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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A cartridge for containing a first electronic circuit and being usable
for exposing a set of terminals of the first circuit to permit the first
circuit to be electrically connected with a second electronic circuit
externally of the cartridge comprising: a housing having a pair of opposed
ends, one of the ends of the housing being open; a circuit board mounted
in the housing with one end margin of the circuit board being spaced
inwardly from the open end of the housing, said circuit board being
adapted to support said first electronic circuit and to permit a set of
terminals of the first circuit to be located at said one end margin of the
circuit board; a slide having an end wall provided with a slot aligned
with said circuit board, the slide being shiftably mounted in the housing
near said open end thereof for movement from a first position with said
one end margin of the circuit board spaced inwardly from the slot to a
second position with said one end margin of the circuit board extending
through the slot, whereby a set of terminals on said one end margin of the
circuit board will be exposed for connection to a second electronic
circuit externally of the housing; and means biasing the slide toward said
first position.
2. A cartridge as set forth in claim 1, wherein said housing has a pair of
spaced stops there being a stop for each of said first and second
positions, respectively, said slide being engageable with a stop when the
slide is in the corresponding position.
3. A cartridge as set forth in claim 1, wherein said housing has a pair of
opposed, spaced sidewalls spanning the distance between the ends of the
housing, and including means mounting the circuit board at a location
spaced inwardly from the inner surfaces of the side walls.
4. A cartridge as set forth in claim 1, wherein is included a latch
shiftably mounted in the housing for movement into and out of location in
blocking relationship to the slot, the latch being biased toward the
blocking location, there being a second slot in said slide adjacent to the
first slot, the latch having a surface aligned with the second slot when
the latch is in said blocking location, said second slot adapted to
receive an external projection for engaging said surface of the latch to
shift the latter out of said blocking location.
5. A cartridge as set forth in claim 4, wherein said biasing means being
coupled with said latch to bias the latch toward said blocking location.
6. A cartridge as set forth in claim 5, wherein the latch is pivotally
mounted on the slide for rotation about an axis extending transversely of
the direction of movement of the slide.
7. A cartridge as set forth in claim 1, wherein the slide has a projection
extending outwardly therefrom longitudinally of the path of movement of
the slide, the circuit board being generally planar, the projection being
generally in the plane of the slot and the circuit board.
8. A cartridge as set forth in claim 1, wherein the slide has an outer face
spaced inwardly from the open end of the housing when the slide is in said
first position.
9. A cartridge as set forth in claim 1, wherein is included a second
housing having an end wall provided with a slot therein, the second
housing having a connector adapted to be coupled to said second circuit,
the second housing having a size sufficient to permit it to be at least
partially inserted into the first-mentioned housing through the open end
thereof and to engage and move said slide from said first position to said
second position, said one end margin of the circuit board being movable
into the second housing through the slot in said end wall thereof and into
electrically coupled relationship to the connector as the second housing
moves the slide from the first position to the second position.
10. A cartridge as set forth in claim 9, wherein the second housing has a
latch shiftably mounted therein for movement from a first location
blocking the slot of said end wall of the second housing to a second
location out of blocking relationship to the last-mentioned slot, the end
wall of the second housing having a second slot adjacent to the
first-mentioned slot thereof, the latch being aligned with the second slot
when the latch is in said first location, said slide of the first housing
having a projection for insertion into the second slot of the second
housing for engaging the latch in the second housing to shift the latch
from said first location to the second location as the second housing is
inserted into the open end of the first housing.
11. A cartridge as set forth in claim 10, wherein the first housing has a
latch shiftably mounted therein for movement from a first location
blocking the slot of the slide to a second location out of blocking
relationship to the slot of the slide, the slide having a second slot
adjacent to the first slot, said end wall of the second housing having a
projection for insertion into the second slot of the slide for engaging
the latch in the first housing to shift the latch of the first housing out
of blocking relationship to the slot in the slide when the second housing
enters the first housing through the open end thereof. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention generally relates to portable cartridges containing
diversified input material for programming, being recorded upon, and/or
operating such central components. Such cartridges are used in tape
recorders, microfilm readers, motion picture cameras, and microprocessors.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Recently, the TV game industry began selling consumer video games with
microprocessors. These microprocessors permit the owner of such a game to
purchase inexpensive cartridges that can program the processor. Each
cartridge contains an electronic micro-circuit, and with a plurality of
such cartridges, a player can program a single processor to display
hundreds of video games.
One of the problems that has developed in the manufacture and use of these
cartridges has been in electrically shielding the electronic
micro-circuit. These cartridges are designed to be handled by the players
of the game and are therefore subject to the build-up of large potentials
of static electricity. Static electricity can discharge into the small
traces on the circuit board and either fuse the traces together or destroy
them entirely. A TV game cartridge is especially vunerable because it
contains at least one read-only memory (ROM) which is highly sensitive to
static discharge.
Prior approaches to the problem of shielding these circuits have used
shorting bars which short all of the traces together when the circuit is
not in use. These shorting bars distribute any static electricity equally
across all of the traces and tend to dissipate its effect. A second
approach has been to keep the circuit board at least a quarter of an inch
away from an opening or any exposed surface of the cartridge. Although
static electricity can develop very high potentials, a modest air gap can
stop most discharges.
Another problem in the manufacture of TV game cartridges for consumer use
has been in designing these cartridges to resist inquisitive tampering and
to withstand physical damage to the electronic micro-circuits within the
cartridges. Children particularly have an innate desire to open the
cartridges and inadvertenly damage the traces both on the circuit board
and in the connector of the micro-processor.
Prior approaches to combat this problem have relied on designing
impenetrable housings and the use of traces and circuit components that
can withstand all but malicious damage.
In general, however, no TV game manufacturer has heretofore developed a
cartridge that is both relatively tamper proof, resistant to static
electricity, and inexpensive to manufacture.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the present invention to provide a novel method and
apparatus that overcomes the limitations and disadvantages of the prior
art.
A further object of the present invention is to design a cartridge for
shielding an electronic micro-circuit from static electricity.
An additional object of the present invention is to design a cartridge and
a socket that will resist inquisitive tampering and will prevent damage to
the circuit components therein due to the insertion of foreign objects
through the access slots.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a cartridge that
will keep a read-only memory (ROM) and its associated circuit shielded
when not inserted in a TV game and will only expose the circuit when
necessary for insertion into the game.
These and other objects are achieved by a cartridge for shielding a
portable electronic micro-circuit and for connecting the circuit into a TV
game. The apparatus includes a circuit board having an electronic
micro-circuit that is protected from static electricity. The circuit board
is adapted for connection with an electrical connector in a TV game and
has two members for moving aside a protective shield that protects the
connector on the TV game. The two members thus expose the connector in the
TV game for engagement to the circuit board.
Additional objects and features of the invention will appear from the
following description in which the preferred embodiment has been set forth
in detail in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the front end of a cartridge according to
the present invention.
FIG. 2 is a perspective view of the front end of a socket for the cartridge
of FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a top plan view taken in section along line 3--3 of the cartridge
of FIG. 1.
FIG. 4 is a top plan view, in section, taken along line 4--4 of the socket
of FIG. 2.
FIG. 5 is a side elevational view taken in section along line 5--5 of the
cartridge of FIG. 3.
FIG. 6 is a side elevational view taken in section along line 6--6 of the
socket of FIG. 4.
FIG. 7 is an exploded view of the cartridge of FIG. 1.
FIG. 8 is an exploded view of the socket of FIG. 2.
FIGS. 9A, B, and C are diagrammatic, side elevational views, in section,
illustrating the mating sequence between the cartridge of FIG. 1 and the
socket of FIG. 2.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to FIGS. 1 and 2, the preferred embodiment includes a cartridge 9
which is inserted into a socket 11. The cartridge is portable and contains
a circuit board including an electronic micro-circuit. The socket houses a
connector which establishes the electrical connection between the circuit
board and the microprocessor (not shown) in the TV game cabinet 12.
Referring to FIG. 1, the cartridge 9 includes a top housing 14 that is
molded from a high impact resistant material such as
acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene, a terpolymer (ABS). The top housing also
serves as a holder into which all of the components of the cartridge are
assembled during the manufacturing process.
Mounted within the top housing 14 is a circuit board 16, FIGS. 3, 5. The
circuit board is of known construction and has a plurality of traces 17
printed thereon. The traces form electrical leads between the socket 11
and the electronic micro-circuit housed within a metal can 18. The metal
can attenuates any RF radiation that may be emitted by the micro-circuit
and the read-only memory (ROM) within the metal can. The circuit board is
supported above the top housing 14 by a plurality of support ribs 19, FIG.
3. These support ribs develop an air gap between the circuit board and the
cartridge so that static electricity is effectively shielded from the
electronic micro-circuit. When the circuit board is inserted into the
socket 11, the traces 17 along the leading edge 20 of the circuit board
protrude beyond the shielding as described in detail below.
Referring to FIGS. 3, 5, 7, the circuit board 16 is protected against
physical damage by a latch 22. The latch is fabricated from a very strong,
wear-resistant plastic material. The latch has two lateral trunnions 23
about which the latch can be rotated. The latch also includes a lateral
channel 27 for receiving a spring 26. As illustrated in FIG. 9A, the
spring urges the latch 22 in a counter-clockwise direction about the two
trunnions 23 and urges the latch shut as described below. The latch
further includes two inclined surfaces 28, FIGS. 3, 9A, that are adapted
to be engaged by two complementary projecting members 60 from the socket
11. These members pass through the slide and force the latch to open. It
should be noted that the leading edge 20 of the circuit board 16 contacts
a mating surface 30, FIG. 9A, on the rear wall of the latch when the latch
is shut. Thus, the circuit board maintains the latch in position in the
cartridge when the cartridge is disengaged from the socket.
The latch 22 is received in a slide 34, FIGS. 3,5,7. The slide is also
fabricated from a high impact resistant plastic. The slide moves relative
to the circuit board 16, FIGS. 9A-C and when the cartridge is inserted
into the socket 11, the slide retracts into the cartridge to expose the
traces 17 on the leading edge 20 of the circuit board. The latch 22 is
supported in the slide by two journals 35 which receive the trunnions 23
on the latch. As illustrated in FIG. 9A, the spring 26 urges the latch 22
in a counter-clockwise direction about the journals 35 and causes the
latch to seal the cartridge. The slide 34 is mounted in a trackway 38,
FIG. 3, in the cartridge which permits the slide to travel between a pair
of forward stops 36 and a pair of rear stops 37 that are fabricated in the
top housing 14. When the cartridge is removed from the socket 11, the
spring 26 urges the latch and, in turn, the slide 34 forward against the
forward stops 36. When the cartridge is inserted in the socket, the socket
urges the slide rearward in the cartridge to expose the circuit board 16.
Referring to FIG. 1, the slide 34 includes two lateral, elongate slots 39.
These slots receive two rectangular members 60 projecting from the socket
11. The two slots 39 are aligned with the two inclined surfaces 28 on the
latch 22. To open the latch, the projections from the socket 11 pass
through the slots 39 and engage the surfaces 28. The slide also includes a
centrally located elongate slot 41 through which the leading edge 20 of
the circuit board 16 projects when the slide retracts into the cartridge.
The circuit board is rigidly mounted in the cartridge and the slide and
latch move with respect to it. When the cartridge is removed from the
socket, the slot 41 is covered by the latch 22 and the latch prevents any
object from passing through the slot 41 and reaching the traces 17 on the
circuit board. Adjacent to the smaller slots 39 are two parallel
projecting members 43. These members move aside a shield in the socket and
permit the leading edge of the circuit board to pass into the socket and
be connected to the connector therein.
Referring to FIGS. 5 and 9A, it should be noted that the axis of the
trunnions 23, FIG. 9A, the plane of the circuit board 16, the slots 39,
41, and the two projecting members 43 are all co-planar. Any force
directed against the latch 22 while it covers the central slot 41 is
resisted by the leading edge 20 of the circuit board 16. The circuit board
is held in place by the support ribs 19. Thus, penetration into the
cartridge by a foreign object is resisted and the latch cannot be forced
open.
The latch 22 is urged shut by the spring 26, FIGS. 5, 7. The free ends of
the spring 26 engage the lateral channel 27 in the latch. The spring is a
conventional torsion spring with a flat force curve. The spring is held in
place by the pins 45 and the member 46 fabricated in the top housing 14.
The spring pushes the latch 22 upward around the rotational axis of the
trunnions 23 and causes the latch to seal the central slot 41. In
addition, the spring urges both the latch and the slide 34 against the
forward stops 36 in the top housing 14.
The cartridge 9 is received in the socket 11, FIGS. 2, 4, 6. The socket
includes a connector 50 of conventional construction. The connector 50 is
bolted to the socket and is electrically connected to the microprocessor
(not shown) of the TV game. The connector receives the leading edge 20 of
the circuit board 16 through the central slot 58 and makes electrical
contact with the traces 17 thereon. The connector 50 is covered by a
shield 51 which prevents damage to the connector and also serves as a dust
cover. The shield, like the latch 22, prevents the insertion of a foreign
object into the access slots 57, 58. The lower edge of the shield has two
inclined surfaces 53 which are used in moving the shield aside. The shield
is urged downward over the connector 50 by a resilient member 55.
Referring to FIG. 2, the socket contains two lateral slots 57 which line
up with the inclined surfaces 53 on the shield. These slots are adapted to
receive the two parallel projecting members 43 located on the front
surface of the slide 34. The front surface of the socket also contains two
co-planar rectangular projecting members 60. These projecting members are
adapted for passing through the two slots 39, FIG. 1, in the front of the
slide 34.
It should be noted from FIGS. 9A-C, that the two projecting members 60 on
the socket 11 are dimensioned to pass through the two slots 39 in the
slide 34, FIG. 1. In addition, the two projecting members 43 on the front
surface of the slide 34 are adapted to pass through the two slots 57 on
the front of the socket 11. In addition, the four projecting members and
the four complementary slots are keyed so that the cartridge can only be
inserted one way into the socket. Thus, the alignment of the circuit board
16 and the connector 50 is preserved.
After the above components have been assembled in the top housing 14, FIG.
3, the bottom housing 64 is snapped into place. The bottom housing is also
fabricated from a high impact resistant plastic. The top housing is
attached to the bottom housing with a bolt 66 to complete the assembly of
the cartridge.
FIGS. 9A, B, and C illustrate the process of mating between the cartridge 9
and the socket 11. FIG. 9A illustrates the cartridge and the socket in
separated positions. Typically, the socket is mounted on the cabinet 12 of
a TV game and the connector 50 therein is wired to a microprocessor (not
shown). Within the socket 11, the resilient member 55 urges the shield 51
upward in a direction to cover the connector 50 and to block the slots 57,
58. Inside the cartridge 9 the spring 26 urges the latch 22 in a
counter-clockwise direction around the axis of the trunnions 23. The
spring thus causes the latch to cover the central slot 41 and the two
smaller slots 39 in the front surface of the slide 34. The spring also
urges the slide 34 forward against the forward stop 36 in the top housing
14.
When the cartridge 9 and the socket 11 are brought together for mating as
illustrated in FIG. 9B, the forward projecting members 43 on the slide 34
pass through the two slots 57 in the front surface of the socket. These
projections 43 engage the inclined surfaces 53 on the shield 51 and cause
the shield to be pushed downward. In addition, the two projecting members
60 on the socket pass through the two slots 39 on the slide 34 and engage
the two inclined surfaces 38 on the latch 22. These two projecting members
57 cause the latch to rotate about the axis of the trunnions 23 in a
clockwise direction and to expose the central slot 41. The four projecting
members 43, 60 thus simultaneously push down both the latch 22 and the
shield 51.
FIG. 9B illustrates the slide 34 in its forward position against the stops
36 and with the latch 22 in a lowered position. In this position the slide
34 can retract into the cartridge and expose the leading edge 20 of the
circuit board 16. In addition, the shield 51 is illustrated in a lowered
position ready to permit the circuit board to enter the connector 50.
Next, the slide 34 is forced rearward into the cartridge against the
pressure of the spring 26 by the socket 11. The motion of the slide in the
trackway of the cartridge 38 exposes the leading edge 20 of the circuit
board 16. The circuit board, which is stationary in the cartridge, thereby
passes into the connector 50.
FIG. 9C illustrates the cartridge 9 fully mated in the socket 11. The latch
22 is in a lowered position and is urged upward by the spring 26 against
the two projecting members 60 that extend from the front of the socket 11.
The shield 51 is also in a lowered position. The shield 51 is urged upward
by the resilient member 55 against the two projecting members 43 that
extend from the front surface of the slide 34. The circuit board 16 passes
through the two slots 41, 58 and is engaged by the connector 50. Thus, the
microprocessor can incorporate the electronic micro-circuits housed within
the metal can 18.
The removal of the cartridge 9 from the socket 11 is merely the inverse of
the above-described process. For the sake of brevity the sequence of
removal need not be repeated.
It should be noted from FIG. 5 that the latch 22 cannot be opened by an
instrument that is pressed normally against the front surface of the slide
34. The latch can only be opened by a projecting member of predetermined
size that tends to rotate the latch 22 around the axis of the two
trunnions 23. Any force normal to the face of the slide is resisted by the
latch and in turn the leading edge 20 of the circuit board 16 which is
mounted on the support ribs 19. In FIG. 6 the projecting members 60 that
extend from the socket 11 have inclined surfaces that complement the
inclined surfaces 28 on the latch. The relative motion of these inclined
surfaces causes the latch to rotate about the axis of the trunnions and to
open.
The shield 51 in the socket 11 likewise cannot be opened by an instrument
pressed normally against the face of the socket. The shield is backed up
by the socket 11, FIG. 9A and the connector 50 and thereby resists such a
force. In FIG. 6 the projecting members 43 that extend from the front
surface of the slide 34 have inclined surfaces that complement the
inclined surfaces 53 on the shield. Typically, only relative motion
between these surfaces can cause the shield to lower and to expose the
connector.
Thus, although the best mode contemplated for carrying out the present
invention has been herein shown and described, it will be apparent that
modification and variation may be made without departing from what is
regarded to be the subject of the invention.
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Description  |
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