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John Venaleck Phones & Addresses

  • Naples, FL
  • 1355 Jackson St, Painesville, OH 44077
  • 1382 Jackson St, Painesville, OH 44077
  • 6704 Painesville Ravenna Rd, Painesville, OH 44077
  • Chardon, OH
  • Fort Myers, FL
  • Bonita Springs, FL
  • Cleveland, OH
  • Madison, OH
  • Concord Twp, OH
  • 14354 Harbour Landings Dr #7A, Fort Myers, FL 33908

Work

Position: Protective Service Occupations

Education

Degree: High school graduate or higher

Resumes

Resumes

John Venaleck Photo 1

Vice President

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Location:
Painesville, OH
Industry:
Electrical/Electronic Manufacturing
Work:
Meritec Inc.
Vice President
John Venaleck Photo 2

Vice President

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Location:
P/O Box 110, Painesville, OH
Industry:
Electrical/Electronic Manufacturing
Work:
Meritec Inc.
Vice President

Business Records

Name / Title
Company / Classification
Phones & Addresses
John T. Venaleck
President
Associated Enterprises
Nonresidential Building Operator · Electronic Connectors (Manufac
PO Box 110, Concord Township, OH 44077
1382 W Jackson St, Concord Township, OH 44077
(440) 354-2106, (440) 354-0687
John T. Venaleck
Ohio Associated Enterprises, LLC
Manufacturer · Mfg Electronic Connectors · Mfg Current-Carrying Wiring Devices
1382 W Jackson St, Concord Township, OH 44077
PO Box 110, Concord Township, OH 44077
1359 W Jackson St, Concord Township, OH 44077
(440) 354-3148
John T. Venaleck
VENLEE ENTERPRISES LLC
John T Venaleck
APSCO, INC
Painesville, OH
John T Venaleck
ASSOCIATED ENTERPRISES, INC
Painesville, OH

Publications

Us Patents

High Density Interconnect System And Method

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US Patent:
6371773, Apr 16, 2002
Filed:
Mar 23, 2001
Appl. No.:
09/815570
Inventors:
Larry M. Crofoot - Perry OH
John T. Venaleck - Painesville OH
Assignee:
Ohio Associated Enterprises, Inc. - Painesville OH
International Classification:
H01R 1200
US Classification:
439 79, 439608
Abstract:
An electrical interconnect system allows high signal density with means of electrical isolation to minimize degradation of electrical signals. The electrical interconnect system includes signal conductors which are surrounded by multiple reference or ground conductors, a given signal conductor for example surrounded by four reference conductors. The interconnect system includes a reference element with two sets of reference conductors, one of the sets offset a distance from the other set.

Electrical Connector For High Density Signal Interconnections And Method Of Making The Same

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US Patent:
6471547, Oct 29, 2002
Filed:
Jun 1, 2000
Appl. No.:
09/585064
Inventors:
John T. Venaleck - Painesville OH, 44077
Larry M. Crofoot - Perry OH, 44081
International Classification:
H01R 13648
US Classification:
439608, 439701
Abstract:
A high density electrical cable connector has a primary structural support or spine that is made of an electrically conducting material. The cable connector has a strain relief or cable retainer attached at one end of the spine for securing a cable to the spine. The cable connector has electrically conductive terminals at an opposite end, the terminals having contact portions for receiving and electrically connecting to other terminals, such as pins or other contacts on an electronic or electrical device such as a circuit board and/or another electrical connector. An intermediate layer of non-conducting material between the terminals and the spine electrically isolates the terminals from the spine. Wires from the cable may be attached to the terminals, so as to form an electrically conductive path between the cable and other terminals connected, e. g. , pins, received by the terminals.

Zero Insertion Force Cable Interface

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US Patent:
7291031, Nov 6, 2007
Filed:
Jul 8, 2005
Appl. No.:
11/177658
Inventors:
Larry M. Crofoot - Perry OH, US
Alan L. Roath - Madison OH, US
John T. Venaleck - Painesville OH, US
Assignee:
Ohio Associated Enterprises, LLC - Painesville OH
International Classification:
H01R 13/15
H01R 13/62
US Classification:
439265, 439259
Abstract:
A connector assembly includes a female dual row connector, and a male dual row connector configured to be inserted into the female dual row connector. The female connector is configured to be compression mounted onto a circuit card, and has conductive tails for being brought into contact with traces on the card or circuit board. The female connector may have a stiffener to help it maintain its shape. The rows of contacts of the male connector may be selectively brought together (collapsed) or moved apart (expanded). The rows of contacts are collapsed during insertion or removal of the male connector from the female connector, thus allowing zero force insertion of the male connector into the female connector. The collapsing and expanding of the rows for the male connector may be accomplished through any of a variety of mechanisms.

Zero Insertion Force Cable Interface

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US Patent:
7316579, Jan 8, 2008
Filed:
Sep 18, 2006
Appl. No.:
11/522685
Inventors:
Alan L. Roath - Madison OH, US
John T. Venaleck - Painesville OH, US
Assignee:
Ohio Associated Enterprises, LLC - Painesville OH
International Classification:
H01R 13/15
US Classification:
439260, 439265, 439267, 439268
Abstract:
An electrical connector includes a cable end connector which mates with a board mount connector. The cable end connector includes a plurality of header modules that each include pivotal contact-bearing headers. The headers are coupled to ribbon conductors in a parallel planar array. One end of each of the headers has conductors prepared to accept the welding of ribbonized coaxial cables. The other end of the conductors form compliant contacts for engagement with other compliant contacts or with pads arranged on the edge of a circuit board. Headers of each module have posts that emanate from lateral sides of a header body, distal from the compliant contact ends, that function as cam sliders. The cam sliders are located in slots, and engage ramps, which may be moved to urge the contacts of the headers together or apart.

Low Friction Cable Assembly Latch

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US Patent:
7484989, Feb 3, 2009
Filed:
Nov 20, 2007
Appl. No.:
11/942888
Inventors:
John T. Venaleck - Painesville OH, US
Assignee:
Ohio Associated Enterprises, LLC - Painesville OH
International Classification:
H01R 13/627
US Classification:
439352, 439358
Abstract:
A latch end for an electrical connector latch has a low coefficient of friction latch mating surface that engages with a mating slot in a mating electrical connector. The latch pivots around a central pivot point to move the latch end inward toward the center of the connector to engage the mating slot, or outward away from the center of the connector to disengage from the slot. The low friction mating surface may be a plastic overmold or a low friction coating on a metal hook of the latch end. The metal hook provides strength to the latch end. The low friction mating surface provides for a lower coefficient of friction and perhaps a larger contact area between the mating surface and the mating slot or protrusion. The latch engages a mating structure in the mating electrical connector. The mating electrical connector may have prongs that engage corresponding receptacles.

Electrical Receptacle And Circuit Board With Controlled Skew

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US Patent:
7682192, Mar 23, 2010
Filed:
Dec 4, 2008
Appl. No.:
12/327978
Inventors:
John F. Sawdy - Black Mountain NC, US
Larry M. Crofoot - Perry OH, US
John T. Venaleck - Painesville OH, US
Assignee:
Ohio Associated Enterprises, LLC - Painesville OH
International Classification:
H01R 13/648
US Classification:
43960705, 43960706, 43960707, 43960708
Abstract:
An electrical coupler includes a connector receptacle having multiple modules. The modules each include a pair of signal conductors and a ground plane or shield, held together by a dielectric module body. The shields are between the pairs of conductors in adjacent modules, and provide electrical shielding between the pairs of signal contacts of different modules. The signal conductors and the shields may be coupled to a board, such as a circuit board. The receptacle may be an angled receptacle, such as a right angle receptacle. The signal conductors of each pair in the receptacle may have a predetermined amount of skew, having different effective electrical lengths. This may allow signal paths through the receptacle and the board to have a combined electrical path that is substantially the same for the signal conductor pair of one of the modules.

Electrical Cable Connector Latch Mechanism

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US Patent:
7824208, Nov 2, 2010
Filed:
Mar 5, 2010
Appl. No.:
12/718406
Inventors:
Larry M. Crofoot - Perry OH, US
John T. Venaleck - Painesville OH, US
Assignee:
Ohio Associated Enterprises, LLC - Painesville OH
International Classification:
H01R 13/62
US Classification:
439352
Abstract:
An electrical cable connector has a latch mechanism wherein the moveable portion is part of the mating receptacle, and the mechanism for unlatching resides in the cable connector. A rocker part is located such that one end extends under the resilient latch member and the other end has a surface which is made to rotate about a pivot point by an externally actuated ramp. The rotation of the rocker lifts the resilient member from its seat and releases the connector latch. The actuating ramp is spring loaded to return to its resting position which is the latched position; it is attached to a loop designed to allow a finger pull action to initiate latch disengagement. Forces and friction resistance is managed such that reliable single-hand operation is achieved, with push to engage and pull to disengage.

Backplane Cable Interconnection

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US Patent:
8475177, Jul 2, 2013
Filed:
Jan 18, 2011
Appl. No.:
13/008060
Inventors:
Larry M. Crofoot - Perry OH, US
John T. Venaleck - Painesville OH, US
Assignee:
Ohio Associated Enterprises, LLC - Painesville OH
International Classification:
H01R 12/00
H05K 1/00
US Classification:
439 61, 439701
Abstract:
A backplane cabling interconnect scheme is provided that includes a wafer based cable termination and an organizer shroud. The shroud complements existing backplane connectors and provides positioning and polarization for the cable terminated wafer. The wafer cable ends can be stacked or arranged in various arrays and are held in place with an integral latch. A permanent latch is provided for high vibration environments.
John T Venaleck from Naples, FL, age ~55 Get Report