This disclosure relates to armored vehicles, specifically an armored passenger cab for such vehicles.
Armored military vehicles are built to withstand the forces generated from buried mines or Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs). All aspects of the cab structure must meet challenging performance requirements to provide a fully capable system that protects the occupants from both the sudden acceleration of a blast event and potential exposure to enemy fire through a hull breach or failed closure. One of the areas needing enhanced structural capacity are the passenger and driver access doors of the armored vehicle. Specifically, the hinges on these doors are subject to high energy loads, exasperated by the significant weight of an up-armored door. During a blast event from a mine or an IED, the armored door's inertia resists motion as the blast impact rapidly accelerates the rest of the vehicle upward. The hinges take most of the load that is generated. A failure in the door hinge system can cause the door to disengage with the opening, leaving the occupants vulnerable to enemy attacks through the opening. This invention is meant to redirect the load that previously would be applied to the hinges, during a blast event, to be redistributed to other well-supported structures. By bolstering the hinges, the armored cab is able to maintain its integrity at higher loads, thereby protecting the occupants at higher blast levels.
This disclosure involves an armored passenger cab for an armored vehicle. The armored vehicle cab includes cab side walls that are engaged at the front to a cab front wall and at the rear to a cab back wall. A cab floor is engaged to the cab side walls, the cab front wall, and the cab back wall. A cab roof is engaged to the top edges of the cab side walls, the cab front wall, and the cab back wall. The cab front wall contains a cab windshield that a driver of the vehicle can look through. Cab doors are engaged to the cab side walls through door hinges to encase the area that the driver and passengers sit during operation. The driver or passengers access the armored cab vehicle through operations to unlock the door latches and move the door about the door hinges. A door operating mechanism is engaged between the armored vehicle cab and the cab door to assist in moving the cab door. The cab floor contains cab mounting brackets for engaging the armored vehicle cab to a vehicle chassis. An inner portion of the cab doors contain mounting plates where the door hinges attach to armored door panels.
A blast door unsupported by wedges will tend to act as a lever arm during a blast event, because the hinges securely attach the front edge of the door and leave the rest of the door generally unsupported. This results in a relative rotation and motion of the bottom front corner of the door in the vertical and fore/aft directions. Even if the door is supported by latches (that don't fail in blast) at the opposite end, the elastic nature of the steel door will allow its center of mass to rotate down relative to the hinges and the latches. Although this motion is small, it is enough to cause shearing of hinge bolts, or failure of the hinge body. The enhanced blast protection of the armored vehicle cab is accomplished with wedge to wedge interfaces between the cab doors and the cab side walls that are approximately 90 degrees out of synch with each other to provide both fore/aft and vertical buffering of blast force applied to the cab floor. This is accomplished as follows.
The armored vehicle cab has a cab door opening with the cab door mounted adjacent to the cab door opening to seal the cab door opening when the cab door is closed. The cab door opening is partially defined by a cab door opening lower edge. The cab door opening lower edge has a lower edge wedge bracket welded to it. The lower edge bracket is a solid block with a machined flange interfacing with a slot in the body side panel at the bottom edge of the door opening. The lower edge bracket has a lower cab wedge engaged to it at a lower edge wedge bracket engagement surface. The cab door has a cab door lower edge. The cab door lower edge has a lower door wedge engaged to it at the lower edge wedge engagement surface. The lower cab wedge and the lower door wedge are adjacent or in contact when the cab door is closed. The wedges are of consistent length and width. The thickness of the wedges is greater on one side than the other side. The thicker side of the lower edge cab wedge is immediately adjacent to the lower door wedge thinner side, and vice versa in this door closed condition. During a blast event the wedge faces are in contact with one another and prevent vertical motion of the door. Instead, the interaction of these wedges provides an alternative load path between the door and the door opening during a blast event. This results in load transfer through the door and body panel rather than the hinges.
Fore/aft motion support of the hinges during blast events is provided by another set of wedges. The cab door opening is partially defined by the cab door opening front side edge. The cab door opening front side edge has a front edge wedge bracket welded to it. The front edge wedge bracket is a solid block with a machined flange interfacing with a slot in the body side panel at the side edge of the door opening. The front edge wedge bracket has a side edge cab wedge mounted to it at a front edge wedge bracket engagement surface. The cab door has a cab door front side edge. The cab door front side edge has a side door wedge engaged to it at the front edge wedge engagement surface. The side edge cab wedge and the side door wedge are adjacent or in contact when the cab door is closed. The wedges are of consistent length and width. The thickness of the wedges is greater on one side than the other. The thicker side of the side door wedge is immediately adjacent to the side edge cab wedge thinner side, and vice versa in this door closed configuration. The interaction of these wedges provides a fore/aft load path during blast events as the wedges move against each other.
The location of the wedge pairs in the vicinity of the hinges, reduces the force applied to the hinges during a blast event.
The foregoing summary, accompanied by further detail of the disclosure, will be presented in the Detailed Description below with reference to the following drawings that are part of this disclosure.
The enhanced blast protection of the armored vehicle cab 101 is accomplished with a pair of wedge to wedge interfaces between the cab doors 107 and the cab side walls 102 that are approximately 90 degrees out of synch with each other to provide both fore/aft and vertical buffering of the blast force applied to the cab floor 134. The wedges 119a, 119b, 119c, and 119d can be of different types of material, but they are made of a hard plastic in the preferred embodiment. Blast protection enhancement is accomplished as follows.
The armored vehicle cab 101 has a cab door opening 140 with the cab door 107 mounted adjacent to the cab door opening 140, shown in
There is a door front to bottom support bracket 114 between the cab door lower edge 113 and a cab door front side edge 123. The door front to bottom support gusset 114 provides additional stability to the door 107.
Fore/aft motion support during blast events is provided by another set of wedges 119c and 119d. The cab door opening 140 is partially defined by the cab door opening front side edge 122. The cab door opening front side edge 122 has a front edge wedge bracket 127 engaged to it. The front edge wedge bracket 127 is a solid block with a machined flange interfacing with a slot 135 in the body side panel 132. The lower edge wedge bracket 127 is similar in shape as the lower edge bracket 117 shown in
The wedge pair comprised of lower door wedge 119a and the lower door wedge 119b provide an alternative vertical load path, and the wedge pair comprised of the lower door wedge 119c and the lower door wedge 119d provide a fore/aft load path that reduces the forces applied to the door hinges 108 during a blast event below the cab floor 134. An important element is that the wedge pairs are aligned approximately 90 degrees apart.
As described above, the armored vehicle cab 101 of this disclosure provides a number of advantages, some of which have been described above and others of which are inherent in the disclosure. Also, modifications may be proposed to the armored vehicle cab of this disclosure without departing from the teachings herein.
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