Abstract: An electrical connector having a barrel or hollow cylindrical sleeve into which is inserted a cylindrical interface member adapted to accept a coil spring member on one end thereof. The interface member on its other end acts upon a cylindrical sphere or ball captured with the other end of the sleeve member. The ball is movable axially and rotationally within the sleeve to make electrical and mechanical contact with an external surface which may be either movable with respect to the ball or not perpendicular to the ball. The connector is formed to direct current to pass primarily through the sleeve and to bypass the spring.
Abstract: A structure of an array of connectors fastened to a planar insulator, usually formed of a high temperature thermoplastic. The planar insulator has a pattern of substantially cylindrical openings formed therein into which is inserted a machined copper alloy sleeve which is plated with tin or tin-lead alloy. The sleeve itself is a hollow substantially cylindrical tube with a multi-finger spring contact inserted near one (usually called the upper end). The spring contact itself is plated with gold, tin, tin-lead or other malleable electrically conductive material. At the far end of the cylindrical tube is fixed a plug of “kraft paper” to function as a barrier, made from substantially pure wood pulp with no fillers. The cylindrical tube of the sleeve grips the kraft paper barrier sufficiently for it to remain in place during the processing cycle when the copper alloy sleeve is soldered to the circuit board.
Abstract: An electrical connector formed from a solid material having a compliant end with a plurality of barb-like concentric rings formed about a hollow cavity formed in the material in which an axially extending channel has been formed for engaging a press fit terminal formed in a circuit board or other similar device.