The invention relates to a belt transmission, and more particularly, to a belt transmission comprising a first tensioner and second tensioner engaged about an intermediate shaft, the first tensioner and second tensioner each comprising a first arm and second arm and a torsion spring engaged therebetween, the first arm and second arm each bearing upon a surface, the first arm and second arm rotatable by operation of the torsion spring to exert a force upon the intermediate shaft whereby a tension is imparted to a first belt and a second belt engaged with the intermediate shaft.
Electric power assist steering systems (EPAS) have been around since the 1960's. Hydraulic power assist steering has traditionally dominated the market. Hydraulic systems have high parasitic energy loss when the hydraulic pump is pumping, but power assist is not required. Early attempts to eliminate this parasitic loss involved fitting an electric motor to the pump and only driving the pump when necessary.
Electric hydraulic assisted power steering systems use an electric motor to drive a hydraulic pump to feed a hydraulic power steering system. These systems are an intermediate step by the industry and their use will likely fade with the increased use of EPAS. EPAS systems allow realization of reduced noise, reduced energy use, active safety features, and adjustability to meet driving conditions. However, the use of these systems has remained limited until recent C.A.F.E. requirements became more difficult to meet. This is driving automotive manufactures to turn to EPAS systems more and more in an effort to improve vehicle fuel economy. EPAS systems eliminate the parasitic losses typically found in hydraulic assist power steering systems.
For example, one difficulty that slowed implementation of EPAS systems was meeting the power requirement with a 12 volt electric motor. Recently systems have been developed that successfully solve this problem. Further, all EPAS systems require a control module to sense driver input and control the electric motor to provide the desired assist. The control module measures driver input torque and uses this to determine the amount of assist required. Assist can be tuned to meet the drivers need depending on driving conditions. The system can even have a tunable “feel” available to the driver.
Even though the main driver for automotive EPAS is fuel economy improvement, EPAS has additional benefits. The system can make steering assist available even when the vehicle's engine is not running. It also enables the use of the automatic parallel parking systems available today.
There are two main types of EPAS systems; column assist and rack assist. Rack assist EPAS systems have an electric motor that is connected to the steering rack. The electric motor assists the rack movement usually through driving a lead screw mechanism. Column assist EPAS systems have an electric motor connected to the steering column. The electric motor assists the movement of the column shaft usually through a worm gear type arrangement. One advantage of these types of systems is the electric motor can be placed in the passenger compartment freeing up valuable space under the hood. This also keeps any sensitive electrical components out of the harsh under hood environment.
Worm drive column assist systems are usually used in small cars where the assist power requirements are lower than what would be needed in a large heavy vehicle. These systems are limited by the speed of the steering wheel and the ratio of the worm drive. The steering wheel at its fastest speed rotates relatively slowly at approximately 60 rpm. With a 60 rpm speed of the steering wheel and a worm drive ratio of 15:1, the max speed of the electric motor would only be 900 rpm. Worm drives are limited to ratios under 20:1 because ratios higher than that cannot be back-driven.
The steering system must be able to be operated with no power. This requires the worm drive be able to operate with the gear driving the worm (back-driven). Having a low motor speed and limited ratio worm drive causes the need for high torque motor. Even with a high torque motor, these types of systems have not been made successful on heavy vehicles. Small vehicles are light and require less steering effort thus enabling the use of these systems. Worm drive column assist SPAS systems are the lowest cost systems and thus also lend themselves to smaller less expensive vehicles.
Typical steering systems with worm drive assists are limited in their efficiency. EPAS systems must be designed to operate when there is no power available. Due to the nature of worm drive's tendency to lock up during back driving when ratios exceed approximately 20:1, worm drive EPAS systems efficiency is not greater than approximately 85% and nearer to 65% during back-driving conditions.
Representative of the art is U.S. Pat. No. 8,327,972 which discloses a vehicle steering system transmission comprising a housing, an input shaft journalled to the housing, an electric motor connected to the housing and coupled to the input shaft, an output shaft journalled to the housing, the input shaft and the output shaft coupled by a first pair of sprockets having a first belt trained therebetween and having a first ratio, the first belt and first pair of sprockets comprising a helical tooth configuration, the input shaft and the output shaft coupled by a second pair of sprockets having a second belt trained therebetween and having a second ratio, and the input shaft and the output shaft coupled by a third pair of sprockets having a third belt trained therebetween and having a third ratio.
What is needed is a belt transmission comprising a first tensioner and second tensioner engaged about an intermediate shaft, the first tensioner and second tensioner each comprising a first arm and second arm and a torsion spring engaged therebetween, the first arm and second arm each bearing upon a surface, the first arm and second arm rotatable by operation of the torsion spring to exert a force upon the intermediate shaft whereby a tension is imparted to a first belt and a second belt engaged with the intermediate shaft. The present invention meets this need.
The primary aspect of the invention is to provide a belt transmission comprising a first tensioner and second tensioner engaged about an intermediate shaft, the first tensioner and second tensioner each comprising a first arm and second arm and a torsion spring engaged therebetween, the first arm and second arm each bearing upon a surface, the first arm and second arm rotatable by operation of the torsion spring to exert a force upon the intermediate shaft whereby a tension is imparted to a first belt and a second belt engaged with the intermediate shaft.
Other aspects of the invention will be pointed out or made obvious by the following description of the invention and the accompanying drawings.
The invention comprises a belt transmission comprising a housing, a first belt trained between a first shaft and a first intermediate shaft, a second belt trained between the first intermediate shaft and a second intermediate shaft, a third belt trained between the second intermediate shaft and a second shaft, a first tensioner and second tensioner each engaged with the housing and each engaged about the first intermediate shaft whereby each tensioner exerts a force upon the first intermediate shaft which thereby imparts a tension to the first belt and to the second belt, and a third tensioner and fourth tensioner each engaged with the housing and each engaged about the second intermediate shaft whereby each tensioner exerts a force upon the second intermediate shaft which thereby imparts a tension to the second belt and to the third belt.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and form a part of the specification, illustrate preferred embodiments of the present invention, and together with a description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
The inventive device comprises input shaft 2, input pulley 1, multi-ribbed belt 100, compound pulley/sprocket 3, a first intermediate shaft 4, automatic tensioner assemblies 5, 6, 7, and 8, a compound sprocket 11, a second intermediate shaft 12, a 3 mm pitch toothed or synchronous belt 101, a 5 mm toothed or synchrounous belt 102, an synchronous sprocket 13, housing portion 9, housing portion 10, a plurality of bearings (50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56), a motor mount 14, and a plurality of fasteners 15. A synchronous or toothed belt comprises teeth which extend across a width of the belt.
Input shaft 2 is mounted on bearings 50, 51. Input pulley 1 is press fit to input shaft 2. Bearings 51 and 50 are mounted in each housing 9 and housing 10 respectively, thereby supporting input shaft 2.
Compound pulley/sprocket 3 is mounted on first intermediate shaft 4. First intermediate shaft 4 is mounted on bearings 52, 53. In turn, bearings 53, 52 are each mounted within an automatic tensioner 5 and automatic tensioner 6 respectively. Automatic tensioner 5 and automatic tensioner 6 along with bearings 53, 52 are each in contact with housing 9 and housing 10, respectively. Compound pulley/sprocket 3 comprises pulley 32 for engaging belt 100 and sprocket 31 for engaging belt 101.
Second intermediate shaft 12 is mounted on a pair of bearings 54, 55. Compound sprocket 11 is mounted to intermediate shaft 12. Bearings 54, 55 are each mounted in automatic tensioner 7 and automatic tensioner 8 respectively. Automatic tensioner 7 and 8 with bearings 54, 55 respectively are each in contact with housing 9 and housing 10. Compound sprocket 11 comprises sprocket 110 for engaging belt 101 and sprocket 111 for engaging belt 102.
Output sprocket 13 is mounted on a bearing 56. Bearing 56 is mounted in housing 10. Housing portion 9 and housing portion 10 are bolted together using fasteners 15. Motor mount 14 is bolted to housing 10. A motor or other driver (not shown) can be mounted to motor mount 14. Sprocket 13 engages belt 102.
Multi-ribbed belt 100 transmits power from input pulley 1 to pulley 32. A multi-ribbed belt comprises ribs that extend in the endless of longitudinal direction of the belt. Belt 101 transmits power from sprocket 31 to sprocket 110. Belt 102 transmits power from sprocket 111 to output sprocket 13.
Output sprocket hub 130 is configured to enable connection to a vehicle steering shaft (not shown). Input shaft 2 is configured to allow connection to an electric motor or other power source (not shown). Housing 10 further comprises a bracket 82, see
Known tensioners typically comprise a rigidly mounted base and a moveable arm assembly with an idler pulley journalled to the moveable arm. The idler pulley is forceably engaged with a belt by a torsion spring which tensions a belt. Each automatic tensioner 5, 6, 7, and 8 differs from the prior art wherein the prior art tensioner base is replaced by an arm which acts as a second tensioner arm in the inventive device, see
Automatic tensioner 5 and 6 act cooperatively to position shaft 4 thereby tensioning belt 100 and belt 101. Automatic tensioner 7 and 8 act cooperatively to position shaft 12 thereby tensioning belt 101 and belt 102.
Automatic tensioner 5 and 7 act upon housing 9. Automatic tensioner 6 and 8 act upon housing 10, which in turn the combination creates a reaction force upon the movable intermediate shaft 4. The reaction force exterted on the moveable intermediate shaft 4 positions the shaft to a position of equilibrium based upon the tension in belt 100 and belt 101. Shaft 4 and pulley 3 move into a position where the belt tension is equal to the combined force pf tensioners 5 and 6. The same operating principle is realized by tensioners 7 and 8 acting on intermediate shaft 12 and thereby pulley 11. In this Figure tensioner 5 and tensioner 7 are shown in exploded view. Tensioner 6 and tensioner 8 are not shown in exploded view. Tensioners 5, 6, 7, 8 are of the same design and description.
Arms 500, 501 comprise surfaces 505, 506 respectively which rest on bracket surface 91 and bracket surface 92, see
For the two belts (101, 102) engaged with each compound pulley/sprocket (3, 11) the tensioning force is preferably oriented such that the proper force in the proper direction is applied to create the desired tension in each belt.
Proper belt tension depends on the diameter of the pulley and the desired torque in the system. For example, a torque input to input pulley 1 is 1.88 Nm and the pulley diameter is 30 mm. This yields a force of 125.3N (or ΔT=125.3N) applied to belt 100 by pulley 1. This is the difference in tension in belt 100 due to torque regardless of the installed tension in the belt.
Torque=Force×distance
Torque=1.88 Nm
Distance=Diameter/2=0.030 m/2=0.015m
Force=Torque/distance
Force=1.88 Nm/0.015m
Force=125.3N
Where T2=tight side tension
Solving for T2:
T2=T1eμθ
Additionally the torque is equal to the radius of the pulley times the difference between the tight side tension and the slack side tension:
Torque=r*ΔT=r(T2−T1)
Substituting for T2 and solving for T1:
Since ΔT=125N we get T2=137.3N
The value calculated above for T1 is the minimum value so a factor of safety is added to the system, for example, this value is doubled to 24N which gives a tight side tension of 149.3N for belt 100. When there is no torque in the drive, the tight side and slack side tensions equalize to become the installed tension. The magnitude of that is one half the total tension:
The hubload is then the resultant of the sum of these tension forces applied at the angle of the belt. To determine the angle of the belt we need to know the wrap angle of the belt around the pulley. Simple geometry yields the following formula for wrap angle:
WA=π−2 sin(R2−R1/center distance)
Where:
This results in a wrap angle of 139.7 degrees.
The angle of the tension force is:
Tension force angle=TFA=(180−WA)/2
TFA=(180−139.7)/2
The belt tension forces are at angles of +/−20.15 degrees from the line formed between pulley centers.
The hubload (HL) is then:
Hubload=2(installed tension*cos(TFA))
HL=2*(86.6*cos(20.15))=162.6N
The hubload is applied along a line formed through the centers of each pulley pair at the mid width of the belt. The force on the output pulley is equal and opposite the force on the input pulley.
When the pulley is a compound pulley or sprocket, see
FH1 is the force of hubload from belt 100.
FH2 is the force of hubload from belt 102.
FT1 is the force from tensioner 1.
FT2 is the force from tensioner 2.
In order to determine the forces required in each tensioner, the calculation is simplified by separating the calculations into the forces from each belt and then adding them together. The forces are resolved into an x component and a y component. The x axis is normal to a line formed between the centers of the pulleys of the input drive (z-axis). Considering the x direction from FH1 we get:
Given:
Summing the forces in the X direction (see
0=FH1−FT2x−FT1x
Where:
FT2x is the force from tensioner 2 in the x direction.
FT1x is the force from tensioner 1 in the x direction.
Summing the moments about point A (
0=−FH1*z1+FT1x*z2
FT1x=(z1/z2)*FH1
Then:
FT1x=109.7N
Substituting:
FT2x=FH1−FH1x
FT2x=47.5N
Repeating the calculations for the x direction from FH2:
FH2 cos β=FT2x′+FT1x′
FT2x′=FH2 cos β−FT1x′
Summing moments about A:
0=−FH2 cos β*z3+FT1x′*z2
FT1x′=FH2 cos β*(z3/z2)
FT1x′=14.7N
Substituting:
FT2x′=FH2 cos β−FT1x′
FT2x′=37.6N
Adding the respective forces in the x direction for the tensioners gives:
FT1x″=FT1x+FT1x′
FT1x″=109.7N+14.7N=124.4N
And
FT2x″=FT2x+FT2x′
FT2x″=47.5N+37.6N=85.1N
Repeating these calculations for forces in the Y direction yields:
FT1y″=168.1N
FT2y″=583.0N
Geometry informs the magnetude of FT1 and FT2 by:
FT1=√{square root over (FT1x″2+FT1y″2)}
FT2=√{square root over (FT2x″2+FT2y″2)}
FT1=209.1N
FT2=589.2N
From this, simple geometry gives us the angles of these forces:
Θ=a sin(FT2y″/FT2)=81.7 deg
α=a sin(FT1y″/FT1)=53.5 deg
Similar determinations of tensioner force can be made for each tensioner position and then each tensioner can be configured to create the required force. Table 1 below is a summary of the required tensioner forces. The values in Table 1 are provided only as examples and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
Each arm 500, 501 has a circular profile at the contact surface 505, 506 respectively. The distance between the tensioner rotation center (shaft 4 center) and a line perpendicular to the bracket surface 91 at the point of contact with the arm surface 505, see
The center of curvature of the arm surface is offset a fixed distance from its center of rotation. The effective arm length is equal to the offset only when lines A and B are coincident with one another. When lines A and B are not coincident, the effective arm length is less than the center offset (CO) as a function of the angle formed between the lines.
E=Effective arm length=CO*cos(ω)
Given:
The force from each tensioner arm is equal to the torque on the arm divided by the effective arm length.
Knowing the force required of the tensioner acts against the angular surfaces of the housing, for example, 91, 92, at the point of contact of the tensioner arm and the surface, one can determine the force required at these surfaces and from that, the torque required in the tensioner arm.
Given:
SA=Surface 91 angle=30 deg
TF=Tensioner force=635N
Then:
Arm force=(TF/2)*cos(SA)
AF=(635/2)*cos(30)
AF=275N
The torque required in the arm is simply the arm force (AF) times the effective arm length (EAL).
Torque=AF*EAL
T=275N*0.00594 m=1.63 Nm
Tensioners 5, 6, 7, 8 are designed such that as the arms rotate, the effective arm length is reduced. Each respective torsion spring (504, 604, 704, 804) also provides less torque as the tensioner arms rotate. If the torsion spring has a spring rate of 0.01 Nm/deg and the arms rotate 20 degrees, then the torque from the spring drops by 0.2 Nm. The effective arm length changes from the above 5.94 mm to 5.30 mm. The resulting tensioner arm force remains nearly constant at 270N.
The included angle of the faces of the housing surfaces 91, 92 can range between 180 deg to 90 deg giving a surface angle of 0 deg to 45 deg as described above, see
If the angle between surfaces 91, 92 is 0 degrees, there is no horizontal force component from the tensioner arms. Surface angles greater than zero causes the tensioner to self center due to the horizontal component of the force being equal and opposite from each tensioner arm. If the surface angle exceeds 45 degrees, these horizontal components exceed the tensioning force. This creates a condition of “diminishing returns” on the spring torque. As the spring torque is increased, the horizontal component of tensioner force grows more than the tensioning force.
Although a form of the invention has been described herein, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that variations may be made in the construction and relation of parts and method without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention described herein.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3364766 | Ramo | Jan 1968 | A |
3715928 | Case | Feb 1973 | A |
3863514 | Jensen | Feb 1975 | A |
4403979 | Wujick | Sep 1983 | A |
4502345 | Butterfield | Mar 1985 | A |
4662861 | Seung | May 1987 | A |
4768997 | Page | Sep 1988 | A |
4840608 | Araki et al. | Jun 1989 | A |
4922727 | Viegas | May 1990 | A |
5209705 | Gregg | May 1993 | A |
6685785 | Morris et al. | Feb 2004 | B1 |
7070526 | Lawrence | Jul 2006 | B2 |
7237647 | Nakamura et al. | Jul 2007 | B2 |
7490696 | Saruwatari et al. | Feb 2009 | B2 |
7798928 | Serkh | Sep 2010 | B2 |
7887446 | Hironaka | Feb 2011 | B2 |
7905317 | Kruttschnitt et al. | Mar 2011 | B2 |
8216113 | Parsons | Jul 2012 | B2 |
8327972 | Schneider | Dec 2012 | B1 |
8408188 | Hormilla | Apr 2013 | B1 |
8454463 | Parsons | Jun 2013 | B2 |
20020119854 | Mohr et al. | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20050121251 | Ueno et al. | Jun 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
405059 | Jan 1991 | EP |
2159448 | Mar 2010 | EP |
2000320626 | Nov 2000 | JP |
1113840 | Nov 2011 | JP |
Entry |
---|
European Patent Office, Notification of Transmittal of the International Search Report and the Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority, or the Declaration, Mailing date Oct. 16, 2014. |
“Noise and Life of Helical Timing Belt Drives”, Ueda et al., Transactions of the ASME, vol. 121, Jun. 1999. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20150045162 A1 | Feb 2015 | US |