From Solder to Snap-In: A 50-Year History of Press-Fit Pins & Their Patent Genealogy

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1. 1970-1980: The “hard” years

  • 1970 – Siemens & ITT introduce the first rigid press-fit pin: a solid brass nail that relied on oversize hole interference. High insertion force (300 N), cracked PTHs, limited to telecom back-planes .
  • 1974Eye-of-the-Needle flexible zone patented by Siemens (DE 24 27 526): a stamped diamond slot that buckled elastically → insertion force ↓ 40 %, reliability ↑ 10×.
  • 1977 – Amphenol files US 4 159 157 on the C-Press split-barrel, giving a continuous circumferential contact.

Key insight: replace brute interference with elastic compliance.


2. 1980-1990: Telecom boom & the birth of “compliant” families

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YearBrandNamePatent / trademarkInnovation
1983SiemensTCom pinEP 0 100 678Rectangular wire formed into twin-beam spring, 0.8 mm pitch capability.
1985AmpCompliant PinUS 4 533 305First stamped S-shape; 25 µm Sn plating spec’d.
1988BergAction PinUS 4 533 305 (assigned)Multi-lance cuts → lower peak force, self-centring.

By 1989 press-fit outsold solder headers in European central-office frames.


3. 1990-2000: Automotive & the rise of TE Connectivity

TE’s dual-platform strategy (still dominant today)

a) ACTION PIN

  • 1990 – Tyco acquires AMP; brands the multi-lance pin “ACTION PIN”.
  • 1996 – US 5 700 167 adds lead-in bullet for blind insertion on robotic lines.
  • Feature: four longitudinal lances create radial beams; insertion 70-120 N, retention ≥ 60 N in 1.0 mm PTH.

b) MULTISPRING (MS)

  • 1992 – Internal R&D; 1997 commercial release.
  • Patent family: US 6 132 372; EP 1 037 303.
  • Concept: two symmetrical spring windows stamped from strip; wall thickness 0.6 mm (standard), 0.4 mm (Nano MS), 0.8 mm (Power MS).
  • Benefit: 30 % lower insertion than ACTION PIN, same retention; ideal for 0.8 mm pitch ECUs.

TE data sheet: “MS is 10× more reliable than IDC or solder under IEC 60352-5”

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4. European answers: Elo Pin, C-Press, H-Pin

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Pin typeOriginShapeForce profilePatent expiry
Elo PinBosch / Kostal / FCIHour-glass double S-bendVery low peak, smooth plateauEP 0 605 847 (exp. 2004)
C-PressAmphenolOpen C cross-sectionContinuous, no stress concentrationUS 4 533 305 (exp. 2002)
H-PinFCI / DelphiH beam, two parallel slotsHigh retention, small holesUS 5 897 401 (exp. 2017)

Elo Pin became the default for sealed automotive bulk-head connectors because its smooth force curve keeps the PTH deformation below 50 µm.


5. 2000-today: Miniaturisation & open patents

  • 2005 – JST files US 7 377 823 on wire-based press-fit (cost ↓ 20 %, patent expired 2025) .
  • 2013 – TE launches Nano MULTISPRING 0.4 mm wall, 0.3 mm pitch, 30 N insertion – target 112 G PAM4 back-plane .
  • 2020 – EP 3 694 055 (TE) adds anti-rotation rib for 0.8 mm pitch three-phase power modules .

Most fundamental patents (Siemens diamond, AMP S-shape, TE multi-lance) expired ≥ 2010, opening the door for Asian stampers to ship “generic compliant pins” at USD 0.002 each.


6. Material & plating evolution

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EraAlloyConductivityStress-relaxationPlating
1980CuSn420 % IACS100 °C/500 h2 µm SnPb
1995CuNiSi (C7025)40 % IACS150 °C/1000 h3 µm Sn
2010CuCrZr (C18150)80 % IACS175 °C/1000 h1 µm Ni + 1 µm SnAg

Today’s automotive 150 °C zones use CrZr; below 125 °C NiSi wins on cost.


7. Key learning for designers

  1. Patent walls are down—feel free to copy the 1980 shapes, but watch brand trademarks (MULTISPRING®, ACTION PIN®).
  2. Choose Elo/H for lowest peak force, MULTISPRING for highest density, ACTION PIN for brute-current.
  3. Specify hole quality first: 25 µm Cu, ±50 µm dia., no burr—pin is only half the story.

From a 1970 “nail” to a 0.3 mm micro-spring, the press-fit pin has soldered nothing—and yet connected everything.

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