This application claims priority from Great Britain Application Serial No. 0423517.2, filed Oct. 22, 2004.
The present invention relates to transmission arrangements for amphibious vehicles, and in particular to control aspects thereof.
It is known for amphibious vehicles to have road wheels which can be retracted above the water line for use of the vehicle on water. This has the advantage of reducing hydrodynamic drag; particularly where the vehicle is designed to plane over the surface of the water, as such vehicles travel faster than displacement vehicles.
Where such wheel retraction systems are fitted, and the road drive and marine drive are driven in parallel, for example as disclosed in the applicant's co-pending application published as WO 02/07999, it is preferable to disconnect road drive on water. An example of road drive disconnection is disclosed in WO 02/14092, also of the present applicant. In this disclosure, a decoupler is provided in each wheel driveshaft. Such decouplers have many virtues, but light weight and simplicity are not among them.
It is advantageous if a single decoupler can be arranged to decouple drive to both wheels. This could be achieved by situating the single decoupler, for example, on the input driveshaft of the differential, where a single driven axle is provided. However, the location of the decoupler is not a solution to the problem of excess weight and complexity; the decoupler still needs to be activated.
Since there are a number of adjustments to be made to an amphibious vehicle during mode change on entry into or egress from water, it is preferable to reduce as far as possible the number of tasks that have to be effected directly by the driver. This helps simplify control of the vehicle at a critical time, one which is not necessarily intuitive to the novice amphibian driver. Accordingly, the present invention provides for automatic decoupling of road drive when the wheels are retracted during mode change from land mode to marine mode and for automatic coupling of road drive when the wheels are protracted during mode change from marine mode to land mode.
In a first aspect, the present invention provides an amphibious vehicle comprising:
In a further aspect the amphibious vehicle comprises a body; a power train comprising a prime mover, a road transmission, and a marine transmission; and a suspension capable of retracting road wheels; where the road transmission is decoupled automatically as the road wheels are retracted.
The road wheels may drive at least one tracked drive.
The road transmission may be decoupled at a differential input.
The decoupling means may be a dog clutch.
The decoupling means may be mechanically linked to the retractable suspension; particularly by a push-pull cable.
A spring return means may be fitted to the actuator for the decoupling means.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments which, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, illustrate by way of example the principles of the invention.
a is a plan view from above of a retractable suspension system for an axle of the vehicle of
b is a detail view of the apparatus for effecting coupling and drive to the protracted wheel assemblies of
a is a plan view from above of a retractable suspension system for an axle of the vehicle of
b is a detail view of the apparatus for effecting decoupling of drive from the retracted wheel assemblies of
As can be seen from
Transfer case 30 also provides a road transmission output along vertical output shaft 86. Bevel gears are used to transfer power from shaft 40 to shaft 86. The change speed transmission 32 is shown as a CVT (continuously variable transmission), comprising input pulley assembly 90, output pulley assembly 92, and a drive belt 91 connecting the two. The output from CVT 32 is taken down to differential 34 by vertical output shaft 88. The input to differential 34 is provided through a dog clutch 33. Numeral 99 denotes an electric motor, preferably a starter motor with attached Bendix drive. Such a drive may be used to provide a reverse gear where transfer case 30 does not provide such a facility.
a, 4b, 5a, and 5b illustrate the retractable suspension assembly of one axle of the vehicle of
For a driven axle, as shown, torsion tubes 216, 218 are fixed to lower suspension arms 214 which enclose driveshafts (not shown). Upper suspension members 215 are also provided, mounted to be swingable about inner pivots 213. Wheel hubs 204 are mounted to the distal ends of lower suspension arms 214.
As can be seen in
As this wheel assembly retraction process takes place, it can be seen through comparison of
The term “dog clutch” is often used in the art to describe a sprag engaging on a ratchet type wheel. Such a clutch has the known weakness of only being able to transmit power in a single rotational direction; any attempt to transmit power in the reverse direction will simply snap the sprag clutch arm. As can be seen from
It will be appreciated that further modifications to the transmission layout described above may be made as required without departing from the scope of the invention. For example, other suspension retraction mechanisms may pull the push-pull cable equally well (e.g. directly acting hydraulic or pneumatic cylinder(s), electric motor(s) or linkage mechanism(s). A dog clutch could be applied to one or both differential output shafts, rather than to the input shaft; the entire arrangement could also be applied to an axle which is both powered and steered. Furthermore, rather than the lower suspension members being tubular, they may be solid, or may take the form of wishbones.
While a particular form of the present invention has been illustrated and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, it is not intended that the invention be limited except by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0423517.2 | Oct 2004 | GB | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060172628 A1 | Aug 2006 | US |