The invention relates to an aircraft wheel with a separable bearing box.
Aircraft wheels are known that have both a hub receiving bearings for mounting the wheel to rotate on a landing gear axle, and also a rim with side flanges for receiving a tire, the rim being secured to the hub by a web. The wheel may be made up of two half-wheels that are secured to each other via the web by means of assembly bolts, or on the contrary it may comprise a single piece, in which case one of the flanges is removable in order to mount the tire.
Such wheels are held on the axle by means of an end nut, which on being tightened, serves to pre-load bearings that are mounted around the axle. Each of the wheels needs to be replaced on a regular basis because of progressive wear to the tire, typically once every two hundred flights. A maintenance crew jacks up the landing gear, removes the axle nut, and removes the wheel in order to replace it with a wheel having a tire that is new or retreaded. The wheel that has been removed then goes to a maintenance workshop where it is disassembled in order to remove the worn tire so as to replace it. This disassembly is also used for inspecting the bearings, for greasing them, and possibly for replacing them if they have reached the end of their prescribed lifetime.
Recently, “long duration” tires have appeared that make it possible to have a much larger number of flights between two wheel changes. Such tires raise the question of inspecting the bearings, which under present maintenance programs need to be inspected at a frequency that is much more frequent than changing such tires.
The invention seeks to propose an aircraft wheel that facilitates inspecting, maintaining, or changing its bearings.
In order to achieve this object, there is proposed an aircraft wheel comprising a hub for mounting the wheel on a landing gear axle to enable the wheel to rotate about an axis of rotation, and a rim with edge flanges for receiving a tire, the rim being secured to the hub by a web, wherein, according to the invention, the hub is adapted to receive releasably a bearing box comprising:
As a result, the wheel can be mounted like a conventional wheel on the axle, the axle nut then serving to stop the bushing of the bearing box axially on the axle. During a maintenance operation, the wheel is removed from the axle by unscrewing the axle nut, and the box is separated from the remainder of the wheel by unscrewing the stop nut in order to replace it with another box containing bearings that have been inspected and greased, which operation can be performed directly on the tarmac. The wheel is then put back on the aircraft, and the box that has been removed is taken away for inspecting and greasing the bearings.
By means of the wheel of the invention, it is thus possible to have different frequencies for inspecting and maintaining the bearings and for replacing the tire.
Furthermore, the presence of a sleeve guided by the bearings of the wheel makes it possible to couple all kinds of elements thereto, such as the blades of a fan or the target of a rotation sensor, such as a Hall effect tachometer.
In addition, the presence of the bushing and of the sleeve make it easy to fit the wheel with a motor, by fitting a motor on the box, with the stator of the motor being secured to the bushing and its rotor being secured to the sleeve.
In a particular embodiment, the motor does not have any bearings between the rotor and the stator, these two elements being guided in rotation by the bearings in the box.
The invention can be better understood in the light of the following description of particular embodiments of the invention, given with reference to the figures of the accompanying drawings, in which:
A conventional aircraft wheel 1 as shown in
The invention proposes a wheel with a hub that is separable, such as the wheel 51 shown in
For this purpose, the sleeve 62 has ends shaped as housings with shoulders forming abutments for receiving the outer rings of the bearings 53, 54. The bushing 61 has one end 63 shaped so as to project both ways from a thin-walled tubular portion 64. The portion of the end 63 that projects towards the bearings forms an abutment for the bearings, whereas the portion of the end 63 that projects towards the axle 100 includes fluting 65 to co-operate with complementary fluting on the axle 100 so as to prevent the bushing 61 from rotating relative to the axle 100. The other end 66 of the bushing 61 is threaded to receive a pre-loading nut 67 for pre-loading the bearings.
The outer wall of the sleeve 62 is received as a sliding fit in the bore of the hub 52. One end 68 of the sleeve 62 forms an external step to constitute an axial abutment of the sleeve 62, and the other end 69 is threaded to receive a stop nut 70, which can be seen in
During an operation of inspecting the bearings while the tire carried by the wheel is still good for several more flights, it suffices to remove the wheel, to extract the bearing box therefrom and to replace it with a box in which the bearings have been inspected and greased, and then to reinstall the wheel. The operation can be carried out easily on the tarmac, removing the box from the wheel requiring only the stop nut 70 to be unscrewed.
Thus, the wheel of the invention is taken to the workshop in order to change the tire, with the inspection, maintenance, and bearing-replacement cycle being decorrelated from the tire cycle.
The presence of a box makes it easy to provide the wheel with the motor. Specifically, as shown in
As shown in
In a variant shown in
In a variant shown in
In all of these motorized variants, the bearing box 60 can still be separated easily from the remainder of the wheel by unscrewing the stop nut 70.
In a particular aspect of the invention, it should also be observed that the bearing box 60 in this example is shaped to make it possible, instead of mounting a wheel of the invention, to mount a conventional prior art wheel, such as the wheel shown in
Thus, as illustrated in
The invention is not limited to the above description, but on the contrary covers any variant coming within the ambit defined by the claims.
In particular, although it is stated that the bushing is fluted to constrain it in rotation on the axle, this provision is optional, and is genuinely necessary only if the sleeve has a motor, which needs to have its stator prevented from moving in rotation.
Although the bearing boxes are shown herein as being provided with motors, with extensions of the bushing or of the sleeve forming the stator, the rotor, or the disk for coupling to a rotor, these elements may be made integrally with the bushing or with the sleeve, or indeed they merely be fitted thereto.
These boxes could equally well be fitted with members other than motors, such as a fan for cooling brake disks through the web of the wheel, or a sensor for sensing the speed of rotation of the wheel.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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16 57907 | Aug 2016 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2613892 | Dever | Oct 1952 | A |
5655845 | Lampart | Aug 1997 | A |
20110304292 | Charuel et al. | Dec 2011 | A1 |
20160031259 | Champion | Feb 2016 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 687 826 | Dec 1995 | EP |
2 394 912 | Dec 2011 | EP |
1 155 836 | May 1958 | FR |
Entry |
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French Preliminary Search Report for 16 57907, dated Mar. 9, 2017. |
French Written Opinion for 16 57907, dated Aug. 24, 2016. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20180057151 A1 | Mar 2018 | US |