This application is a national stage of International Application No. PCT/EP2006/009619, filed Oct. 5, 2006, which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 to German Patent Application No. 10 2005 048 841.2, filed Oct. 12, 2005, the entire disclosure of which is herein expressly incorporated by reference.
The invention relates to an air filter for a ventilation system of a motor vehicle.
A filter of this type, which is disclosed in German patent document DE 42 34 047 C1, has a filter medium that is fastened in, and surrounded by, a filter frame. For installation in the air duct of the ventilation system, a filter of this type is inserted along its two-dimensional extent into a receiving slot of the ventilation system. In order to guide the air filter as it is inserted in the housing of the air duct, depressions are provided which act as sliding guides and support the air filter in the fitted state, counter to the direction of flow through the air filter. However, if the sliding guides are oriented parallel to one another, it can be expected that a great deal of force will be needed for installation (because of the large contact surfaces provided along the sliding guides with the insertion slot). Accordingly, obliquely converging sliding guides and outer surfaces of the filter frame are provided in the disclosed air filter.
One object of the invention is to provide an air filter which is simple to install and is readily secured in position in the installed state.
This and other objects and advantages are achieved by the air filter according to the invention, which has a filter frame with a filter medium fastened therein, and is insertable along its two-dimensional extent into a receiving slot of a ventilation system. In the inserted, installed state, the filter is sealed, along the inserted portions of the filter frame, between the filter frame and oppositely arranged walls of the insertion slot. To permit insertion of the air filter into the associated insertion slot of the ventilation system with particularly low installation forces, the filter dispenses with specially configured operative surfaces connected to sliding guides of the insertion slot. Rather, the end of the filter frame that faces the insertion direction has at least one guide slot or opening which is oriented in the insertion direction. By inserting the air filter along its two-dimensional extent (i.e., transversely with respect to the direction in which the flow passes through it), little construction space is needed to replace the filter.
When an air filter of this type, is inserted, guide pins which are provided on the housing of the ventilation system in the insertion slot can engage with the guide slot of the filter frame, so that the latter can be guided, upon insertion, in a particularly force-free manner, and fixed in the inserted, fitted installation position. In addition to the air filter being able insertable in a particularly force-free manner, the guide slot (opening or aperture) on the filter frame enables it to be introduced into the insertion slot of the ventilation system in a particularly force free manner, since, depending in each case on the length of an associated guide pin, the air filter is guided only at a very late point (in particular, only in the region of the guide pin,—that is, in the region of the guide frame end facing the insertion direction), and is still movable laterally at the opposite end (i.e., the filter frame end side facing away from the insertion direction). During insertion into an insertion slot of the ventilation system, the air filter can therefore be moved along its two-dimensional extent (for example even along a slight curve), or, for guidance around structural obstacles or edges, can even be moved to a small extent transversely with respect to the two-dimensional extent of the air filter. In particular, an insertion slot leading through lateral depressions prevents mobility of this type, provided it fixes the filter in the fitted position.
Furthermore, by omitting lateral guide depressions on the housing of the ventilation system in the region of the insertion slot, an air filter of this type allows a particularly simple and construction-space-saving configuration of the housing of the ventilation system.
Furthermore, noise generation at associated edges, particularly if an air filter is not fitted in certain equipment variants, is avoided. Since an air filter of this type makes it possible for a guide shoulder on the filter, which encircles the frame and also, because of its large active length, overall has a large covering surface, to be replaced by a guide pin having a relatively small covering, a filter of this type improves the air resistance and reduces the noise generation in the ventilation system.
In order to ensure a predetermined installation position of the air filter in the insertion slot, in a particular embodiment of the air filter, the guide slot in the filter frame end side facing the insertion direction is arranged outside the surface center. This prevents the air filter from being installed in a twisted installation position. If a plurality of insertion slots are provided in the filter end facing the insertion direction, then the insertion slots are to be arranged, with respect to the surface center, asymmetrically with respect to one another, in order to achieve this effect.
To permit a particularly cost-effective and lightweight construction of a filter, the filter medium has a pleated (that is, folded) filter fleece. This also permits a particularly large two-dimensional extent of the filter medium.
In order to avoid damage to the pleated filter medium of the filter by surrounding obstacles or edges as the air filter is inserted into the insertion slot of the ventilation system, in a particular embodiment of the air filter, the pleating of the filter is oriented with the elongated extent of its crease, or of the doubled-over edges, in the insertion direction of the filter. This avoids angular obstacles coming into engagement with the filter medium transversely with respect to the folds of the filter. Furthermore, the guide pin which comes into engagement in the guide slot can be arranged between the folds of the pleating without a special arrangement of the filter medium or filter frame.
In a particular embodiment of the air filter, it is provided that the guide slot is arranged with its full two-dimensional extent along the end facing the insertion direction, that is, transversely with respect to the insertion direction, in a fold of the pleating (i.e., without overlapping with the filter medium) between two layers of the pleated filter medium. This also permits a particularly simple installation of the filter medium in the filter frame, without need of further trimming along the planar filter frame inner regions which surround the guide slot. In the case of an open design of the guide slot, an arrangement of this type i) permits complete sealing of the filter medium along its surrounding fastening in the filter frame, and ii) avoids damage to the filter medium by a guide pin of the associated ventilation system entering the guide slot.
In a particular refinement of the air filter, the guide slot is arranged in the fold of the pleating, in a direction from the opening of the fold toward the base of the fold, upstream of the seal of the filter frame. The guide slot is therefore arranged in the filter frame on both sides of the wall of the filter frame, upstream and downstream of the seal of the air filter. In particular in the case of an open design of the guide slot, a flow circulating around the filter by the filter slot opening past the seal and filter medium is prevented.
In a simplest design, the guide slot is configured as a hole-like aperture in the filter frame. An associated guide pin of the ventilation system can bear against said hole-like aperture of the filter frame in a manner supporting the filter at least in and counter to the direction in which the flow passes through it, but in particular on all sides.
In this case, the hole-like aperture can be formed by a corresponding indentation on the filter frame. Alternatively, it can be bounded in a completely surrounding manner by the filter frame.
In order to form a secure sealing of the air filter, one embodiment of the air filter has a guide slot which is formed by a trough-like depression in the filter frame. As a result, a flow circulating around the air filter through a hole-like aperture is avoided.
Other objects, advantages and novel features of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of the invention when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The air filter 1 has an air filter frame 2 which can be manufactured, for example, of a textile or cardboard material or else in the form of an injection molded plastic part. A filter medium 3 in the form of a pleated filter fleece is fastened in the frame 2 of the air filter in a completely surrounding (and therefore tight) manner along the inside of the walls forming the air filter frame 2. The pleating of the filter medium 3 is oriented with the doubled-over edges of the pleating extending in the insertion direction. Between the filter frame 2 and the surrounding housing of the ventilation system 4, the air filter 1 is sealed by means of a seal 5 which surrounds the inserted region. In the region through which the air filter 1 passes, the housing of the ventilation system has an insertion slot 40, the walls of which have an edge-free profile which is essentially continuous with the air duct walls mounted upstream and downstream in the direction through which the flow passes. If the installation of an air filter is omitted, for example within the context of equipment variants, no housing edges which generate noise or air resistance are provided in the air duct of the ventilation system 4.
The air filter 1 (which is shown in the installed state) has, in the end wall of the filter frame 2, which wall lies toward the front in the insertion direction, guide slots 20 which are illustrated in two different configurations in the exemplary embodiment shown. The guide slots 20 each have a circular cross section into which a round guide pin 41 of the housing of the ventilation system 4 enters. Because of the small frictional surfaces of a guide of this type, as the air filter 1 is inserted into the insertion slot 40 of the ventilation system, it is guided in a particularly force-free manner and is securely fixed in the installed state. In the cross-sectional area of the air filter 1 (
In the installed state, the air filter 1 is supported on the guide pins 41 of the housing of the ventilation system 4 via the guide slots 20, in particular in and counter to the direction in which the flow passes through it. As shown in
One of the insertion slots is bounded by a trough-like depression provided on the guide frame 2. Given an appropriate thickness of the filter frame 2 and short elongate extent of the guide pin 41 in the insertion direction, the depression can be arranged in the thickness extent of said filter frame. In the exemplary embodiment illustrated, the guide slot 20 is bounded by a dome-shaped raised portion of the filter frame, which can be provided by means of an adhesive part attached to the filter frame 2 or on the wall there of the filter frame 2 during shaping production of the guide frame 2.
The other receiving slot 20 is bounded by a hole-like aperture of the filter frame 2, formed by a circular cutout of the filter frame 2.
The guide slots 20 of the guide frame 2 are arranged with their full two-dimensional extent in a fold of the pleated filter medium 3. As a result, the filter medium 3 can be fastened in a particularly simple, surrounding, and tight manner to the inside of the walls forming the filter frame 2 past the elements 21 of the guide frame 2 that bound the guide slot 20 and passed the hole-like opening bounding the guide slot 20. In this case, the guide slots 20 are furthermore arranged within the fold of the pleating, in a direction from the opening of the fold toward the base of the fold, with their full two-dimensional extent along the wall of the filter frame 2, upstream of the seal 5 of the air filter 1. Therefore both the outside opening of the guide slot 20, (i.e., the opening which faces the walls of the housing of the ventilation system) and an inside opening (i.e., an opening which is provided in the case of an open design of the guide slot 20 and is arranged on that side of the guide frame which faces the filter medium) are arranged on the same side upstream or downstream, of both the filter and the seal, relative to the direction in which the flow passes through the air filter. As a result, a flow circulating around the filter via the opening of the guide slot 20 is avoided.
On the end of the filter frame 2 which faces the insertion direction of the air filter, the air filter 1 has two guide slots 20 of which (in order to illustrate different embodiments in the exemplary embodiment shown) one guide slot 20 is bounded by a trough-shaped depression 21 formed in the filter frame 2, and one guide slot 20 is bounded by a hole-like aperture 20 in the filter frame 2. The guide slot 20 which is bounded by the hole-like aperture permits a particularly cost-effective and simple design of the air filter 1. A projection arranged on the wall of the housing of the ventilation system 4 projects into the two guide slots 20 in or through the insertion slot 20 along the pleating of the filter medium 3 that is arranged in the insertion direction. In this case, the guide pins 41 project into the through-flow cross section of the filter. As a result, firstly a compact and space-saving configuration of the components is achieved, and, secondly, the filter medium 3 is protected against damage by means of the guide elements of the housing of the ventilation system 4.
The foregoing disclosure has been set forth merely to illustrate the invention and is not intended to be limiting. Since modifications of the disclosed embodiments incorporating the spirit and substance of the invention may occur to persons skilled in the art, the invention should be construed to include everything within the scope of the appended claims and equivalents thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2005 048 841 | Oct 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2006/009619 | 10/5/2006 | WO | 00 | 8/11/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/042194 | 4/19/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4093119 | Swisher | Jun 1978 | A |
5509950 | van de Graaf et al. | Apr 1996 | A |
5611728 | Arold | Mar 1997 | A |
5613991 | Esaki et al. | Mar 1997 | A |
6129140 | Kawahara | Oct 2000 | A |
6387143 | Adiletta | May 2002 | B1 |
6598580 | Baumann et al. | Jul 2003 | B2 |
6692347 | Schneider | Feb 2004 | B1 |
6814660 | Cavett | Nov 2004 | B1 |
20020106310 | Zuk, Jr. | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20040020177 | Ota et al. | Feb 2004 | A1 |
20040072533 | Cho | Apr 2004 | A1 |
20040185767 | Schneider | Sep 2004 | A1 |
20040242059 | Aoyama et al. | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20050044688 | Wynn | Mar 2005 | A1 |
20050051486 | Zuk, Jr. | Mar 2005 | A1 |
20070066215 | Song et al. | Mar 2007 | A1 |
20080035103 | Barris et al. | Feb 2008 | A1 |
20080168754 | Frey et al. | Jul 2008 | A1 |
20090209190 | Gould | Aug 2009 | A1 |
20100282681 | Zuk, Jr. | Nov 2010 | A1 |
20130067877 | Griffiths et al. | Mar 2013 | A1 |
20130180221 | Peteln | Jul 2013 | A1 |
20140302913 | Bichl et al. | Oct 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
42 34 047 | Aug 1993 | DE |
100 34 487 | Jan 2002 | DE |
10 2004 025 274 | Dec 2004 | DE |
20 2005 013 646 | Dec 2005 | DE |
102013015630 | Mar 2015 | DE |
1 172 240 | Jan 2002 | EP |
57-117214 | Jul 1982 | JP |
8-118948 | May 1996 | JP |
9-290630 | Nov 1997 | JP |
2001-63357 | Mar 2001 | JP |
2004079863 | Sep 2004 | KR |
Entry |
---|
International Search Report dated Dec. 15, 2006 (PCT/ISA/210) with PCT/ISA/220, with English Translation of relevant portion (Seven (7) pages). |
Written Report of the International Search Agency (PCT/ISA/237) with English translation of relevant portion (Seven (7) pages). |
German Search Report dated Jul. 24, 2006 with English Translation of relevant portion (Four (4) pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090298413 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |