US2585010A - Wire connecting tool - Google Patents

Wire connecting tool Download PDF

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Publication number
US2585010A
US2585010A US753066A US75306647A US2585010A US 2585010 A US2585010 A US 2585010A US 753066 A US753066 A US 753066A US 75306647 A US75306647 A US 75306647A US 2585010 A US2585010 A US 2585010A
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Prior art keywords
shaft
wire
sleeve
tool
terminal
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Expired - Lifetime
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US753066A
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Clarence N Hickman
Rudolph F Mallina
Reck Frank
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AT&T Corp
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Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01RELECTRICALLY-CONDUCTIVE CONNECTIONS; STRUCTURAL ASSOCIATIONS OF A PLURALITY OF MUTUALLY-INSULATED ELECTRICAL CONNECTING ELEMENTS; COUPLING DEVICES; CURRENT COLLECTORS
    • H01R43/00Apparatus or processes specially adapted for manufacturing, assembling, maintaining, or repairing of line connectors or current collectors or for joining electric conductors
    • H01R43/033Apparatus or processes specially adapted for manufacturing, assembling, maintaining, or repairing of line connectors or current collectors or for joining electric conductors for wrapping or unwrapping wire connections
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/53Means to assemble or disassemble
    • Y10T29/5313Means to assemble electrical device
    • Y10T29/532Conductor
    • Y10T29/53209Terminal or connector
    • Y10T29/53213Assembled to wire-type conductor
    • Y10T29/53222Means comprising hand-manipulatable implement
    • Y10T29/53226Fastening by deformation

Definitions

  • This invention relates to tools for connecting wire to electrical terminals and is specifically directed to certain structural details thereof which eifect advantageous functioning of such a tool.
  • a hand tool having a body member which houses a rotatable shaft. Means is provided associated with said body member and with said shaft for rotating said shaft. The operating or forward portion of said shaft is confined within a sleeve which is attached to said body member and which, among other functions, afiords a sleeve bearing surface for said shaft.
  • the forward portion of said shaft has an axial opening therein adapted to accommodate one end of an electrical terminal to which it is desired to connect a wire. It is not necessary, as will be appreciated by skilled persons from a reading of subsequent description, that the opening be exactly symmetrical with respect to the axis of the shaft. It is necessary only that such opening be substantially axial.
  • a groove is provided in the surface of said shaft opening on the forward end thereof and extending along said shaft substantially parallel to said axial opening.
  • the end edges, or one end edge, of said groove are, or is, purposefully made smooth or rounded in order to provide an edge over which a wire will readily slide without undue frictional obstruction.
  • This groove is adapted to accommodate freely one end of the wire which is to be connected to said terminal.
  • the forward end of said sleeve, which'may extend beyond the forward end of said shaft. is provided with cut-out portions or notches or other suitable aperture or apertures, which aperture or apertures are used to secure the said wire against any substantial movement other than the wrapping thereof about said terminal by said tool.
  • the end face of said shaft is provided with an offset countersink to facilitate the entry of said terminal into said axial opening.
  • the inner end surfaces of said sleeve are beveled to facilitate the positioning of said wire and said terminal prior to entry thereof into respective groove and axial opening.
  • Fig. 1 is a side elevation of a pistol grip type of tool embodying features of this invention
  • Figure 2 is a top view of the rearward, or handle portion of the tool shown in Fig. 1;.
  • Figs. 3 through 10 are enlarged views of the forward end of such a tool as shown in Fig. 1 and are referred to in the subsequent description .to illustrate various structural and functional aspects of the invention.
  • a body member i has housed therein a rotatable shaft 2, the forward portion of which shaft 2 is provided with a sleeve bearing 3 which is rigidly fastened to the forward end of body member I by means of a soldered joint 4 or other well-known securing means.
  • a pinion 5 is secured by means of set screw 21 to said shaft 2 and said pinion resides in a recess 6 in'body member 8, the rearward end of shaft 2 being freely rotatable within the rearward portion l of body 8 as a bearing.
  • a sector plate 8 is freely pivoted to body I at 9.
  • This sector plate is provided with a rack It which cooperates with pinion 5, a stop pin II cooperating with slot I2 in body member I, a finger grip I3, 9. projecting tang Id cooperating with plunger I5 and a stop pin H cooperating with a stop surface I8 on body I.
  • Hand grips I9 and 20 are provided and are secured to body I by means of screws 2
  • a spring I6, housed in a hole in body I urges the plunger I5 into the position disclosed in Fig. 1.
  • a removable plate 22 is secured to the rearward portion I of body I by means of screws 23. Plate 22 assists hand grip 20 in confining the motion of sector plate 8.
  • Fig. 1 The normal position of sector plate 8 is as shown in Fig. 1 wherein stop pin II and slot I2 determine the normal rotary position of shaft 2 under the bias-- ing action of spring I6 on sector plate 8.
  • Fig. 1 the tool is shown in operating position relative to an electrical terminal 24 of an electrical apparatus unit, such as a relay 25, and relative to a wire 26 to be attached to terminal 24.
  • the structure may very well be arranged such that sector plate 8 is confined by hand grip l8 instead of by hand grip 28 and thus be positioned such that rack It would be in front of pinion 6 (Fig. 1) or below pinion I (Fig. 2), whereupon, upon actuation of finger grip l3, shaft 2 would be rotated counterclockwise when viewed from the left of Figs. 1 and 2.
  • pinion 6 Fig. 1
  • pinion I Fig. 2
  • Fig. 7 illustrates the configuration of the forward portion of shaft 2, an end view thereof being shown most clearly in Fig. 6 and other partial views being shown in Figs. 3, 4, 5, 8, 9 and 10.
  • a slot or groove 28 is provided opening on the surface of shaft 2 and on the forward end thereof. The forward edge 28 of said slot 28 is rounded or beveled to permit the bare end 30 of wire 26 to slide thereover without undue frictional resistance.
  • in shaft 2 is provided on the end of shaft 2 with an offset countersink 32.
  • the sleeve 3 provides a free bearing surface for shaft 2. 'The upper and lower inner end surfaces (see Fig. 6) of sleeve 3 are beveled or grooved at 33 and 34.
  • Finger grip I3 is released to allow spring l6 to return sector plate 8 to normal, as determined by stop pin H and slot l2.
  • This normal position of shaft 2 will align the bevels 33 and 34 with slot 28 and countersink 32 respectively (see Fig. 6).
  • Wire 26 is now positioned such that the bare end 38 thereof is guided by means of bevel 33 in accordance with the dotted position of wire 26 shown in Fig. 10, into slot 28 to assume therein such a position as shown in Fig. 3.
  • the insulated portion of wire 26 is now twisted about notch 35 of sleeve 3, similarly to the representation of Figs. 4 and 8.
  • the tool is then moved to the apparatus, such as to relay 25, upon which is mounted an electrical terminal 24 to which wire 26 is to be connected.
  • the tool is tilted to take advantage of the natural guideway created by bevel 34 of sleeve 3 and by countersink 32 of shaft 2.
  • the tool is readily correctly positioned, as indicated by the dotted position of terminal 24 in Fig. 10, such that terminal 24 may be quickly inserted into bore 3
  • of shaft 2 may be arranged to accommodate flat, round, square or any cross-sectional configuration of terminal to which it is desired to connect a wire such as 26.
  • a hand tool for securing wire to electrical terminals comprising a body member housing a rotatable shaft therein, means for rotating said shaft, the forward portion of said shaft supported within a sleeve attached to said body member, said forward portion of said shaft provided with a substantially axial opening adapted to accommodate therein one end of an electrical terminal.
  • said forward portion of said shaft also provided with a groove opening on the surface of said shaft and on the forward end thereof, said groove having a smooth forward edge and adapted to have inserted therein one end of a wire, the forward end of said sleeve providing holding means for said wire and guiding means for said wire and said terminal, said tool adapted when said shaft is rotated to hold said wire by said holding means and by means of said smooth forward edge of said groove to permit said one end of said wire to slide out of said groove while being secured about said one end of saidterminal.
  • a hand tool for securing wire to electrical terminals comprising a body member housing a rotatable shaft therein, means for rotating said shaft, the forward portion of said shaft housed by a sleeve attached to said body member, said forward portion of said shaft provided with a substantially axial opening adapted to accommodate therein one end of an electrical terminal.
  • said forward portion of said shaft also provided with a groove opening on the surface of said shaft and on the forward end thereof and located substantially parallel to said axial opening, said groove having a curved forward edge and adapted to have inserted therein one end of a wire, the forward end of said sleeve having an aperture therein to provide holding means for said wire and having its inner end surfaces formed to provide guiding means for said wire and said terminal, said tool adapted when said shaft is rotated to hold said wire to said forward end of said sleeve and by means of said curved edged groove to permit said one end of said wire to slide out of said groove while being wrapped about said one end of said terminal.
  • a hand tool for securing wire to electrical terminals comprising a body member housing a rotatable shaft therein, rack and pinion means for rotating said shaft, the forward portion of said shaft housed by a sleeve attached to said body member, the forward end of said sleeve extending beyond the forward end of said shaft, said forward portion of said shaft provided with a substantially axial bore adapted to accommodate therein one end of an electrical terminal,
  • said forward portion of said shaft also provided with a slot opening on the surface of said shaft and on said forward end thereof and located substantially parallel to said axial bore, said slot having a rounded forward edge and adapted to have inserted therein one end of a wire, said forward end of said sleeve having an aperture in its periphery to provide holding means for said wire and having its inner end surfaces beveled to provide guiding means for said wire and said terminal, said tool adapted when said shaft is rotated to securely hold said wire to said forward end of said sleeve and by means of said round edged slot to permit said one end of said wire to slide out of said slot while being wrapped about said one end of said terminal.
  • a hand tool for securing wire to electrical terminals comprising a body member housing a rotatable shaft therein, manually operated rack and pinion means for rotating said shaft, the forward portion of said shaft circumferentially surrounded by a sleeve rigidly secured to said body member, the forward end of said sleeve extending beyond the forward end of said shaft, said forward portion of said shaft provided with a substantially axial bore adapted to accommodate freely therein one end of an electrical terminal, said forward portion of said shaft also provided with a slot opening on the surface of said shaft and on said forward end thereof and located substantially parallel to said axial bore, said slot having a rounded forward edge and adapted to have insorted therein one end'of a wire, said forward end of said sleeve having its periphery notched to provide holding means for said wire and having its inner end surface beveled to provide guiding means for said wire and for said terminal, said tool adapted when said shaft is rotated to securely hold said wire in fixed relation to said forward end of said sleeve

Description

1952 c. N. HICKMAN ET AL 2,585,010
' WIRE CONNECTING TOOL Filed June 6. 194'! C. N. h'lC/(MAN INVENTORS R. F. MALL/NA F. RECK- eaw A T TORNEV Patented Feb. :12, 1952 WIRE CONNECTING TOOL Clarence N. Hickman, Jackson Heights, Rudolph F. Mallina, Hastings on Hudson, and Frank Reck, Flushing, N. Y., assignors to Bell lelephone Laboratories, Incorporated, New York, N. Y., a corporation of New York Application June 6,1947, Serial No. 753,066
4 Claims. 1
This invention relates to tools for connecting wire to electrical terminals and is specifically directed to certain structural details thereof which eifect advantageous functioning of such a tool.
According to the invention a hand tool is provided having a body member which houses a rotatable shaft. Means is provided associated with said body member and with said shaft for rotating said shaft. The operating or forward portion of said shaft is confined within a sleeve which is attached to said body member and which, among other functions, afiords a sleeve bearing surface for said shaft. The forward portion of said shaft has an axial opening therein adapted to accommodate one end of an electrical terminal to which it is desired to connect a wire. It is not necessary, as will be appreciated by skilled persons from a reading of subsequent description, that the opening be exactly symmetrical with respect to the axis of the shaft. It is necessary only that such opening be substantially axial. A groove is provided in the surface of said shaft opening on the forward end thereof and extending along said shaft substantially parallel to said axial opening. The end edges, or one end edge, of said groove are, or is, purposefully made smooth or rounded in order to provide an edge over which a wire will readily slide without undue frictional obstruction. This groove is adapted to accommodate freely one end of the wire which is to be connected to said terminal. The forward end of said sleeve, which'may extend beyond the forward end of said shaft. is provided with cut-out portions or notches or other suitable aperture or apertures, which aperture or apertures are used to secure the said wire against any substantial movement other than the wrapping thereof about said terminal by said tool. The end face of said shaft is provided with an offset countersink to facilitate the entry of said terminal into said axial opening. The inner end surfaces of said sleeve are beveled to facilitate the positioning of said wire and said terminal prior to entry thereof into respective groove and axial opening. The broad aspects of such a tool as briefly described above are disclosed and claimed in a copending application of H. A. Miloche, Serial No. 752,895, filed June 6, 1947.
Other advantageous structural features will be apparent from the subsequent detailed description of one embodiment of the invention. General descriptions of the various figures comprising the drawing, which is a part of this disclosure, are as follows:
Fig. 1 is a side elevation of a pistol grip type of tool embodying features of this invention;
Figure 2 is a top view of the rearward, or handle portion of the tool shown in Fig. 1;.
Figs. 3 through 10 are enlarged views of the forward end of such a tool as shown in Fig. 1 and are referred to in the subsequent description .to illustrate various structural and functional aspects of the invention.
Referring to Figs. 1 and 2, an exemplary embodiment of the invention is disclosed as follows. A body member i has housed therein a rotatable shaft 2, the forward portion of which shaft 2 is provided with a sleeve bearing 3 which is rigidly fastened to the forward end of body member I by means of a soldered joint 4 or other well-known securing means. Near the rearward end of shaft 2 a pinion 5 is secured by means of set screw 21 to said shaft 2 and said pinion resides in a recess 6 in'body member 8, the rearward end of shaft 2 being freely rotatable within the rearward portion l of body 8 as a bearing. A sector plate 8 is freely pivoted to body I at 9. This sector plate is provided with a rack It which cooperates with pinion 5, a stop pin II cooperating with slot I2 in body member I, a finger grip I3, 9. projecting tang Id cooperating with plunger I5 and a stop pin H cooperating with a stop surface I8 on body I. Hand grips I9 and 20 are provided and are secured to body I by means of screws 2|. Hand grip 20 assists in confining sector plate 8 against body I such that rack III will satisfactorily engage pinion 5. A spring I6, housed in a hole in body I urges the plunger I5 into the position disclosed in Fig. 1. A removable plate 22 is secured to the rearward portion I of body I by means of screws 23. Plate 22 assists hand grip 20 in confining the motion of sector plate 8. The normal position of sector plate 8 is as shown in Fig. 1 wherein stop pin II and slot I2 determine the normal rotary position of shaft 2 under the bias-- ing action of spring I6 on sector plate 8. In Fig. 1 the tool is shown in operating position relative to an electrical terminal 24 of an electrical apparatus unit, such as a relay 25, and relative to a wire 26 to be attached to terminal 24.
The following discussion is directed to the structure and functioning of the combination shaft 2 and sleeve 3 on the forward or left-hand end of the tool of Fig. 1. It will be appreciated that when finger grip I3 is actuated in a manner similar to trigger action of a pistol that rack III will rotate shaft 2 by means of pinion 5. The direction of rotation of shaft 2 is determined by the position of rack III with reference to pinion i. In other words, referring to Figs. 1 and 2, if the rack I8 is on the back of pinion 8 (Fig. 1) or above pinion 6 (Fig. 2) the shaft 2 will, then rotated by operation of finger grip l3, rotate clockwise when viewed from the left of Figs. 1 and 2. The structure may very well be arranged such that sector plate 8 is confined by hand grip l8 instead of by hand grip 28 and thus be positioned such that rack It would be in front of pinion 6 (Fig. 1) or below pinion I (Fig. 2), whereupon, upon actuation of finger grip l3, shaft 2 would be rotated counterclockwise when viewed from the left of Figs. 1 and 2. In the following description with reference to Figs. 3 through a direction of shaft rotation has been assumed as shown by arrow 36 of Fig. 6 and it will be readily appreciated that for the opposite rotation, such as would be consistent with Figs. 1 and 2, the horizontal dissymmetry of Fig. 6 would be reversed, with similar changes to the structure of others of Figs. 3 through 10.
Fig. 7 illustrates the configuration of the forward portion of shaft 2, an end view thereof being shown most clearly in Fig. 6 and other partial views being shown in Figs. 3, 4, 5, 8, 9 and 10. A slot or groove 28 is provided opening on the surface of shaft 2 and on the forward end thereof. The forward edge 28 of said slot 28 is rounded or beveled to permit the bare end 30 of wire 26 to slide thereover without undue frictional resistance. A circular substantially axial bore 3| in shaft 2 is provided on the end of shaft 2 with an offset countersink 32. The sleeve 3 provides a free bearing surface for shaft 2. 'The upper and lower inner end surfaces (see Fig. 6) of sleeve 3 are beveled or grooved at 33 and 34. The normal position of sector plate 8, and thus shaft 2, is arranged such that these beveled inner end surfaces 33 and 34 of sleeve 3 are vertically aligned with the offset countersink 32 and slot 28 of shaft 2 as shown in Fig. 6. On the right side of the end edge of sleeve 3 of Fig. 6, an aperture such as notch 35 is provided as a means of securing wire 26 against movement thereof during operation of the tool.
To use the tool the following procedure is preferred. Finger grip I3 is released to allow spring l6 to return sector plate 8 to normal, as determined by stop pin H and slot l2. This normal position of shaft 2 will align the bevels 33 and 34 with slot 28 and countersink 32 respectively (see Fig. 6). Wire 26 is now positioned such that the bare end 38 thereof is guided by means of bevel 33 in accordance with the dotted position of wire 26 shown in Fig. 10, into slot 28 to assume therein such a position as shown in Fig. 3. The insulated portion of wire 26 is now twisted about notch 35 of sleeve 3, similarly to the representation of Figs. 4 and 8. The tool is then moved to the apparatus, such as to relay 25, upon which is mounted an electrical terminal 24 to which wire 26 is to be connected. In order to facilitate the entry of terminal 24 into bore 3| of shaft 2, the tool is tilted to take advantage of the natural guideway created by bevel 34 of sleeve 3 and by countersink 32 of shaft 2. The tool is readily correctly positioned, as indicated by the dotted position of terminal 24 in Fig. 10, such that terminal 24 may be quickly inserted into bore 3|.
Actuation of finger grip I3 will impart rotary motion to shaft 2 in the direction as has been assumed, of arrow 36 of Fig. 6 whereupon, since wire 26 is securely held in fixed position and since the bare wire 88 may easily slide over rounded edge 28 of slot 28, as shaft 2 rotates, the slot 28 will wrap bare wire 38 about terminal 24 as bare wire 38 slides out of slot 28. The stop pin II on sector plate 8 may be so positioned that it will engage stop surface I8 on body I after shaft 2 has made approximately three turns, as indicated by Figs. 5 and 9. The tool may now be disengaged from terminal 24 leaving wire 28 securely attached thereto in the form of a neat, tight spiral wrappin It will be apparent that bore 8| of shaft 2 may be arranged to accommodate flat, round, square or any cross-sectional configuration of terminal to which it is desired to connect a wire such as 26.
It is not intended that the scope of this invention be limited to the embodiments disclosed. Therefore, claims are appended which alone define the scope of this invention.
What is claimed is:
1. A hand tool for securing wire to electrical terminals comprising a body member housing a rotatable shaft therein, means for rotating said shaft, the forward portion of said shaft supported within a sleeve attached to said body member, said forward portion of said shaft provided with a substantially axial opening adapted to accommodate therein one end of an electrical terminal. said forward portion of said shaft also provided with a groove opening on the surface of said shaft and on the forward end thereof, said groove having a smooth forward edge and adapted to have inserted therein one end of a wire, the forward end of said sleeve providing holding means for said wire and guiding means for said wire and said terminal, said tool adapted when said shaft is rotated to hold said wire by said holding means and by means of said smooth forward edge of said groove to permit said one end of said wire to slide out of said groove while being secured about said one end of saidterminal.
2..A hand tool for securing wire to electrical terminals comprising a body member housing a rotatable shaft therein, means for rotating said shaft, the forward portion of said shaft housed by a sleeve attached to said body member, said forward portion of said shaft provided with a substantially axial opening adapted to accommodate therein one end of an electrical terminal. said forward portion of said shaft also provided with a groove opening on the surface of said shaft and on the forward end thereof and located substantially parallel to said axial opening, said groove having a curved forward edge and adapted to have inserted therein one end of a wire, the forward end of said sleeve having an aperture therein to provide holding means for said wire and having its inner end surfaces formed to provide guiding means for said wire and said terminal, said tool adapted when said shaft is rotated to hold said wire to said forward end of said sleeve and by means of said curved edged groove to permit said one end of said wire to slide out of said groove while being wrapped about said one end of said terminal.
3. A hand tool for securing wire to electrical terminals comprising a body member housing a rotatable shaft therein, rack and pinion means for rotating said shaft, the forward portion of said shaft housed by a sleeve attached to said body member, the forward end of said sleeve extending beyond the forward end of said shaft, said forward portion of said shaft provided with a substantially axial bore adapted to accommodate therein one end of an electrical terminal,
, 5 said forward portion of said shaft also provided with a slot opening on the surface of said shaft and on said forward end thereof and located substantially parallel to said axial bore, said slot having a rounded forward edge and adapted to have inserted therein one end of a wire, said forward end of said sleeve having an aperture in its periphery to provide holding means for said wire and having its inner end surfaces beveled to provide guiding means for said wire and said terminal, said tool adapted when said shaft is rotated to securely hold said wire to said forward end of said sleeve and by means of said round edged slot to permit said one end of said wire to slide out of said slot while being wrapped about said one end of said terminal.
4. A hand tool for securing wire to electrical terminals comprising a body member housing a rotatable shaft therein, manually operated rack and pinion means for rotating said shaft, the forward portion of said shaft circumferentially surrounded by a sleeve rigidly secured to said body member, the forward end of said sleeve extending beyond the forward end of said shaft, said forward portion of said shaft provided with a substantially axial bore adapted to accommodate freely therein one end of an electrical terminal, said forward portion of said shaft also provided with a slot opening on the surface of said shaft and on said forward end thereof and located substantially parallel to said axial bore, said slot having a rounded forward edge and adapted to have insorted therein one end'of a wire, said forward end of said sleeve having its periphery notched to provide holding means for said wire and having its inner end surface beveled to provide guiding means for said wire and for said terminal, said tool adapted when said shaft is rotated to securely hold said wire in fixed relation to said forward end of said sleeve and by means of said round edged slot to permit said one end of said wire to slide out of said slot while being wrapped spirally about said one end of said terminal. CLARENCE N.- HICKMAN.
RUDOLPH 'F. MALLINA. FRANK RECK.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Hirsch Mar. 8, 1936
US753066A 1947-06-06 1947-06-06 Wire connecting tool Expired - Lifetime US2585010A (en)

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Cited By (33)

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US2649121A (en) * 1948-03-19 1953-08-18 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Tool for effecting solderless connections between a wire and a terminal
US2688449A (en) * 1948-12-08 1954-09-07 Western Electric Co Wire winding tool
US2725198A (en) * 1952-12-23 1955-11-29 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Hand-operated wiring tool
US2732139A (en) * 1956-01-24 shaff
US2741436A (en) * 1951-12-28 1956-04-10 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wire wrapping tool for fine wires
US2743502A (en) * 1951-06-30 1956-05-01 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wire connecting tool
US2746124A (en) * 1951-12-28 1956-05-22 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wire wrapping tool for coated wire
US2758797A (en) * 1952-05-09 1956-08-14 Western Electric Co Tool for winding wire on terminals
US2760731A (en) * 1951-12-28 1956-08-28 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wire wrapping tool for stranded wire
US2863610A (en) * 1953-06-08 1958-12-09 Western Electric Co Apparatus for wrapping strands on articles
US2884210A (en) * 1954-10-15 1959-04-28 Bruno New York Ind Corp Wire twisting tool
DE1067492B (en) * 1955-04-18 1959-10-22 Gardner Denver Co Tool for preparing and applying a wire to a clamp
US2926859A (en) * 1954-05-11 1960-03-01 Gardner Denver Co Wire connecting tool
US3019410A (en) * 1959-10-12 1962-01-30 Thomas & Betts Corp Wire-to-wire connection
US3027418A (en) * 1957-11-25 1962-03-27 Richard H Peterson Electrically interconnected network
US3064695A (en) * 1958-03-21 1962-11-20 Richard G Strohmaier Wire splicing tools
US3077211A (en) * 1960-12-23 1963-02-12 Ibm Wire wrapping tool
US3078052A (en) * 1960-06-30 1963-02-19 Gardner Denver Co Conductor wrapping device
US3095913A (en) * 1959-05-29 1963-07-02 Gen Electric Co Ltd Devices for wrapping and removing wrapped connections
US3096796A (en) * 1960-06-20 1963-07-09 Henry N Dittrich Lead spiraling tool
US3108620A (en) * 1960-09-28 1963-10-29 Elsworth T James Wire wrapping tool
US3143307A (en) * 1962-10-31 1964-08-04 Gardner Denver Co Conductor wrapping bit
US3250302A (en) * 1963-10-21 1966-05-10 Zoltai John Wire wrapping tool
US3262193A (en) * 1964-05-22 1966-07-26 Automatic Elect Lab Wire strapping tool
US3298586A (en) * 1964-10-05 1967-01-17 Ingersoll Rand Co Tool for making soldered wire wrapped terminal connections
US3318344A (en) * 1964-11-10 1967-05-09 Western Electric Co Wire wrapping tool
US3329927A (en) * 1964-05-08 1967-07-04 Ralph L Ayers Protective cover for telephone and telegraph distributing frame terminal blocks
DE1603986B1 (en) * 1963-01-24 1970-01-22 Thor Power Tool Co Adjustment device for tools for winding wire onto electrical connection pins
US3516140A (en) * 1967-09-01 1970-06-23 Western Electric Co Wire wrapping tool
US3670784A (en) * 1970-08-11 1972-06-20 Universal Instruments Corp Wire wrapping tool
US3788367A (en) * 1971-11-03 1974-01-29 Universal Instruments Corp Wire wrap tool
US4064581A (en) * 1976-04-23 1977-12-27 O.K. Machine And Tool Corporation Wire strip, wrap and unwrap tool
FR2493614A1 (en) * 1980-11-03 1982-05-07 Sfena Tool for wire wrapped connections - has wire first engaged in tubular opening which ensures correct angle of insertion and prevents rotation of post

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US669351A (en) * 1900-11-16 1901-03-05 George N Schindel Tool for twisting wires.
US746139A (en) * 1903-03-17 1903-12-08 Elliott Grant Fence-weaving machine.
US951454A (en) * 1909-07-30 1910-03-08 George L Reichhelm Pliers.
US1151639A (en) * 1915-01-18 1915-08-31 Charles S Whitworth Device for forming loops in wires.
US1249898A (en) * 1916-08-14 1917-12-11 Hazel Burton Bush Apparatus for connecting service-wires to charged main wires.
US1253782A (en) * 1916-09-19 1918-01-15 Edgar J Bryan Coil-forming machine.
US1891664A (en) * 1932-05-06 1932-12-20 Orson W Brenizer Wire splicing device
US2032415A (en) * 1934-05-25 1936-03-03 Aaron J H Hirsch Wire twisting tool

Cited By (33)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2732139A (en) * 1956-01-24 shaff
US2649121A (en) * 1948-03-19 1953-08-18 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Tool for effecting solderless connections between a wire and a terminal
US2688449A (en) * 1948-12-08 1954-09-07 Western Electric Co Wire winding tool
US2743502A (en) * 1951-06-30 1956-05-01 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wire connecting tool
US2741436A (en) * 1951-12-28 1956-04-10 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wire wrapping tool for fine wires
US2746124A (en) * 1951-12-28 1956-05-22 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wire wrapping tool for coated wire
US2760731A (en) * 1951-12-28 1956-08-28 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wire wrapping tool for stranded wire
US2758797A (en) * 1952-05-09 1956-08-14 Western Electric Co Tool for winding wire on terminals
US2725198A (en) * 1952-12-23 1955-11-29 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Hand-operated wiring tool
US2863610A (en) * 1953-06-08 1958-12-09 Western Electric Co Apparatus for wrapping strands on articles
US2926859A (en) * 1954-05-11 1960-03-01 Gardner Denver Co Wire connecting tool
US2884210A (en) * 1954-10-15 1959-04-28 Bruno New York Ind Corp Wire twisting tool
DE1067492B (en) * 1955-04-18 1959-10-22 Gardner Denver Co Tool for preparing and applying a wire to a clamp
US3027418A (en) * 1957-11-25 1962-03-27 Richard H Peterson Electrically interconnected network
US3064695A (en) * 1958-03-21 1962-11-20 Richard G Strohmaier Wire splicing tools
US3095913A (en) * 1959-05-29 1963-07-02 Gen Electric Co Ltd Devices for wrapping and removing wrapped connections
US3019410A (en) * 1959-10-12 1962-01-30 Thomas & Betts Corp Wire-to-wire connection
US3096796A (en) * 1960-06-20 1963-07-09 Henry N Dittrich Lead spiraling tool
US3078052A (en) * 1960-06-30 1963-02-19 Gardner Denver Co Conductor wrapping device
US3108620A (en) * 1960-09-28 1963-10-29 Elsworth T James Wire wrapping tool
US3077211A (en) * 1960-12-23 1963-02-12 Ibm Wire wrapping tool
US3143307A (en) * 1962-10-31 1964-08-04 Gardner Denver Co Conductor wrapping bit
DE1603986B1 (en) * 1963-01-24 1970-01-22 Thor Power Tool Co Adjustment device for tools for winding wire onto electrical connection pins
US3250302A (en) * 1963-10-21 1966-05-10 Zoltai John Wire wrapping tool
US3329927A (en) * 1964-05-08 1967-07-04 Ralph L Ayers Protective cover for telephone and telegraph distributing frame terminal blocks
US3262193A (en) * 1964-05-22 1966-07-26 Automatic Elect Lab Wire strapping tool
US3298586A (en) * 1964-10-05 1967-01-17 Ingersoll Rand Co Tool for making soldered wire wrapped terminal connections
US3318344A (en) * 1964-11-10 1967-05-09 Western Electric Co Wire wrapping tool
US3516140A (en) * 1967-09-01 1970-06-23 Western Electric Co Wire wrapping tool
US3670784A (en) * 1970-08-11 1972-06-20 Universal Instruments Corp Wire wrapping tool
US3788367A (en) * 1971-11-03 1974-01-29 Universal Instruments Corp Wire wrap tool
US4064581A (en) * 1976-04-23 1977-12-27 O.K. Machine And Tool Corporation Wire strip, wrap and unwrap tool
FR2493614A1 (en) * 1980-11-03 1982-05-07 Sfena Tool for wire wrapped connections - has wire first engaged in tubular opening which ensures correct angle of insertion and prevents rotation of post

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