The present invention relates generally to automobile axles and, more particularly, to an automobile axle having a lateral shock absorber. Side impact forces and horizontal stresses related to cornering are decreased by the present invention.
When a force is applied to a car in a horizontal direction, such as a wind load, a side impact, or the centripetal force around a corner, the force will be felt first by the tires and they will bend slightly. This may lead to undesirable accelerated tire wear. If the force is great enough, the tires may begin to slip on the pavement, resulting in a loss of control.
Various devices have been proposed in the art for reducing side impact stresses upon a vehicle. Although assumably effective for their intended purposes, the existing devices do not adequately absorb horizontal stresses such that tire wear is reduced and the damage from side impact collisions is significantly reduced.
Therefore, it would be desirable to have a vehicle axle that absorbs horizontal stresses so as to make the vehicle ride better and be more responsive during evasive maneuvers, wear on vehicle tires is reduced, and the impact of a side collision is reduced. More particularly, it would be desirable to have a vehicle axle having a force absorbing member that biases the axle shaft outward and that absorbs horizontal forces encountered, say, when cornering or upon a side impact. Further, it would be desirable to have a vehicle axle having an axle shaft that slides within a main axle but resists axle recoil in the case of a side impact collision.
Therefore, a vehicle axle according to the present invention includes a main axle having an end defining a splined cavity. The vehicle axle further includes a splined shaft coaxial with the main axle, the splined shaft having a configuration that is complementary to a configuration of the splined cavity. The shaft and the main axle are coupled together by the shaft splines and the cavity splines, the shaft being movable relative to the main axle along the axis. The vehicle axle includes a force-absorbing member located inside the splined cavity and being in communication with the main axle and the splined shaft so as to absorb force when the splined shaft moves toward the main axle past an equilibrium point.
The force-absorbing member includes at least one of a spring, a pneumatic damper, a hydraulic damper, and a permanently-deformable solid. The force-absorbing member is positioned to bias the splined shaft outwardly and to absorb horizontal forces imparted upon the splined shaft, such as those from the wind, vehicle cornering, or side impact. The vehicle axle may also include a safety pin that is biased to prevent further movement of the splined shaft relative to the main axle if the shaft is moved past a predetermined point. In other words, the safety pin prevents automatic return of the shaft to its unbiased configuration after an accident.
A stress absorbing axle according to another embodiment of the invention includes an axle housing having a pair of ends each defining an axle housing opening in communication with an axle housing cavity, the axle housing having an internal sealing flange displaced from each axle housing opening. The axle includes a pair of outer drive shafts, each outer drive shaft being coaxially received in a respective axle housing cavity for relative slidable movement therein, each outer drive shaft having an outer end operatively coupled to a vehicle wheel and an inner end defining an opening in communication with a splined cavity. The axle includes a pair of inner drive shafts, each inner drive shaft having a splined end received through a respective outer drive shaft opening and coaxially coupled to a respective outer drive shaft splined cavity such that the respective outer drive shaft is slidably movable therein between compressed and extended configurations relative thereto. A piston is attached to the inner end of each outer drive shaft and configured so as to form an inner fluid chamber between the piston and the sealing flange and an outer fluid chamber between a respective piston and respective axle housing opening, the inner and outer fluid chambers configured to hold a fluid. A fluid channel includes a first end in fluid communication with a respective inner fluid chamber and a second end in fluid communication with a respective outer fluid chamber. A force absorption container is in fluid communication with each respective fluid channel, each force absorption container having a compression spring therein, wherein the spring is compressed when movement of the piston pushes fluid through the channel into the force absorption container.
Therefore, a general object of this invention is to provide a vehicle axle that absorbs horizontal forces exerted upon a vehicle.
Another object of this invention is to have a vehicle axle, as aforesaid, that includes a splined shaft that is biased outwardly relative to a main axle for absorbing horizontal forces.
Still another object of this invention is to have a vehicle axle, as aforesaid, that prevents recoil of the splined shaft in case of a side collision.
Yet another object of this invention is to have a vehicle axle, as aforesaid, that reduces premature tire wear when a vehicle rounds a corner.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein is set forth by way of illustration and example, embodiments of this invention.
a is an exploded view of the axle as in
b is an isolated view on an enlarged scale of a portion of the vehicle axle taken from
a is a top view of the axle as in
b is a sectional view taken along line 3b-3b of
c is an isolated view on an enlarged scale of a portion of the axle taken from a portion of
d is an isolated view on an enlarged scale of a portion of the axle taken from a portion of
a is a top view of a vehicle axle as in
b is a sectional view taken along line 4b-4b of
c is an isolated view on an enlarged scale taken from a portion of
d is an isolated view on an enlarged scale taken from a portion of
a is sectional view as in
b is a sectional view as in
a is a sectional view as in
b is a sectional view as in
a is a perspective view on an enlarged scale of the permanently deformable solid in an uncompressed configuration;
b is a perspective view on an enlarged scale of the permanently deformable solid in an compressed configuration; and
a is a perspective view of a vehicle axle according to another embodiment of the present invention, the axle being illustrated in a normal configuration;
b is another perspective view as in
a is a perspective view on a reduced scale of the axle as in
b is an isolated view on an enlarged scale taken from
c is a sectional view taken along line 10c-10c of
a is an isolated view on an enlarged scale taken from
b is another isolated view as in
a is another perspective view of the axle as in
b is an isolated view on an enlarged scale taken from
A vehicle axle will now be described in detail with reference to
As shown in
The shaft 120 may include a plurality of splines 123, and the main axle 110 may include a plurality of splines 113 that are complementary to the shaft splines 123. Interaction between the shaft splines 123 and the main axle splines 113 may couple the shaft 120 to the main axle 110 and cause the shaft 120 to rotate with the main axle 110 while allowing the shaft 120 to move along the shared axis. In one embodiment, as shown in
A force-absorbing member 130 is in communication with the main axle 110 and the shaft 120 to absorb force when the shaft 120 moves toward the main axle 110 (i.e., when the shaft end 122a moves toward the main axle 110) past an equilibrium point. As shown in
If the shaft end 122b is coupled to the force-absorbing member 130, the force-absorbing member 130 is coupled to the main axle 110, and a resilient force-absorbing member 130 is used (e.g., spring 130a, etc.), the force-absorbing member 130 may additionally bias the shaft 120 toward the equilibrium point when the shaft 120 has moved away from the main axle 110 past the equilibrium point (i.e., when the shaft end 122a has moved away from the main axle 110 past the equilibrium point).
The equilibrium point is the point where the force-absorbing member 130 does not pull the shaft 120 toward the main axle 110 or push the shaft 120 away from the main axle 110, but where further movement of the shaft 120 toward the main axle 110 causes a change in the force-absorbing member 130. For example, if the force absorbing member 130 is a spring 130a, the equilibrium point is the point where the spring 130a neither pushes nor pulls the shaft 120 relative to the main axle 110, but where movement of the shaft 120 toward the main axle 110 causes the spring 130a to compress.
As shown in
In one embodiment, as shown in
In use, the main axle 110 may be coupled to a vehicle in a traditional manner (e.g., through differential 10 in
In case of a side impact (e.g., during an accident), the shaft 120 may move toward the main axle 110, and the force-absorbing member 130 may absorb force from the shaft 120, causing less force to be transferred to the main axle 110. If a resilient force-absorbing member 130 (e.g., spring 130a, etc.) is used, it may be important that safety pin 142 interact with notch 140 to restrict further movement of the shaft 120 relative to the main axle 110, as movement of the shaft 120 back to the equilibrium point (and particularly the forces associated with that movement) could be dangerous.
a shows the spring 130a in normal use (i.e., maintaining the shaft 120 at the equilibrium point), and
If an adjustable force-absorbing member 130 is used, as discussed above, a sensor 152 (e.g., a pressure sensor) and/or a user input 152 may determine how quickly the force-absorbing member 130 may compress, and the processor 150 may adjust the force-absorbing member 130 accordingly. In this manner, the “handling” of the suspension (and specifically the vehicle axle 100) may be further customized.
The invention as described above may be referred to as a “one-way stress absorbing axle” in that it provides for stress absorption when the stress is applied toward the center of the axle. Also contemplated by the present invention, however, is what may be referred to as a “two-way stress absorbing axle” in that it provides additional or improved functionality for absorbing stress that may be applied toward the center of the axle as well as stress applied away from the center of the axle. In the two-way stress absorbing axle, not only is there compression of a respective shaft 120 into the main axle 110 upon sensing a stress in the direction of the center of the main axle as with the embodiment 100 described above, the two-way stress absorbing axle allows extension of an opposed shaft relative to an opposed end of the main axle. In this way, the overall length of the vehicle's wheelbase is not shortened by the absorption of a stress and compression of the respective shaft and main axle (as in
An embodiment of a two-way stress absorbing axle 200 (also referred to herein as a vehicle axle) according to the present invention will now be described in detail with reference to
The vehicle axle 200 further includes a pair of outer drive shafts 220, each being coaxially received in a respective axle housing cavity 216 for relative slidable movement therein. Each outer drive shaft 220 includes an outer end 222 operatively coupled to a vehicle hub 12 and an inner end 224 defining an opening 226 in communication with a respective splined cavity 227 (
Further, the vehicle axle 200 includes a pair of inner drive shafts 230, each inner drive shaft 230 having a splined end 232 configured to be received through a respective outer drive shaft opening 226 and coaxially coupled to a respective outer drive shaft splined cavity (
It is understood that the opening of the axle housing is sealed relative to the outer drive shaft 220 that extends therethrough, the piston 228 forms a seal between the outer drive shaft inner end 224 and the inner wall of the axle housing 210, and the sealing flange 218 seals off respective portions of the axle housing 210. Accordingly, an inner fluid chamber 240 is defined between a respective piston 228 and respective sealing flange 218 (
The vehicle axle 200 further includes a fluid channel 244 associated with each pair of inner 224 and outer 222 drive shafts (
In use, the embodiment of the vehicle axle 200 described immediately above provides an improved dampening of lateral forces experienced by a vehicle by allowing respective outer drive shafts 220 to actually slide laterally with respect to the fixed inner drive shafts 230 while dampening the magnitude of an imparted force. More particularly, the outer drive shafts 220 may be in a fully or partially extended configuration in a normal configuration, i.e. when no lateral forces are imparted (
Explained another way (but with the same structure and dynamics as described above), a lateral force causes the axle housing 210 and inner drive shafts 230 toward or away from a respective wheel. For example,
Alternatively, the combination of first 254 and second 256 valves may be replaced by respective three-way ball valves 254′ and 256′ (
It is understood that while certain forms of this invention have been illustrated and described, it is not limited thereto except insofar as such limitations are included in the following claims and allowable functional equivalents thereof.
This application is a continuation-in-part application that claims the benefit of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/133,218 filed Jun. 4, 2008 and titled Automobile Axle.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12133218 | Jun 2008 | US |
Child | 12401709 | US |