This application claims priority to French Patent Application No. FR 0900328 filed Jan. 26, 2009.
The present invention relates to a cable winding drum, a window regulator with the cable winding drum, and a bodywork element with the window regulator.
A window regulator drives a window between a lowered position (in which the window is at least partially inside a door or a side of a vehicle) and a raised position (in which the window compresses a roof seal or a top seal of a frame of a door, hereinafter a “roof seal” for simplicity). The window regulator can drive the window via a cable, which in turn is driven by a cable winding drum. The drum is turned by a geared motor. The drum has a constant diameter, so the speed of the window is constant between the raised position and the lowered position. In particular, the window arrives at the raised position at the same speed as during the rest of the path. The geared motor is designed to allow the window to reach the raised position in which the window compresses the roof seal in such a way as to create a good seal. The geared motor is therefore oversized for the rest of the path of the window. This can expensive and can potentially pinch a user or a foreign body.
There is therefore a need to reduce the cost and the closing power without reducing the closing force in the region of the roof seal.
For this purpose, a cable winding drum includes tracks for the winding of a plurality of cable runs, each of the tracks having a winding diameter whose diameter varies. In a variant, the turns of one track alternate with the turns of another track. In a variant, the variation of the diameter of the tracks is not in phase or is of a different profile between two tracks. In a variant, the variations of the diameter of the tracks are in phase.
In a variant, each track includes at least a first section with a first winding diameter, a second section with a second winding diameter, the second diameter being smaller than the first diameter, and a third section with a diameter that is variable between the first diameter and the second diameter.
In a variant, the drum includes housings for securing the ends of a cable, the housings being at opposite ends of the tracks. The invention also relates to a window regulator includes a cable winding drum as described above. In a variant, the window regulator further includes a cable driven by the drum, the cable including a first run that winds in one direction onto one track of the drum and a second run that winds in another direction onto another track of the drum.
The invention also relates to a bodywork element including the window regulator as described above, a window driven by the window regulator between a raised position and a lowered position, and a seal compressed by the window in its raised position.
In a variant, a cable run of the window regulator winds around a section of the drum that has the smallest diameter when the window is in a predetermined upper region containing the seal between the lowered position and the raised position. In a variant, the cable run winds around the smallest-diameter section when a top edge of the window is at least 2.5 centimeters away from the raised position.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent on reading the following detailed description of various embodiments of the invention, given by way of example only and with reference to the drawings, which show:
A cable winding drum includes tracks for the winding of a plurality of cable runs, each of the tracks having a winding diameter whose diameter varies. This makes it possible, given a constant speed of rotation of the drum, to generate a cable winding speed that differs according to the winding diameter. Consequently, a window driven by a window regulator having such a drum has a speed of displacement that varies depending on the state of winding of the cable around the drum. It also makes it possible to reduce the cost and the closing power without reducing the closing force in the region of a roof seal.
The window regulator 12 shown in
The cable 22 includes a first run 34 and a second run 36. The runs 34 and 36 are wound in opposite directions around the drum 32. As one run is being wound onto the drum 32, the other run is unwinding. This enables the sliders 18 and 20 to move upward and downward inside the bodywork element. The run winding onto the drum 32 is considered to be the run which is driving the window 11. For example, when the run 34 is being wound onto the drum 32, the other run 36 is unwinding, allowing the sliders 18 and 20 to descend and carry the window 11 to the lowered position. Reversing the winding and unwinding of the runs 34 and 26 moves the window 11 toward the raised position. In
In
The drum 32 includes winding tracks for a plurality of cable runs, each of the tracks having a winding diameter whose diameter varies. The drum 32 has an outside diameter that varies. This makes it possible to vary the speed at which the window 11 is driven on the basis of the position of the window 11 between the window-raised position and the window-lowered position. In particular, with the geared motor running at a constant speed, it enables the speed of the window 11 to be reduced in the vicinity of the window-raised position when a run is winding around a smaller diameter of the drum 32. Since the closing force is increasing, a less powerful geared motor connected to this drum 32 is able to properly compress the roof seal, just as a more powerful geared motor would do with a constant-diameter drum. As an example, in
The winding around the section 44 corresponds to the movement of the window 11 close to the raised position of the window 11 (the closed position). For example, when the run 36 is winding around the section 44 (
More specifically, when the window 11 is in the lowered position (
Conversely, when the window 11 is in the raised position (
The electronic circuitry associated with the geared motor monitors the speed of rotation of the motor by various known means, with a motor-speed to window-speed ratio which increases on the small diameter of the drum 32, giving better definition and quicker detection of a pinch. This region is critical because small obstacles such as a finger can be trapped in this region. In addition, an obstacle such as a finger is referred to as a hard obstacle because it is not easily compressible (it is similar to a very stiff spring), and therefore the pinch force which it experiences increases very rapidly in the space of a few millimeters between the moment when the pinch begins and the moment when, after its detection, the motor actually stops and changes its direction of rotation to release it. With the smaller-diameter drum 32, for the same number of revolutions of the motor to arrive at the stop, the window 11 travels a shorter distance, and the pinch force increases less. The result is an improved anti-pinch system.
Furthermore, since the drum 32 includes tracks having a winding diameter whose diameter varies, the power and hence the cost of the geared motor can be reduced. This is because a window regulator 12 geared motor is conventionally sized to enable the window 11 to stress the seal situated in the roof or the top of the door frame as it arrives at the raised position. The seal keeps out air and water when the window 11 is in the raised position, so the seal is very stiff. The torque generated by the geared motor must therefore be great enough to stress the seal. However, during the rest of the path of the window 11, either upwards or downwards, the torque generated by the geared motor is greater than it needs to be. Using the drum 32, the force generated in the cable 22 (for more or less constant torque in the geared motor) is greater when the cable 22 is winding around the smallest-diameter section 44 than when the cable 22 is winding around the largest-diameter section 42. Thus, since it is possible to increase the force applied to the cable 22 with the smallest-diameter section 44 of the drum 32, it is possible to use a geared motor that is less powerful, but from which the torque developed is converted into an increase in the force applied to the smallest-diameter section 44.
The cable winding tracks are alternating or interleaved. In other words, the turns of one track alternate with the turns of another track. The drum 32 in
In
Because of the variable diameter of the drum 32, the length of cable 22 in the cable pathway is variable depending on the positions of the runs 34 and 36 along the tracks 38 and 40 in the sections 42, 43 and 44. Thus, the length of the runs 34 and 36 between the drum 32 and the deflectors 26 and 30, respectively, in
Equally (alternatively or in combination with the tensioners), the variation of the diameter of each track 38 and 40 could be out of phase and/or be of a different profile between two tracks 38 and 40. On the drum 32 in
The description given above is not restricted. It is also conceivable, as an alternative or in combination, to give the drum 32 a small diameter to arrive at the lowered position of the window 11. The drum 32 may thus have a smaller-diameter section on either side of the section 42 or a smaller-diameter section on only one side of section 42.
The foregoing description is only exemplary of the principles of the invention. Many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings. It is, therefore, to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than using the example embodiments which have been specifically described. For that reason the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0900328 | Jan 2009 | FR | national |