of getting a warped housing. But unfortunately, the serration structure of the housing
60
reduces the strength of the housing wall at the same time. In some violent shaking shipment environments, the vulnerable wall of the connector housing is easily crushed due to the possible shaking of the mating card inserted onto the connector. Especially, in the riser card application as show in
FIG. 5
, the retention of a riser card
7

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