The present invention concerns a brake fluid reservoir with an air vent for pressure balancing, the top of the reservoir body being equipped with a threaded neck accommodating a threaded cap on the neck and having a baffled passageway for venting the reservoir.
The realization of brake fluid reservoirs with pressure balancing is known. There exist different embodiments of reservoirs wherein the cap has an element forming a baffle enabling the pressure to be balanced while preventing brake fluid from escaping due to the effect of the vehicle's sudden acceleration or deceleration, for example, if the brakes are applied suddenly. These solutions are not always satisfactory, however, because the risk of the fluid escaping remains due to the orientation of the baffle, which can be incorrectly oriented with respect to the vehicle axis.
Document EP 2,189,344 discusses a brake fluid reservoir equipped with a pressure balancing arrangement, thereby avoiding the risk of brake fluid escaping under exceptional conditions through the particular orientation of the outlet of the cap by indexing the seal forming the baffle equipping the interior of the cap. This seal is positioned precisely so that the cap, once screwed into place, is suitably oriented and so that the outlet of the baffle is not turned toward the front, an orientation that would be the most favorable for the escape of brake fluid from the baffle through the effect of sudden braking.
But this solution, although interesting, has the disadvantage of being complex to realize given that the cap consists of the cap body in the form of a lid with an indexed thread and accommodates the seal forming a baffle, which is itself indexed, by a connecting arrangement that respects the indexing. Finally, a gasket is placed between the cap equipped with its baffle and the top of the neck. The neck must also have an indexed thread so that, when the cap is screwed in place, the baffle will have the correct orientation.
This solution has the disadvantage of complex manufacture and additional assembly operations resulting in relatively high costs overall.
An object of the present invention is the realization of a brake fluid reservoir with pressure balancing that is especially simple to produce and use, so as to reduce the cost of the reservoir and ensure the efficiency of the pressure balancing while avoiding the risk of brake fluid escaping.
To that end, an object of the invention is a brake fluid reservoir of the type described above, characterized in that,
A) the neck has a top with a pressure balancing channel,
B) the cap consists of:
The reservoir according to the invention has the advantage of having a one-piece cap incorporating the air vent portion. Likewise, the top of the neck incorporates the channel forming the baffle in such a way that realization of the assembly is especially simple. Use is also simple and the cap can be very easily placed in the appropriate position not only to enable communication between the interior of the brake fluid reservoir and the exterior and balance the pressure to avoid any vacuum in the reservoir even in the event of significant and rapid extraction of brake fluid during braking, but also ensuring that there is no risk that the liquid shaken in the reservoir will escape through the balancing path formed by the channel specifically during a sudden braking action.
According to an advantageous characteristic, the entrance of the channel is a lateral entrance crossing the partition bordering the channel on the interior.
This lateral entrance is realized very simply with a mold without requiring any moving parts because this lateral entrance is open on top.
According to another advantageous characteristic, the channel occupies almost the entire periphery of the upper portion of the neck and is circular in shape, its inlet being separated from its outlet by a partition.
This circular embodiment of the channel is particularly simple because the channel is circular in shape and the inlet and outlet in the channel are simply separated by a partition, the inlet emerging in the reservoir laterally through removal of a portion of the wall, whereas the outlet communicates from above.
According to another advantageous characteristic, the pressure balancing channel makes more than one peripheral turn in the upper portion of the neck.
According to another advantageous characteristic, the flat bottom has a circular sealing lip occupying a position corresponding to the opening of the neck when the cap is screwed onto the neck so that the circular sealing lip inside the neck engages with the partition bordering the channel on the interior.
This sealing lip completes the seal of the channel over the entire periphery without interfering with the opening of the entrance to the channel, which can pass beneath the lip. This lip ensures the effectiveness of the pressure balancing path consisting of the channel once the cap is screwed onto the neck.
According to another advantageous characteristic, the outlet is an opening in the shape of a cavity communicating with the threaded region of the cap and that of the neck.
According to another advantageous characteristic, the upper portion of the neck has, upon its outer surface, an orientation marker for determining the screw position of the cap.
The present invention will be described in greater detail by an example of a brake fluid reservoir with pressure balancing, shown schematically in the attached drawings.
According to
Cap 2 has edge 21 with interior threads, 211 corresponding to threads 121 of neck 12 and bottom 22. On the outside, cap 2 is equipped with portions in relief, 212, to facilitate gripping it when tightening or loosening.
According to
As shown in
As shown in
Annular contact surface 222 is equipped with cavity-shaped opening 2221, which crosses this surface 222, for example, in a radial direction so that, when cap 2 is screwed onto neck 12, opening 2221 straddles channel 123, thereby constituting the outlet of the channel.
Cap 2 is screwed in such a way that its opening 2221 encounters outlet region 123b of channel 123. On the exterior, cap 2 has marker 223, indicating open position 2221, so it can be positioned by screwing it to the appropriate location.
Cap 2 can also be indexed by the configuration of its threads 211 and those 121 of neck 12 so that, when it is completely screwed in place, opening 2221 of cap 2 is found in outlet region 123b of the channel.
Cap 2 being screwed on neck 12 forms, with channel 123, a communication path with a very narrow cross-section, therefore with a significant pressure drop between the channel inlet and its outlet, which enables pressure to be balanced inside reservoir 1 to bring it to atmospheric pressure while preventing brake fluid from escaping from the reservoir through cap 2.
Depending on the installation position of reservoir 1 in the engine compartment, cap 2 will be oriented in the most suitable manner to prevent the sudden movement of brake fluid in the reservoir, for example, during sudden braking, from being pushed through the channel to the outlet. The outlet is oriented toward the back, which corresponds to the position toward which there is the least risk of brake fluid being pushed or being pushed violently and being forced through the channel and leaking through the cap.
According to a variant not shown, channel 123, which, in the above example, occupies almost the entire periphery of upper portion 122 of the neck, can also be shorter in length and occupy only a fraction of that periphery or have a length that extends over more than one turn in the top of the neck. In this case, cavity shaped opening 2221 straddles only the outlet region of this channel without straddling another portion of the channel in such a way that the communication path between the reservoir inlet and outlet for balancing extends over the entire length of the channel.
The brake fluid reservoir and its cap are made simply of molded plastic material. The shape of the neck as well as the cap allow for very simple manufacture without requiring a complex mold and moving elements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1254714 | May 2012 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/060478 | 5/22/2013 | WO | 00 |