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| United States Patent | 4540907 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4540907.html |
| Inventor(s) | Hagenlocher; Walter (Stuttgart, DE);
Rapp; Lutz (Stuttgart, DE);
Eschen; Werner (Kongen, DE);
Ragaly; Istvan (Schwieberdingen, DE);
Scharpf; Heinz (Remshalden, DE);
Streller; Jorg (Affalterbach, DE);
Weigand; Johann (Guglingen, DE);
Winkler; Klaus (Freiberg, DE) |
| Abstract | A wire conductor embedded in a circuit board for interconnecting rectifier
diodes passes through a cut-out of the circuit board and is bent out of
the cut-out beyond the surface of the circuit board so as to provide a
U-shaped connection piece in which the end of a generator winding wire can
be laid and clamped until it is soldered. The U-shaped connection piece
can also be provided by a clip affixed to the embedded wire where it is
accessible in a cut-out of the circuit board. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4540907 |
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Alternator-rectifier unit with economical connections to wires embedded
in a circuit board |
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| Publication Date |
September 10, 1985 |
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| Filing Date |
February 28, 1983 |
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| Priority Data |
Mar 12, 1982[DE]3208893 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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We claim:
1. An engine-driven alternator-rectifier unit, suitable for vehicular
service, having a shaft-mounted rotor carrying an excitation winding, a
stator equipped with windings for producing 3-phase a.c., a 3-phase full
wave rectifier having at least three positive-pole diodes and three
negative-pole diodes for rectifying said 3-phase a.c. and further
comprising:
a flat circuit board of insulating material having parallel surface planes
and oriented perpendicular to and extending at least partially around the
axis of the shaft on which said rotor is mounted, and
circuit conductor wires embedded in said circuit board for contributing to
the interconnection of said diodes and said windings,
said circuit board having cut-out portions which are substantially vacant
except for portions of said embedded wires extending out of said circuit
board and passing through said cutout portions, and which cut-out portions
are located at places selected for connecting external conductors,
including lead wires of said windings, respectively, to said embedded
wires,
said portions of said embedded wires at said selected places passing
through said cut-out portion of said circuit board, being substantially
longer than required for crossing said cut-out portions, and each having
an intermediate length of wire bent at both ends in first planes of
bending which are substantially parallel or identical so as to bring a
major part of said intermediate wire length outward beyond one of the
surface planes of said circuit board and additionally bent in at least one
direction perpendicular to said first planes of bending to provide a
U-shaped configuration, protruding at least in part from a said cut-out
portion of said circuit board, for grasping a portion of a wire lead
external to and otherwise connected with said circuit board,
three of said intermediate wire lengths of said embedded wires being
pinched at said U-shaped configurations thereof so as to clamp respective
lead wires of said windings in respect to the electrical connections
between embedded wires and said lead wires of said windings.
2. Alternator-rectifier unit according to claim 1, in which each of said
intermediate wire lengths protruding at least in part from a said cut-out
portion of said circuit board is bent at both ends in substantially the
same first plane of bending, also bent in approximately parallel second
planes perpendicular to said first plane of bending, and bent in the
middle of said intermediate wire length in a third plane of bending at the
least approximately parallel to said first plane of bending, said wire
bends of each of said intermediate wire lengths in said second plane of
bending, as seen in a direction perpendicular to said approximately
parallel second planes of bending, providing a U-shaped profile with at
least one leg of the U of said profile shape extending into said cut-out
portion of said circuit board through which the wire of said intermediate
wire length passes.
3. Alternator-rectifier unit according to claim 2, in which each of said
intermediate wire lengths is bent in the middle in said third plane of
bending, in a U-shaped profile of sufficient width for clamping of one of
said lead wires in the bend of said third plane of bending and between the
wire bends in U-shape in second parallel planes of bending.
4. Alternator-rectifier unit according to claim 3, in which the middle bend
of said intermediate wire length is located at least in part within the
cut-out portion of said circuit board through which said intermediate wire
length passes.
5. Alternator-rectifier unit according to claim 2, in which the middle bend
of each said intermediate wire length is a tight bend doubling said
intermediate wire length on itself so that the bends of said intermediate
wire length in said second planes of bending, are closely adjacent and
said second planes of bending are substantially parallel, the lead wire
clamped in said intermediate wire length being clamped by pinching effect
of said bends in said second planes of bending, so that said lead wire
fits within said U-shaped profile.
6. Alternator-rectifier unit according to claim 1, in which each of said
intermediate wire lengths protruding at least in part from a said cut-out
portion of said cut-out portion of said circuit board is bent at both ends
respectively in parallel first planes of bending, so as to lead
intermediate length outward beyond one of the surface planes of said
circuit board, and additionally bent in each said of parallel first plane
of bending in a manner doubling said intermediate length of wire on itself
towards said circuit board, the midportion of each of said intermediate
lengths of wire being bent in U-shape one said doubled-back portion
thereof in one of said first planes of bending and the other of said
double-back portions thereof in the other of said first planes of bending,
so as to bring the doubled-back portions of said intermediate wire lengths
substantially opposite each other,
three of said wire lengths of said imbedded wires being pinched so as to
clamp respective lead wires of said windings in respective electrical
connections between said imbedded wires and said lead wires of said
windings, with said lead wiring in each case set within the U-shape of the
midportion bend of the said intermediate wire length.
7. Alternator-rectifier unit according to claim 1, in which each of said
intermediate wire lengths protruding at least in part from a said cut-out
portion of said circuit board is bent into a two-turn coil extending out
beyond one of the surface planes of said circuit board and projecting out
of the cut-out portion of said circuit board through which the said
intermediate wire length passes, the respective two-turn coils of three of
said intermediate wire lengths of said imbedded wires being pinched so at
to clamp the respective lead wires of said windings between the turns of a
said coil in respective electrical connections between said embedded wires
and said and lead wires of said windings.
8. Alternator-rectifier unit according to claim 1, in which each of said
intermediate wire lengths protruding at least in part from a said cut-out
portion of said circuit board is bent at both ends in the same first plane
of bending, said intermediate wire length being doubled back towards said
circuit board in approximately parallel second planes of bending
perpendicular to said first plane of bending in portions of said
intermediate length respectively adjacent to said bends in said first
plane of bending, each said intermediate wire length being further bent in
U-shape in each of said approximately parallel second planes of bending so
as to bring the midportion of said intermediate wire length again away
from said surface plane of said circuit board and the midportion of said
intermediate wire length being also bent in U-shape in a plane parallel to
said first plane of bending so as to space said U-shaped bends in said
approximately parallel second planes of bending,
three of said intermediate wire lengths of said embedded wires being
pinched with respect to said U-shaped bends in said second planes of
bending so as to clamp respective lead wire of said windings in respective
electrical connections between said embedded wire and said lead wires of
said windings.
9. Alternator-rectifier unit according to claim 1, in which each of said
intermediate wire lengths protruding at least in part from a said cut-out
portion of said circuit board is bent at both ends and substantially the
same plane of bending said intermediate length of wire being also doubled
back towards said circuit board over respective portions of said wire
adjacent to said bends at both ends of said intermediate portion and being
further bent in its midportion in U-shape between said doubled-back
portions,
three of said intermediate wire lengths of said embedded wires having said
doubled-back portions pinched together around respective feed wires of
said windings held in said U-shaped bend of said embedded wire
intermediate length midportion in respective electrical connections
between said embedded wires and said lead wires of said windings. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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This invention concerns an alternator-rectifier unit suitable for vehicular
service of the kind having a shaftmounted rotor carrying an excitation
winding, a stator equipped with windings for producing 3-phase a.c., a
3-phase full wave rectifier having at least three positive-pole diodes and
three negative-pole diodes for rectifying the 3-phase a.c., a circuit
board of insulating material oriented perpendicular to and extending at
least partly around the axis of the shaft on which the rotor is mounted,
and circuit conductors embedded in the circuit board for contributing to
the interconnection of the diodes and windings.
In such alternator-rectifier units, it is common to provide cut-out
portions in the circuit board through at least some of which each of the
embedded wires runs. Published German patent application (OS) No. 3001522
shows such a unit in which these cut-out portions of a circuit board,
which constitute places for connections to the embedded wire,
narrow-necked loops bent out from the portion of the embedded wire passing
through the cut-outs are formed. The circuit board, of course, is of
insulating material and the wire loops brought out from the cut-out
portions extend above the surface of the circuit board. These loops
provide difficulty, however, for mass-production because they constitute
in effect closed eyes into which the ends of the winding wires must be
threaded, making it necessary to hold the winding wire ends in these eyes
until subsequent soldering steps can be performed on the various eyes of
the circuit board.
THE INVENTION
It is an object of the invention to provide the connections at the cut-out
portions of the circuit board in such a way that the prepared ends of the
insulated winding wires can be clamped and thereafter soldered.
Briefly, instead of eye-like loops, U-shaped connection pieces are
provided, which have the legs forming the U extending from the cut-out
portions of the circuit board beyond one of the surfaces of the circuit
board, the legs being sufficiently spaced from each other for clamping the
end of a winding wire between them.
Various ways of providing an open U of conductor material, either out of a
portion of the embedded wire or by means of an added part, for clamping
the end of a winding wire are described in the detailed description of the
invention that follows below.
THE DRAWINGS
The aforesaid detailed description, provided by the way of illustrated
example, refers to the annexed drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a cross-section, along its axis, of an alternator-rectifier unit
having a circuit board with embedded wires brought out for connections;
FIG. 2 is a cross-section along the line II--II of FIG. 1 providing a view
of the circuit board, its cut-out portions and embedded wires;
FIG. 3 is a diagram of the electrical circuit of the alternator-rectifier
unit of FIGS. 1 and 2;
FIGS. 4 to 11 respectively show different forms of connections for clamping
the ends of winding wires to make an electrical connection to an emedded
wire of a circuit board, each of these figures presenting inter-related
views in three different planes, namely at the upper left by a section in
a plane perpendicular to the circuit board, to the right of it a section
at 90.degree. to the one just mentioned and likewise perpendicular to the
circuit and, below the lefthand representation, a plan view down onto the
circuit board.
DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENTS
The alternator-rectifier unit shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 is designed for
operation in a motor vehicle and contains a claw-pole rotor 1 provided
with an exciter winding 2 and two pole wheels 3 and 4 that interfit with
respective claw-poles 5 and 6, which are affixed to the rotor shaft 8,
along with a cylindrical core 7. The rotor shaft 8 is provided with a ball
bearing 9 in a front end bell 10 and with a second ball bearing shown at
11 in a rear end bell 12, for rotation of the rotor. In dot-dash lines,
there are shown a splined pulley 13, for belt drive from the vehicle
engine, mounted on the shaft 8 together with the fan wheel 14 that
ventilates the unit.
Disposed transversely with respect to the axis of rotation A-A of the
claw-pole rotor 1 and its rotor shaft 8, there is clamped, between the two
end bells 10 and 12, a stator lamination stack 15 that is reproduced in
section in FIG. 2 and carries the 3-phase a.c. winding 18 consisting of
three phase windings U, V and W in its channel grooves 17 that are evenly
distributed around the circumference of its stator bore 60. The winding 18
is not shown in FIG. 2, in order to allow the representation of the
remaining structure to be clearer. In the course of one revolution of the
claw-pole rotor 1, there are induced, in the phase windings three
alternating voltages successively offset from each other in phase by
120.degree.. These phase voltages are rectified in the circuit shown in
FIG. 3 by a rectifier comprising six positive-pole diodes 19 and six
negative-pole diodes 20, with the output then being made available between
the insulated positive pole B+ and the vehicle-grounded frame of the
alternator, for supplying power to a d.c. electrical system for the
vehicle.
The positive-pole diodes 19, as shown in FIG. 3, are mounted on a common
kidney-shaped cooling plate of metal designated 21 in FIG. 1, which is
insulatedly mounted on the end bell 12 in the manner shown, while the
negative-pole diodes are disposed on a second cooling plate, not shown in
the drawing, that is connected in an electrically conductive fashion to
the end bell 12. A plastic injection-molded circuit board 22 is interposed
between the cooling plates carrying the diodes to one side of the circuit
board and the pole wheel 4 on the other side. The circuit board 22 has
embedded therein conductors 23 of copper wire shown in the drawing in part
with broken lines, these conductors being accessible at different cut-outs
24 for connecting the diode connection wires 25 running axially and
parallel to the rotor axis. The three cut-outs designated 26a, 26b and 26c
have connection pieces for connection of the three wire ends 27, 28 and
29, respectively belonging to the phase windings U, V and W.
Various embodiments of the connection pieces provided in accordance with
the invention are shown in FIGS. 4 to 11. These connection pieces all have
a U-shaped configuration for receiving a wire end to be connected. The
legs of the U of the connection pieces extend out from the side of the
circuit board facing the claw-pole rotor and there have a small mutual
spacing that is just sufficient for clamping one of the wire ends 27, 28
and 29, and holding them in position until a subsequent soldering step is
performed.
In FIGS. 4 to 11, the cut-outs 26a, 26b and 26c are represented as
indicated with the reference numeral 26, independently of their particular
position, since that is determined simply by the nearness of the winding
ends 27, 28 and 29 respectively.
In the embodiment shown in FIG. 4, the illustrated connection piece 32 is
bent into a hook out of a section of the conductor wire 23 passing through
the cut-out portion of the circuit board. This is done in such a way that
two parallel and closely adjacently-lying wire sections 33 and 34 are
produced, which are then bent into a U profile, such that the two legs 35
and 36 of the U have a small spacing from each other so that a winding
connection wire can be slipped in the from below and mechanically clamped
in place, the winding end being given the general designation 30 instead
of one of the specific winding end designations 27, 28 and 29. Once the
winding end is clamped, it can be held fast at least until a subsequent
soldering step finally completes the connection.
In the embodiment shown in FIG. 5, the two legs of the U 35 and 36 and the
winding wire end 30 are again shown. In this case, the latter can run
transverse to the longitudinal direction of the unbent and approximately
rectilinearly running portions of the embedded conductor 23 in the circuit
board 22.
In FIG. 6, an embodiment is shown in which doubled over wire stubs 27 and
38, connected to provide the U profile, extend beyond the surface of the
circuit board 22 and again are made from the conductor wire 23 passing
through the cut-out portion of the circuit board where the connection is
to be made. Each of the doubled stubs 37 and 38 forms one of two legs of
the U, between which the winding connectin wire 30 can be laid and
clamped.
In the embodiment of FIG. 7, the wire 23 passing through the cut-out
portion of the circuit board is wound into two circular turns 41 which are
coaxial and of the same size and have a slight resilient compression bias
against each other, and are accordingly particularly suitable for clamping
the winding end 30 between them. Looking between the turns a U profile
appears. In the emodiment of FIG. 8, the conductor 23 of the circuit board
22 is brought out above the upperside plane of the circuit board in two
stubs 42 and 43 bent up at a considerable spacing from each other and
connected to sections of wire 44,50 which dip down in U-shape into the
cut-out 26 of the circuit with continuing portions 45, 49, these
respective U-shape portions being connected by a bridge portion 47, the
respective portins 44,45,46 and 48,49,50 having mirror symmetry with
respect to the bridge portion 47 between them, which is perpendicular to
the U profiles of those respective portions just mentioned. The wire
portions 42 and 44 are closely adjacent, as are also the corresponding
wire portions 43 and 50, the wire 23 in each case being bent over tightly
to provide that configuration.
In contrast to the above-described embodiments of the U-shaped connection
pieces in which in each case a deformed section of the conductor wire 23
provides the connection piece, there are shown in FIGS. 9 to 11
embodiments in which a separately made connection piece is provided which
is affixed on a bent-out portion 53 of the conductor 23 in the region of
the cut-out 26 of the circuit board.
In the embodiment of FIG. 9, a bracket-shaped sheet metal strip 54 is
crimped at both of its ends around the bent-out portion 53 of the wire 23
by means of two semicircular bends 55 and 56 in such a way that the
connection piece can be pushed onto the wire portion 53, even after the
circuit board 22 is press-molded and hard. It can then be clamped hard on
the wire portion 53 and then electrically connected with the wire by
soldering welding. In the midportion of the sheet metal strip 54, a tab 57
is provided which is bent in U-shape about the axis 58 that runs parallel
to the wire 23 and its raised portion 53, in such a manner that between
the strip 54 and the opposed end of the tab 57 operating as the other leg
of the U, a wire end 30 can be inserted and clamped.
In the embodiment of FIG. 10, in the completed condition of the circuit
board 22, the bent-out portion 53 of the embedded conductor 23 extends
slightly above the surface of the circuit board. A clip 60 previously bent
into U-shape out of copper or brass wire of round cross-section goes
around the conductor 23 and its legs 61 and 62 extend away from it to
provide a narrow space 64 for accepting the winding connection wire 30. In
this embodiment it is possible without difficulty to weld the clip 60 at
the location of the particular bent-out portion 53 to the conductor 23 or
otherwise provide an electrically conducting connection to the wire 23
before the wire 23 is laid into the mold for the circuit board 22. On the
other hand, there is still the possibility to produce the circuit board
without first furnishing the connection pieces, and only thereafter to
insert the clips 60 from below through the cut-out 26 over the conductor
23 and to push the exposed portion of the latter upwards so as to deform
it in order to provide the desired disposition of the connection piece for
attachment of the winding connection wire 30.
In the embodiment shown in FIG. 11, a very simply constituted bending
scheme is provided that is useful for the conductor 23 in a continuous
process. Here, the conductor 23 which is continuous from one side to the
other of the cut-out 26, is folded back on itself sharply in twin stubs 66
and 67 lying at a close spacing one behind the other, connected by a
semicircular piece 68 and forming a U profile with the latter, of which
the legs 66 and 67 bound the space 69 for accepting the winding connection
wire 30.
In FIGS. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9, a substantially increased soldering surface
can be obtained by multiple (folded) insertion of the connecting wire. In
all embodiments, the mechanical clamping action provides supplementary
security for the soldered connection.
The embodiment of FIG. 5 is particularly suited for automation procedure of
laying in place the connection wire 30, which is to say of the several
winding ends 27,28 and 29, and likewise for the manufacture of the
connection pieces.
Although the invention has been described with respect to particular
illustrative embodiments, it will be seen that further modifications and
variation are possible within the inventive concept.
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Description  |
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