Ultra-small form factor optical connectors
US-2019018201-A1 · Jan 17, 2019 · US
US12013580B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-12013580-B2 |
| Application number | US-202318175455-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Feb 27, 2023 |
| Priority date | Apr 6, 2018 |
| Publication date | Jun 18, 2024 |
| Grant date | Jun 18, 2024 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A new boot for a fiber optic connector has a ribbed back portion, a center portion, and a forward extending portion that can be used to insert and remove the fiber optic connector to receptacle. The ribbed back portion has grasping elements and is connected to the center portion. The center portion is removably connected to a crimp body that is in turn connected to the connector housing. The front extension is connected to the fiber optic connector and also provides a keying feature depending on the side of the fiber optic connector on which it is installed.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed: 1. A fiber-optic connector for connecting at least two optical fibers of a fiber-optic cable to an additional two optical fibers of a different fiber-optic cable inside an adapter or a receptacle, the fiber-optic connector comprising: at least one fiber-optic ferrule to receive the at least two optical fibers; a housing at least partially surrounding the at least one fiber-optic ferrule such that a front face of the at least one fiber-optic ferrule is exposed at a front end of the housing; a crimp body operatively coupled to the housing at a rear end of the housing, the crimp body having an opening to receive the at least two optical fibers through a rear end of the crimp body, the opening extending through the crimp body along a longitudinal axis; and a push-pull boot having a main body with a front end and a back end spaced apart along the longitudinal axis, the back end of the push-pull boot receiving the at least two optical fibers, wherein the push-pull boot further comprises a first member extending between the front end and the back end substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis to prevent the front end and back end from moving relative to one another along the longitudinal axis between a mating position and an unmated position of the fiber-optic connector. 2. The fiber-optic connector of claim 1 , wherein the at least one fiber-optic ferrule includes two single optical fiber fiber-optic ferrules. 3. The fiber-optic connector of claim 1 , wherein the first member is an elongate spine member. 4. The fiber-optic connector of claim 3 , wherein the push-pull boot further comprises a plurality of flexible members connected to the elongate spine member. 5. The fiber-optic connector of claim 1 , wherein the push-pull boot further comprises a plurality of flexible members connected to the first member. 6. The fiber-optic connector of claim 5 , wherein the plurality of flexible members at least partially enclose the at least two optical fibers, each flexible member of the plurality of flexible members connected to at least one other flexible member. 7. The fiber-optic connector of claim 6 , wherein the each of the plurality of flexible members is connected to at least one other flexible member immediately adjacent thereto. 8. The fiber-optic connector of claim 1 , wherein the push-pull boot is bendable in directions other than a direction of the longitudinal axis. 9. The fiber-optic connector of claim 1 , further comprising a grasping portion at the back end of the main body of the push-pull boot. 10. The fiber-optic connector of claim 9 , wherein the grasping portion has a flared out outer surface in a direction from the front end to the back end. 11. The fiber-optic connector of claim 1 , wherein the first member is integrally molded with the push-pull boot. 12. The fiber-optic connector of claim 1 , further comprising a latching mechanism having at least one latch to engage the adapter or the receptacle, wherein the push-pull boot is configured to actuate the at least one latch when the push-pull boot is pulled away from the adapter or the receptacle thereby resulting in the unmated position of the fiber-optic connector. 13. The fiber-optic connector of claim 1 , wherein the first member has a stiffness substantially along the longitudinal axis, the stiffness limiting a compression during a pushing of the push-pull boot and/or the fiber-optic connector, and preventing an elongation during a pulling of the push-pull boot and/or the fiber-optic connector. 14. The fiber-optic connector of claim 1 , wherein the push-pull boot further comprises: a center portion forward of the main body and configured to engage the crimp body via an engagement member, and a front extension extending away from the center portion and the main body of the push-pull boot substantially parallel to the push-pull boot on one side thereof. 15. The fiber-optic connector of claim 14 , wherein the front extension is an integral part of the center portion. 16. The fiber-optic connector of claim 14 , wherein the front extension is removably attached to the center portion. 17. A fiber-optic connector for connecting at least two optical fibers of a fiber-optic cable to an additional two optical fibers of a different fiber-optic cable inside an adapter or a receptacle, the fiber-optic connector comprising: at least one fiber-optic ferrule to receive the at least two optical fibers; a housing at least partially surrounding the at least one fiber-optic ferrule such that a front face of the at least one fiber-optic ferrule is exposed at a front end of the housing; a crimp body operatively coupled to the housing at a rear end of the housing, the crimp body having an opening to receive the at least two optical fibers through a rear end of the crimp body, the opening extending through the crimp body along a longitudinal axis; and a push-pull boot made of a non-elastomeric material and having a main body with a front end and a back end spaced apart along the longitudinal axis, the back end of the push-pull boot receiving the at least two optical fibers, wherein the push-pull boot has a stiffness substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis to prevent the front end and back end from moving relative to one another along the longitudinal axis when the push-pull boot is pushed or pulled. 18. The fiber-optic connector of claim 17 , wherein the push-pull boot includes a spine integrally formed along the longitudinal axis of the push-pull boot. 19. The fiber-optic connector of claim 18 , wherein the push-pull boot has a ribbed back portion with rib members joined to the spine and partially enclosing the at least two optical fibers for strain relief. 20. The fiber-optic connector of claim 19 , wherein each rib member includes a first portion and a second double portion forming a generally round element about the spine.
Protection from bending or twisting · CPC title
Push-pull type, e.g. snap-in, push-on · CPC title
with an intermediate part, e.g. adapter, receptacle, linking two plugs · CPC title
of the ferrule type, connecting a plurality of pairs of ferrules · CPC title
identification of connection, e.g. right plug to the right socket or full engagement of the mating parts (keying element on the plug or adapter G02B6/3831; keying element on the ferrule G02B6/3851; keying element for electrical connection H01R13/64) · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.