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| United States Patent | 5376010 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/5376010.html |
| Inventor(s) | Petersen; Kurt H. (Austin, TX) |
| Abstract | A burn-in socket for land grid array devices or ball grid array devices
includes a receptacle having an array of terminals for accepting and
contacting the device and an outer shell which is actuated by rotation of
the shell to capture the device and provide a force to ensure electrical
contact between the device and the terminals. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 5376010 |
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Burn-in socket |
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| Publication Date |
December 27, 1994 |
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| Filing Date |
February 8, 1994 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| *references marked with an asterisk below are user-added references |
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U.S. References |
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| Add a new US reference: |
| | Reference | Relevancy | Comments | Reference | Relevancy | Comments | 5234349 Matsuoka 439/70 Aug,1993 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5199890 Kubo 439/72 Apr,1993 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5123855 Petersen 439/263 Jun,1992 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5088190 Malhi
Feb,1992 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5068601 Parmenter
Nov,1991 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5057031 Sinclair 439/261 Oct,1991 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4986760 Petersen 439/71 Jan,1991 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4969828 Bright 439/68 Nov,1990 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4950980 Pfaff 324/755 Aug,1990 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4923404 Redmond 439/71 May,1990 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4846704 Ikeya 439/72 Jul,1989 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4832612 Grabbe 439/71 May,1989 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4801273 Ikeya 439/269.1 Jan,1989 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4768973 Bakermans 439/331 Sep,1988 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4758176 Abe 439/331 Jul,1988 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4715823 Ezura 439/267 Dec,1987 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4396935 Schuck 257/706 Aug,1983 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4376560 Olsson 439/331 Mar,1983 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | |
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Foreign References |
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Foreign References |
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References  |
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| Market Size |
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Estimate the gross annual revenues of the relevant market
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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| Market Size | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Market Share | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Reasonable Royalty | N/A | [No votes] |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. A socket for temporarily connecting to a printed circuit board an
integrated circuit device of the type including a body having spaced,
planar major surfaces and a number of contacts disposed on one major
surface and arranged in an array, the socket comprising:
a base adapted for mounting on the printed circuit board and including an
array of holes;
a nest overlying said base and including means for preventing rotation of
said nest with respect to said base and an array of holes and means for
locating the integrated circuit with respect to said array of holes in
said nest;
terminals extending through said array of holes in said base and
corresponding holes of said array of holes in said nest to form an array
of terminals disposed to make connection with the integrated circuit
contacts, said terminals including a termination portion for electrical
connection to the printed circuit board, a contacting portion for
electrical connection to the contacts of the integrated circuit, and a
spring portion connecting said terminal portion and said contacting
portion and resiliently deformable to allow movement of said contacting
portion toward said terminal portion and to produce a force resisting such
movement;
a shell including a top surface overlying said nest, means extending from
said top surface and engaging said base for retaining said shell in
relation to said base and for allowing rotational movement of said shell
with respect to said base, an opening in said top surface permitting
passage of the integrated circuit through said top surface, and means for
applying force upon rotation of said shell with respect to said base and
said nest to the major surface of an integrated circuit disposed on said
nest and in contact with terminals corresponding to the array of contacts
on the integrated circuit sufficient to force the integrated circuit into
electrical engagement with said contacting portions of said terminals and
cause resilient deformation of said spring portions of the terminals
engaged by said integrated circuit.
2. A socket according to claim 1 wherein said means for locating the
integrated circuit with respect to said nest are a flat surface including
said array of holes in said nest and walls extending in a common direction
from said flat surface and disposed around said array of holes to define a
raised border corresponding to the shape of the integrated circuit.
3. A socket according to claim 1 wherein said base includes a circular
perimeter and said means for retaining said shell in relation to said base
are a circular shoulder of increased diameter relative to said base
perimeter and a plurality of projections extending toward said base
perimeter from said shell to engage said base shoulder.
4. A socket according to claim 1 wherein said means for applying force to
the integrated circuit includes at least two camming surfaces extending
from said shell top surface toward said nest and wherein said shell
camming surfaces engage said nest when said shell is in a loading position
wherein said shell top surface opening is rotated to allow insertion of
the integrated circuit through said shell and onto said nest and wherein
said shell camming surfaces disengage from said nest and engage said
integrated circuit when said shell is rotated to a test position wherein
force is applied to the integrated circuit.
5. A socket according to claim 4 further including at least two camming
surface extending from said nest and interacting with said shell camming
surface when said shell is rotated to a loading position wherein said nest
is forced away from said shell against said resilient deformation of said
terminals, and wherein said force is applied to said integrated circuit by
rotation of said shell away from said loading position so that said shell
camming surfaces rotate out of engagement with said nest camming surfaces
to engage said integrated circuit.
6. A socket according to claim 1 wherein said base includes a circular
perimeter and said means for applying force to the integrated circuit are
a circular shoulder of increased diameter relative to said base perimeter
and sloping with respect to said shell top surface and a plurality of
projections extending toward said base perimeter from said shell to engage
said base shoulder so that said shell will move toward and away from said
nest and an integrated circuit disposed thereon as said shell projections
move along said sloped shoulder.
7. A socket according to claim 1 further including a biasing meter disposed
between said base and said nest for urging said nest away from said base
and toward said shell.
8. A socket according to claim 1 wherein said array of holes in said nest
is square, said shell opening is square to correspond to said nest, said
nest includes four camming surfaces disposed adjacent each of the sides of
said array, and said shell top surface includes four camming surfaces
disposed to correspond to said nest camming surfaces when said shell is
rotated such that said shell opening is aligned with said nest array, said
shell camming surfaces disengaging from said nest camming surfaces and
engaging said integrated circuit upon rotation of said shell with respect
to said nest to apply said force to said integrated circuit.
9. A socket for temporarily connecting to a printed circuit board an
integrated circuit device of the type including a body having spaced,
planar major surfaces and a number of contacts disposed on one major
surface and arranged in an array, the socket comprising:
a base adapted for mounting on the printed circuit board and including a
substantially circular perimeter, a shoulder of increased diameter with
respect to said perimeter, a substantially flat surface spaced from said
printed circuit board and an array of holes in said flat surface;
a nest having a substantially flat surface overlying said base and an array
of holes in said flat surface, said nest engaging said base to prevent
rotation of said nest with respect to said base and further including
walls extending from said flat surface toward said base and disposed
adjacent said array of holes for locating the integrated circuit with
respect to said array of holes in said nest;
terminals extending through said array of holes in said base and
corresponding holes of said array of holes in said nest to form an array
of terminals disposed to make connection with the integrated circuit
contacts, said terminals including a termination portion for electrical
connection to the printed circuit board, a contacting portion for
electrical connection to the contacts of the integrated circuit, and a
spring portion connecting said terminal portion and said contacting
portion and resiliently deformable to allow movement of said contacting
portion toward said terminal portion and to produce a force resisting such
movement;
a shell including a top surface overlying said nest, a wall extending from
said top surface toward said base and including at least one projection
engaging said shoulder to retain said shell in relation to said base and
to allow rotational movement of said shell with respect to said base an
opening in said top surface substantially corresponding to said array of
holes in said nest and permitting passage of the integrated circuit
through said top surface, and means for applying force upon rotation of
said shell with respect to said base and said nest to the major surface of
an integrated circuit disposed on said nest and in contact with terminals
corresponding to the array of contacts on the integrated circuit
sufficient to force the integrated circuit into electrical engagement with
said contacting portions of said terminals and cause resilient deformation
of said spring portions of the terminals engaged by said integrated
circuit.
10. A socket according to claim 9 wherein said means for applying force to
said integrated circuit are at least two camming surfaces said shell
opening and extending toward said nest to engage the integrated circuit
upon rotation of said shell.
11. A socket according to claim 9 wherein said means for applying force to
said integrated circuit is a sloped surface of said base shoulder engaging
said shell projection such that rotation of said shell projection relative
to said base shoulder allows said shell to move toward and away from said
nest and said shell to apply force to an integrated circuit disposed on
said nest when said shell moves toward said base. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to sockets for electronic devices which allow
the device to be temporarily connected to a printed circuit board for
burn-in testing purposes. The invention particularly relates to sockets
for land grid array (LGA), one type of which is ball grid array (BGA),
devices.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
During the manufacture of integrated circuit devices, the device is tested
by attaching the device to a printed circuit board and electronically
testing its functionality. Such testing may be done in a heated
environment to accelerate the testing and identify devices which otherwise
might fail shortly after being placed in service.
To facilitate this testing, it is necessary to provide a socket permanently
attached to the test circuit board which will allow the device to be
temporarily connected to the circuit board. Such a socket should allow
rapid connection and removal of the device and should not mar the device
in any way. In addition, the socket must provide positive contact to all
of the electrical connections of the device, and be susceptible to
manipulation by automatic production machinery.
Socket of the type described have in the past primarily included abase
attached to the test circuit board by means of spring-loaded contacts and
a hinged lid which pressed the device down against the contacts. Such
sockets have not proven to be easily compatible with modern process
equipment, particularly production line robotic equipment.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention,provides a socket for temporarily connecting to a
printed circuit board an integrated circuit device of the type including a
body having spaced, planar major surfaces and a number of contacts
disposed on one major surface and arranged in an array, the socket
comprising a base adapted for mounting on the printed circuit board and
including an array of holes, a nest overlying the base and including means
for preventing rotation of the nest with respect to the base and an array
of holes and means for locating the integrated circuit with respect to the
array of holes in the nest, terminals extending through the array of holes
in the base and corresponding holes of the array of holes in the nest to
form an array of terminals disposed to make connection with the integrated
circuit contacts, the terminals including a termination portion for
electrical connection to the printed circuit board, a contacting portion
for electrical connection to the contacts of the integrated circuit, and a
spring portion connecting the terminal portion and the contacting portion
and resiliently deformable to allow movement of the contacting portion
toward the terminal portion and to produce a force resisting such
movement, and a shell including a top surface overlying the nest, means
extending from the top surface and engaging the base for retaining the
shell in relation to the base and for allowing rotational movement of the
shell with respect to the base, an opening in the top surface permitting
passage of the integrated circuit through the top surface, and means for
applying force upon rotation of the shell with respect to the base and the
nest to the major surface of an integrated circuit disposed on the nest
and in contact with terminals corresponding to the array of contacts on
the integrated circuit sufficient to force the integrated circuit into
electrical engagement with the contacting portions of the terminals and
cause resilient deformation of the spring portions of the terminals
engaged by the integrated circuit.
Force may be applied to the integrated circuit to be tested by means of cam
surfaces on the inner surface of the shell top surface which bear
downwardly on the integrated circuit when the shell is rotated or by means
of a sloped surface on the base which interacts with projections extending
from the shell. As the shell projections slide along the sloped surface
upon rotation of the shell, the shell is drawn downwardly to apply force
to the integrated circuit device or allowed to move upwardly to release
the device.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The present invention will be more thoroughly described with respect to the
accompanying drawings, wherein like numbers refer to like parts in the
several views, and wherein:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a first embodiment of a socket according to
the present invention in a position to allow loading of an integrated
circuit device;
FIG. 2 is a perspective view of the socket of FIG. 1 with an integrated
circuit device loaded therein and in a position to retain the integrated
circuit device for testing;
FIG. 3 is a perspective view of the socket of FIG. 1, with a portion shown
in cross-section;
FIG. 4 is a perspective view of one part of the socket of FIG. 1;
FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view of a portion of a second embodiment of a
socket according to the present invention;
FIG. 6 is a perspective view, partially in cross-section, of the socket of
FIG. 5; and
FIG. 7 is a perspective view of the socket of FIG. 5 with a portion in
cross-section and an integrated circuit device in place for testing.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
FIG. 1 illustrates a socket according to the present invention and
generally indicated as 10 which is adapted to be attached to a printed
circuit board comprising a portion of a testing device for integrated
circuit devices. The socket 10 is designed to handle integrated circuit
devices of the ball grid array or land grid array types wherein the device
is comprised of electronic circuitry encapsulated in a coating which is
square or rectangular and has two major surfaces and an array of contact
bumps on one major surface.
When integrated circuits are manufactured, it is desirable to test each
device by temporarily attaching the device to test equipment which will
check the electronic functioning of the device. Such testing may
additionally be done in a heated environment to identify those devices
which may fail shortly after being put into service. To quickly test a
large number of devices, it is necessary to provide means for quickly and
reliably temporarily connecting the integrated circuit devices to the test
equipment, without damaging the devices. Sockets permanently attached to
the test equipment accomplish the goals outlined above. However, existing
sockets for integrated circuit devices, particularly those of the ball or
land grid array types, have included a base for accepting and electrically
contacting the device and a lid which attaches to the base to retain the
integrated circuit in contact with the base. These sockets have proven
difficult for automatic assembly machinery such a industrial robots to
manipulate.
The socket 10 of the present invention utilizes a rotating shell 12 to
retain the integrated circuit within a nest 14 having an array of holes
through which the contacts of the integrated circuit device may be
contacted by terminals such as those which may be seen by temporary
reference to FIG. 5. As can be seen in FIG. 1, the shell 12 includes an
opening shaped to accept the particular integrated circuit being tested
(in this case a square device) and allow the integrated circuit to be
placed on the nest 14 by, for example, a vacuum placement mechanism. FIG.
2 illustrates the socket 10 with an integrated circuit device 16 in place
and the shell 12 rotated to capture the integrated circuit device 16 by
its corners and force the device 16 downwardly.
FIG. 3 illustrates the socket 10 in greater detail. The socket 10 includes
a base 18 which is intended to rest on the printed circuit board of a test
device, a nest 14 resting on the base 18 and a shell 12 disposed above and
surrounding the base 18 and the nest 14. The base 18 has a circular
perimeter 20, a shoulder 22 of increased diameter relative to the
perimeter 20, stops 24 extending vertically from the shoulder 22 for
limiting rotation of the shell 12 as will explained later, and holes 26
(FIG. 5) arranged in an array corresponding to the arrangement of the
contacts on the integrated circuit device 16 to be tested.
The nest 14 is generally planar and sits on the top surface of the base 18.
The top surface of the nest 14 includes a flat area 28 having an array of
holes 30 corresponding to the array of contacts of the integrated circuit
device 16 and the holes 26 in the base 18. Terminals 32 (only one row is
shown in FIG. 3) extend through the holes 30 in the nest 14 to contact the
contacts disposed on the lower side of the integrated circuit device 16.
The nest 14 includes walls 34 surrounding the holes 30 spaced and shaped
to accept the integrated circuit device 16. The upper surfaces of the
walls 34 terminate in camming surfaces 36 which slope from the corners of
the array of holes 30 to a flat surfaces 38 disposed midway along the
length of the walls 34. These camming surfaces 36 are utilized in
conjunction with the shell 12, as will be described below.
The shell 12 is best seen in FIGS. 3 and 4 and includes a top surface 40
with an opening 42 formed to accept the integrated circuit device 16 and
allow the same to be placed in the nest 14 with its contacts touching the
terminals 32. The shell 12 includes outer walls 44 extending downwardly
from the top surface 40 toward the base 18, which walls 44 provide
purchase to rotate the shell 12. Formed on the interior of the shell outer
walls 44 are projections 46 which fit under the base shoulder 22 and
extend toward the base perimeter 20 when in place. The projections 46
prevent the shell 12 from detaching from the base 18 and the nest 14.
Since the projections 46 are narrow, the shell 12 may be rotated until the
projections 46 encounter the stops 24 disposed on the perimeter 20 of the
base 18. The top surface 40 of the shell 12 may be formed with relief
pockets 48 to facilitate molding of the projections 46. It will be
recognized that the entire expanse of the outer walls 44 need not be
present for the shell 12 to function. Only those portions of the walls 44
which include the projections 46 are necessary.
Referring back to FIGS. 1 and 2 in particular, the shell 12 includes
camming surfaces 50 which slope downwardly from the corners of the shell
opening 42 and terminate in flat surfaces 52 disposed midway along the
length of the sides of the opening 42. The camming surfaces 50 and flat
surfaces 52 are essentially mirror images of corresponding structures
formed on the nest 14 and are designed such that the flat surfaces of the
nest 38 and the flat surfaces of the shell 52 are in contact when the
shell 12 is rotated to accept an integrated circuit device 16, as
illustrated in FIGS. 1 and 3.
FIG. 5 illustrates terminals 32 which may be used in the embodiment of a
socket illustrated in FIGS. 1-4 and thus far described. The terminals 32
include terminating portions 54 which extend through the holes 26 formed
in the base 12 and which are permanently connected to the printed circuit
board on which the socket 10 is to be mounted. Opposite the terminating
portions 54 are contacting portions 56 shaped to provide a flat top
surface to contact the contacts formed on the lower surface of the
integrated circuit device 16. Between the termination portion 54 and the
contacting portion 56 is a spring portion 58 formed in the shape of a bow,
although many other shapes are possible. The shape of the spring portion
58 allows resilient deflection of the contacting portion 56 toward the
terminating portion 54 and acts to generate a force, when the terminal 32
is acted upon axially, which tends to urge the contacting portion 56 away
from the terminating portion 54. The terminals 32 may be formed with
projections 60 which engage the underside of the holes 30 in the nest 14,
and the length of the terminals 32 is selected such that the nest 14 will
be urged upwardly when the terminals 32 and the nest 14 are assembled to
the base 18.
With reference back to FIG. 3, the assembled socket 10 will include an
array of terminals 32 within the holes 30 in the nest 14 which tend to
urge the nest 14 upwardly away from the base 18 and toward the shell 12,
if the terminals are formed with projections 60. Thus the terminals 32
will be extended as far as the projections 60 will allow through the holes
30 in the nest 14 and the flat surface 38 of the nest camming surface 36
will be forced against the shell flat surface 52 when the shell 12 is
positioned to accept an integrated circuit device 16. In this position,
the upward force of the terminals 32 is countered by a reaction force
generated downwardly by the shell 12 because movement of the shell 12 is
limited by its projections 46 in engagement with the shoulder 22 of the
base.
When an integrated circuit device 16 has been positioned in the nest 16 and
the shell 12 rotated from the position of FIG. 3 to the position of FIG.
4, the flat surfaces 38 and 52 allow a period wherein the shell 12 can
rotate to contact the integrated circuit 16 without any movement of the
nest 14 occurring. Once contact between the Camming surface 50 of the
shell 12 has been initiated, the downward reaction force generated by the
shell 12 is transferred from the nest 14 to the integrated circuit device
16. When the shell 12 has rotated to the position shown in FIG. 4, all
reaction force generated by the shell camming surface 50 by virtue of
engagement between the shell wall projections 46 and the shoulder 22 of
the base 18 is exerted on the corners of the integrated circuit device 16.
This force maintains the original deformation or causes increased
compression of the terminals 32 and ensures good electrical contact
between the contacts of the integrated circuit device 16 and the
contacting portions 56 of the terminals 32. Rotation of the shell 12 is
halted upon reaching the position shown in FIG. 4 by the stops 24 attached
to the base 18. Return rotation transfers the reaction force generated by
the shell 12 from the integrated circuit device 16 back to the camming
surfaces 36 and ultimately the flat surface 38.
FIGS. 6 and 7 illustrate a second embodiment of a socket 70 which
incorporates a number of changes as compared to the socket 10 described
above. The socket 70 is designed for use with rectangular integrated
circuit device 72 and is designed such that the shell 74 rotates
90.degree. with respect to the nest 76 and the base 78 to capture the
integrated circuit device 72 rather than the 45.degree. of the
earlier-described socket 10. Also, the socket 70 utilizes terminals 80
which do not include projections 60 as do the terminals 32.
The result of 90.degree. rotation is that the shell 74 only includes two
camming surfaces 82 rather than the four illustrated previously. Likewise,
the nest 76 only includes two camming surfaces 84. Otherwise, operation is
similar in that when the shell 74 rotates from the position shown in FIG.
6 to that shown in FIG. 7, the downwardly-acting reaction force of the
shell 74 is transferred from the nest 76 to the integrated circuit device
72.
The result of utilizing terminals 80 without projections 60 is that the
terminals 80 extend further through the holes in the nest 76 than
described earlier and the nest 76 may not be urged by the terminals 80
into contact with the shell 74. In order to maintain the nest 76 in
contact with the shell 74 and to prevent the terminals 80 from extending
an undue distance above the surface of the nest 76, the socket 70 is
provided with auxiliary springs 86 disposed between the base 78 and the
nest 76 which urge the nest 76 upwardly into engagement with the shell 74.
Thus there has been described in two embodiments a socket which utilizes
rotation of an outer shell to achieve temporary connection of an
integrated circuit to a printed circuit board of a testing device.
Although the present invention was described in two embodiments, many
modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art. For example,
the camming surfaces on the nests or the shells or on both the nests and
the shells could be eliminated if the dimensions of the shell and the nest
were carefully chosen with respect to the integrated circuit device to be
tested and the user were willing to accept a somewhat less graceful
transfer of forces between the nest and the device than results with the
provision of the camming surfaces as described herein. Further, the shape
of the device is not determinative of the extent of rotation for which the
shell of the socket should be designed. While 90.degree. rotation is
presently thought most desirable for rectangular devices, the socket of
FIGS. 6 and 7 could be designed to capture only the corners of the device
as described with respect to the square device, and either socket version
could be made to capture an integrated circuit device with more or less
rotation than the optimum described herein.
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Description  |
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