In the early 1930s,
Cannon (now
ITT Interconnect Solutions) was contracted by
Douglas Aircraft Company to develop electrical
circular connectors for use on the
DC-1 and on the subsequent
DC-2 and
DC-3 aircraft platforms. This led to the release of the original AN9534 standard in 1939, which was the precursor to MIL-C-5015 (subsequently MIL-DTL-5015). During the late 1930s, Cannon's Type AN (
Army-Navy) series set the standard for modern circular connectors, and eventually in 1949, MIL-C-5015 was specified. It was revised in 1958, 1971, and 1976. The final revision, released in March 1994, was MIL-C-5015G. In May 2000, MIL-C-5015G was superseded by MIL-DTL-5015H, six years after its publication. In December 2009, MIL-DTL-5015 was superseded by SAE-AS50151, Whilst the original military standard is no longer in use officially, the family of connectors continues to be called MIL-DTL-5015 or MIL-C-5015 by manufacturers and users. == Applications ==