The invention relates to a chain guide for a bicycle chain in accordance with the preamble of claim 1.
Such a chain guide is primarily used in mountain bikes where the chain is subjected to comparatively intense vibrations during off-road use, so that particularly during Downhill or Free-style there is a risk of the chain coming off the sprocket or the chain ring.
Customarily the chain guide includes a roller which is supported by an arm and is in contact or in meshing engagement with the chain The said arm may be fastened to a chain stay, the saddle tube, or even the bottom bracket bearing, for instance through the intermediary of an ISCG reception. With high-grade chain guides, additional guidance is provided in the range of the load strand (tension strand). A like chain guide is disclosed, e.g., in DE 20 2007 007 536.
All these solutions share the drawback that assembly is very complex and moreover the shifting process may be hampered. The known chain guides moreover are relatively bulky, so that particularly in cases of passing over steep steps, it may undesirably occur that the chain guide contacts the step so that the chain may come off or the chain guide may collide with the tire.
In contrast, the invention is based on the object of providing a chain guide having a simple construction which allows for reliable guidance of the chain.
This object is achieved through a chain guide having the features of claim 1.
Advantageous developments of the invention are subject matters of the subclaims.
In accordance with the invention, the chain guide is adapted for a bicycle chain or two-wheeled vehicle chain which meshes with a crankset and a sprocket set. The chain guide further comprises a guide member through which, in accordance with the invention, the chain slidingly passes and which is indirectly or directly fastened to the frame via a retaining arm.
As the guide member fully encloses a section of the chain, reliable guidance of the chain is ensured. Fastening of this guide member to the frame enables very simple, space-saving assembly allowing to execute the chain guide as a whole with a very small structural width, so that the problems due to collision with the ground or with the tires as described at the outset accordingly do not occur at all or only to a highly reduced extent.
In a preferred practical example of the invention, the guide member is executed to be approximately pipe-shaped, so that the expenditure in terms of device technology is minimum.
The retaining arm holding the guide member may be retained on a chain stay in an articulated manner, wherein the axis of the articulation may be selected such that the guide member adapts itself during shifting of the chain line.
This articulation axis may be arranged coaxially with an axis section of a Bowden cable for actuation of a derailleur. In such a variant the Bowden cable thus passes through a part of the supporting arm or a component part supporting the latter.
The articulation axis may be selected such that it extends approximately in parallel with a chain section.
Alternatively or additionally the chain guide may be executed with a further articulation via which the guide member is fastened to the retaining arm in an articulated manner. In a case where the chain guide is executed with two articulations, the latter articulation connecting the guide member and the retaining arm may be executed to be transverse to the former articulation.
In accordance with the invention it is particularly preferred if in a crankset the guide member is aligned with respect to one chain ring, preferably the middle chain ring. In this way, as a result of the chain guide the required tension of the chain turns out to be lower than in the case of a conventional chain guide including a roller, for the latter is as a general rule aligned with respect to the smallest chain ring.
In one practical example the axial length of the approximately pipe-shaped guide member is executed to be substantially larger than the diameter, thus ensuring a relatively precise guidance.
In one practical example the retaining arm is executed with a console portion for fastening of the guide member and with an articulation portion on the side of the swivel axis.
In order to minimize friction, the guide member may be executed with corresponding slide members or of a material having a low coefficient of friction.
In one preferred practical example of the invention at least the guide piece and the retaining arm are executed in two parts, so that they may be arranged on the chain or the frame or a Bowden cable by connecting the guide piece parts or the retaining arm parts, respectively.
Such connecting may be achieved by form-fit, for example by a locking connection.
In one practical example of the invention, the retaining arm has a fork-type fork portion which reaches around portions of the guide member and is connected to the guide member, preferably in an articulated manner, in this area.
Friction between guide member and chain may be minimized if the guide member widens toward its end face openings, whereby an approximately trumpet-shaped pipe contour is formed on both sides.
Assembly of the chain guide is particularly easy if it is carried out with an articulation console which on the one hand is adapted to be immobilized relative to the frame and on the other hand is connected to the supporting frame or to a corresponding component part.
As was already mentioned in the foregoing, the swivel axis of the retaining arm may extend coaxially with an axis section of a Bowden cable.
A preferred practical example of the invention shall in the following be explained in more detail by making reference to schematic drawings, wherein:
In the represented solution the guide member 8 is executed with a round pipe cross-section. In principle it is, of course, also possible to select a different shape, for example a rectangular cross-section or an elliptic cross-section, The material of the guide member 8 is selected with a view to minimum wear and optimum sliding properties, to thereby minimize friction. Friction-reducing elements such as, e.g., guide rollers, a coating, or the like may be provided in the guide member 8.
Fastening of the guide member 8 to the chain stay 2 is effected via a retaining arm 12 having an approximately O-shaped cross-section in the represented practical example, wherein along a console portion 14 the guide member 8 is fastened which is screwed, brazed/soldered, bonded, welded, or fastened in some other manner to the console portion 14 along a jacket portion. Starting out from the console portion 14 there extend two arms 16, 18 toward an articulation portion 20 which is fastened to the chain stay 2 in an articulated manner. Instead of two arms 16, 18 it is also possible to use a single arm which is, e.g., curved in a C shape. In the represented practical example, linking is effected via an articulation console 22 which, in the represented practical example, has a base part 24 on which an articulation ring 26 reaching around the articulation portion 20 and the Bowden cable 28 is retained, so that the latter may be pivoted about the axis of the Bowden cable which extends approximately in parallel with the chain stay 2. The articulation portion 20 and the base part are each provided with a groove which is adapted to the external diameter of the Bowden cable 28. I.e., the pivotal movement takes place approximately in parallel with the axis of the crankset, so that the guide member 8 automatically adapts to the chain line of the chain 6 during shifting of gears and is thus always aligned with respect to the active chain ring.
The retaining arm 12 is designed with a view to minimum weight and maximum rigidity. The articulation ring 26 may, e.g., be formed by a very stable cable strap which extends through the base part 24—in this way, assembly may be carried out in an extremely easy manner. The base part 24 in turn may be clamped to the chain stay 2 or may alternatively be fastened by brazing, etc.
Due to the fact that the fastening of the guide member 8 extends upwardly toward the chain stay 2, the chain guide has an extremely small structural width, with a collision with the tire accordingly not having to be feared.
As mentioned in the foregoing, the geometry of the retaining arm 12 and of the guide member 8 may be optimized depending on a respective application and frame geometry.
In the represented practical example the axial length of the guide member 8 is made to be substantially larger than the diameter of the guide member 8 so as to optimize guidance and the chain pre-stress.
In
As may further be seen from
Details of this practical example are explained by referring to
What is not represented in
In principle it is also possible to do away with the articulation console 22 and use the guiding and retaining pieces 90 for the Bowden cable 28, which are in any event provided on the chain stay 2 or on some other frame part (see, for instance,
In the practical example according to
As was explained in the foregoing, the retaining arm 12 is also formed of two retaining arm parts 12a, 12b, the divisional plane of which also extends centrally and approximately corresponds to the divisional plane of the guide member 8. On the upper end portion of each retaining arm part 12a, 12b in
In the practical example explained with reference to
In a lateral view the transitional area between the retaining legs 64, 66 and the respective associated articulation portion halves 20a, 20b is formed to widen upwardly in an approximately triangular shape, with one through opening 70, 72 each extending approximately in parallel to the swivel axis constituted by the articulation bolt 68 being formed in this area that is executed with a relatively thick wall. Each through opening 70, 72 opens into a reception 74, 76 widened opposite it, wherein in the left-hand reception in
In the represented practical example the tubelet 50 is retained at the two spaced-apart side walls 40, 42 in the mounted condition (see
Assembly of this chain guide 1 is conceivably simple. The two shells 8a, 8b are simply placed at the closed chain 6 and locked with each other. In a further operation the two pipe shells 50a, 50b are placed at the Bowden cable 28 and locked with each other, and subsequently the two retaining arm parts 12a, 12b are placed, so that the side walls 40, 42 thereof encompass the tubelet 50. In the process, the articulation bolts 68 of the retaining legs 64, 66 engage with the respective transverse bores 62a, 62b, so that the guide member 8 is fastened to the retaining arm 12 in an articulated manner. Securing may again be carried out with the use of a cable strap or the like in order to pivotally fasten the chain guide 1 to a part that is integral with the frame.
In the previously described practical examples, to, the tension of the cable strap 56 or other fastening means should preferably be selected such as to preserve the option of transverse pivoting of the chain guide 1. In the practical example according to
What is moreover visible in the representation according to
Most of the component parts of the above-described chain guides 1 may be manufactured in a simple manner by the injection molding process, so that the chain guide may be manufactured with minimum weight on the one hand and at a very low cost on the other hand. The chain guide in accordance with the invention may in one of the above-described variants be fastened to virtually any bicycle, wherein it is furthermore not mandatory to provide a Bowden cable inasmuch as mounting may also be effected with the aid of suitable articulation consoles or the like that are immobilized on the frame, e.g. on the chain stay.
What is disclosed is a chain guide for a bicycle, comprising a guide member through which the chain passes and which is fastened to the frame of the bicycle via a retaining arm.
1 chain guide
2 chain stay
4 crankset
5 derailleur
6 chain
8 guide member
8
a,
8
b shell
10 entry
12 retaining arm
12
a,
12
b retaining arm parts
14 console portion
16 arm
18 arm
20 articulation portion
20
a,
20
b articulation portion halves
22 articulation console
24 base part
26 articulation ring
28 Bowden cable
30 band
34 end portion
36 end portion
38 C leg
40 side wall
41 through hole
41
a,
41
b peripheral segments
42 side wall
43 through hole
43
a,
43
b peripheral segments
44 retaining shackle
46 U leg
48 U leg
50 tubelet
50
a,
50
b pipe shells
52 retaining ring
54 retaining ring
56 cable, strap
58 locking projection
60 locking recess
62 transverse bore
63 flattened portion
64 retaining leg
66 retaining leg
68 articulation bolt
70 through opening
72 through opening
74 reception
76 reception
78 screw
80 nut
82 pipe shell
84 pipe shell
86 positioning shoulder
88 positioning shoulder
90 retaining piece
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2010 023 409.5 | Jun 2010 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2011/059497 | 6/8/2011 | WO | 00 | 3/18/2013 |