This technology relates to the field of pneumatic valves.
A compressor can provide compressed air for operating a pneumatic device. If the compressed air is stored in a reservoir for later use, pneumatic lines and valves can be used to direct the compressed air to flow from the compressor into the reservoir until the reservoir reaches a sufficient storage pressure. The lines and valves can then direct the compressed air from the reservoir to the pneumatic device.
To summarize, the example apparatus can be described as a control valve assembly having chambers, ports and valves. These include a first chamber with a first port, a second chamber with a second port, and a first valve that is operative to open between the first and second chambers in response to elevated pneumatic pressure in the first chamber. A second valve is operative to open between the second chamber and a primary exit port to vent the second chamber in response to elevated pneumatic pressure in the second chamber. Additionally, a third valve is operative to open between the first chamber and a bypass exit port to vent the first chamber in response to elevated pneumatic pressure in the first chamber.
The example apparatus can be summarized differently in the context of a particular implementation of the apparatus. For example, the example apparatus can be described as being for use with a source of compressed air, a reservoir of compressed air, and a pneumatic device. Such an apparatus may comprise a control valve assembly that is configured to be connected pneumatically between the source, the reservoir, and the pneumatic device. The control valve assembly is further configured to be shiftable between open and closed conditions respectively opening and closing pneumatic flow paths that extend separately through the control valve assembly. The flow paths include a first flow path extending from the source to the reservoir, a second flow path extending from the reservoir to the pneumatic device, and a third flow path extending from the source to the pneumatic device.
In another implementation summary, the example apparatus can be described as being for use with a pneumatic device. Such an apparatus includes a source of compressed air, a reservoir for compressed air, and a pneumatic coupling connectable to the pneumatic device. The apparatus also includes a control valve assembly having a housing with ports that are interconnected by chambers within the housing. The ports include a source port pneumatically connected to the source, a reservoir port pneumatically connected to the reservoir, a primary exit port pneumatically connected to the coupling, and a bypass exit port pneumatically connected to the coupling in parallel with the primary exit port.
The apparatus shown in the drawings has parts that are examples of the structural elements recited in the claims, and thus includes examples of how a person of ordinary skill in the art may make and use the example apparatus. That apparatus is described here to provide enablement and the best mode without imposing limitations that are not recited in the claims.
The parts of the apparatus that are shown in
The compressor assembly 12 has a motor 30 and a drive belt 32 for rotating a flywheel 34. The flywheel 34 is linked to a piston that reciprocates in the compressor 16 to provide compressed air on a supply line 36 that connects the compressor 16 pneumatically with the control valve assembly 20. Other pneumatic lines in the compressor assembly 12 include a reservoir line 40 that connects the control valve assembly 26 pneumatically with the reservoir 41 in the tank 10, as well as primary and bypass exit lines 44 and 46 that connect the control valve assembly 20 pneumatically with a cross-coupling 48. An actuator valve in the form of a pressure regulator 50 is interposed between the cross-coupling 48 and the output coupling 18 for the pneumatic device 24 (
Also shown in
As shown in greater detail in
A conical inner surface 120 of the housing 80 defines a valve seat that surrounds an orifice 121 between the source chamber 85 and the reservoir chamber 87. The orifice 121 is normally closed by a first check valve 130 with a piston 132 that is biased against the valve seat 120 by a spring 134. The spring 134 is compressed between the piston 132 and a rotatable end cap 136 that enables the user to adjust the force with which the spring 134 holds the piston 132 in the closed position. The first check valve 130 is thus operative to open between the source chamber 85 and the reservoir chamber 87 under elevated pneumatic pressure acting against the piston 132 in the source chamber 85.
The housing 80 further has a conical inner surface 140 defining a valve seat in the primary exit chamber 93, and an additional conical inner surface 142 defining a valve seat in the bypass exit chamber 97. The valve seat 140 in the primary exit chamber 43 surrounds an orifice 143 between the reservoir chamber 87 and the primary exit chamber 93. The orifice 143 is normally closed by a second check valve 144 with a piston 146 that is biased against the valve seat 140 by a spring 148. In a similar arrangement, the valve seat 142 in the bypass exit chamber 97 surrounds an orifice 151 between the source chamber 85 and the bypass exit chamber 97. That orifice 151 is normally closed by a third check valve 152 with a piston 154 that is biased against the valve seat 142 by a spring 156. The second check valve 144 is operative to open between the reservoir chamber 87 and the primary bypass chamber 93 under elevated pneumatic pressure acting against the piston 146 in the reservoir chamber 87. The third check valve 152 is operative to open between the source chamber 85 and the bypass exit chamber 97 under elevated pneumatic pressure acting against the piston 154 in the source chamber 85.
Each of the three check valves 130, 144 and 152 is operative to open under a corresponding level of pneumatic pressure. Accordingly, the first check valve 130 opens under elevated pressure of at least a first level. The first elevated pressure level is less than the maximum level of storage pressure in the reservoir 41, but is greater than the level needed for operation of a pneumatic device that can be powered by the compressor assembly 12. The second check valve 144 opens under elevated pressure of at least a second level, and the third check valve 152 opens under elevated pressure of at least a third level. The second and third elevated pressure levels are both less than the first, and are preferably equal to each other. Moreover, the second and third elevated pressure levels are not higher than the level needed to operate a pneumatic device that can be powered by the compressor assembly 12, and are preferably lower.
The user can charge the tank 12 with compressed air to a desired level of storage pressure by turning on the compressor 16 with the regulator 50 in a closed condition. Compressed air is then directed from the compressor 16 to the control valve assembly 20 along the supply line 36. As the supply chamber 85 (
In operation of a pneumatic device 24, the user first connects the coupling 22 for the pneumatic device 24 to the output coupling 18 on the compressor assembly 12, as shown schematically in
In the bypass mode of operation, the compressor assembly 12 provides compressed air for operation of the pneumatic device 24 when the storage pressure in the reservoir 41 is less than the level needed to operate the pneumatic device 24. A first example of the bypass mode of operation is shown in
In a second example of the bypass mode, the user may turn on the compressor 16 and, with the regulator 50 closed, allow the source chamber 85 to become pressurized to a level at which the first check valve 130 opens to enable the reservoir 41 to receive compressed air from the compressor 16, as indicated in
The patentable scope of the example described herein is defined by the claims, and may include other examples of how the claimed device may be made and used. Such other examples, which may be available either before or after the application filing date, are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they have structural or process elements that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, or if they have equivalent structural or process elements with insubstantial differences from the literal language of the claims.