This application is a 35 USC 371 application of PCT/DE03/01715 filed on May 26, 2003.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention is directed to an improved contact element holder for electrically contacting a rotor, and in particular on an improved brush holder for commutator or wiper ring machines.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Because of commutator nonconcentricities, commutator brushes of commutator machines, such as direct current small motors, cause abrupt changes at the transition from one commutator lamination to another, and similar noises that are transmitted via the brush carrier to the machine housing and are radiated from there. To reduce these running noises, noise-decoupled brush holders are used.
To assure good-quality commutation, it is important that the brush holder be located centrally to the commutator axis. Deviations from that cause asymmetries in the supply of electrical current, and the resultant forces are in turn the cause of noises. In the noise-decoupled brush holder, a certain flexibility of the brush quivers relative to the brush carrier must be accepted, and hence the inaccuracy, linked with this flexibility, of the central position of the commutator brushes makes the quality of commutation worse.
In a known noise-decoupled brush holder (German Patent Disclosure DE 42 41 405 A1), the decoupling elements between the carrier and the brush quiver are embodied as spring-elastic ribs, which connect an intermediate carrier, which firmly receives the brush quivers, to the carrier. Both the intermediate carrier and the carrier are embodied as plates that are located in the same plane. The ribs, embodied in meandering form, are either located in the plane of the plates or extend perpendicular to the plates; in the latter case, the meandering pattern points in the axial direction of the commutator. The two plates and the ribs are embodied as an integral injection-molded part.
The contact element holder of the invention has the advantage that a rotary decoupling of the quivers about the rotor axis is attained without additional degrees of freedom of a translational or rotational type, and as a result, in use in commutator machines, the centered position of the commutator brushes required for good commutation is no worse than in a non-noise-decoupled, rigid brush holder. The fluctuations in frictional values, responsible for brush noise, between commutator laminations and commutator brushes cause only a rotational motion of the quivers and hence do not affect the centered position of the commutator brushes. By varying the geometry, position and number of the decoupling elements, the contact element holder can be adapted in a targeted way and can thus be adapted quite simply to different kinds of applications or machines.
Structurally, the contact element holder of the invention can be realized quite simply by providing that in a preferred embodiment of the invention, at least three decoupling elements are provided, and each decoupling element has only one degree of freedom, and the decoupling elements are disposed between the carrier and the at least one quiver such that the degree of freedom of each decoupling element extends in the tangential direction to the rotor.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the decoupling elements are disposed offset from one another in the circumferential direction by preferably the same rotational angle, or in other words are disposed in a star pattern.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the quivers are disposed on an intermediate carrier, and the carrier and the intermediate carrier are joined together by the decoupling elements; preferably, the decoupling elements are embodied as elastic, shallow ribs, each of which is located in a plane that is radial to the rotor axis. The carrier and the intermediate carrier are embodied as plates of insulating material which are located in the same plane, and the elastic ribs extend perpendicular to the plates. As a result of this structural embodiment with “upright decoupling elements”, the contact element holder requires little space, which is advantageous for accommodating additional interference suppression elements. Moreover, in the injection molding of the integral contact element holder, the decoupling elements are located in the unmolding direction, so that no additional transverse pushers in the injection-molding tool are required.
The invention is described in further detail below, with reference to the drawings, in which:
The brush holder, shown in plan view in
For the small DC motor, embodied with two poles, the brush holder has two commutator brushes 16, which are each axially displaceably received in a brush quiver 17 that extends in the direction of the through opening 15 and which are pressed against the commutator, in the installed state, by means of brush pressing springs, not shown here. The electrical connection cords of the commutator brushes 16 are identified by reference numeral 18. The brush quivers 17 are secured to the intermediate carrier 13. To that end, two projecting arms 131 are provided on the intermediate carrier 13 and rest with play in corresponding lateral elongations 121 of the recess 12. The brush quivers 17 are made of metal and are secured to the arms 131. In an alternative embodiment of the invention, the brush quivers 17 may be made of insulating material, and in that case they are produced integrally with the plate of insulating material of the intermediate carrier 13 by injection molding, so that the arms 131 are omitted.
The four decoupling elements 14 are disposed in a star pattern, offset from one another by the same circumferential angles, about the through opening 12 in the intermediate carrier 13 and are fixed on one end between the brush quivers 17 on the intermediate carrier 13 and on the other on the carrier 11. Each decoupling element 14 has only one degree of freedom and is disposed such that this degree of freedom extends in the tangential direction to the commutator, or in other words to the through opening 15 that receives the commutator; it is understood that the brush holder is mounted in the motor housing in such a way that the axis of the through opening 15 in the intermediate carrier 13 coincides with the commutator axis. Because of the star- pattern arrangement of the decoupling elements 14 with a tangentially oriented degree of freedom, the intermediate carrier 13, with the brush quivers 17 secured to it, can execute only a limited, rotational pivoting movement about the commutator, so that the commutator brushes 16 that press against the commutator are rotationally decoupled. Either no additional degrees of freedom, namely two rotational degrees of freedom and three translational degrees of freedom, exist, or they are negligible.
In the exemplary embodiment of
The brush holder that can be seen in plan view in
The contact element holder, described as an example as a brush holder for a commutator machine, for producing an electrical connection with a rotor, in this exemplary embodiment with the commutator, can also be used in so-called wiper ring machines, such as synchronous machines with a wiper ring rotor. In that case, instead of the commutator brushes, so-called grinding brushes are inserted into the quivers and rest in spring-loaded fashion on at least one wiper ring, instead of a commutator. Moreover, the contact element holder described may be used wherever an electrical touch contact is to be made between a three-dimensionally stationary current-carrying component and a current-carrying component (rotor) that rotates relative to it.
The foregoing relates to preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention, it being understood that other variants and embodiments thereof are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention, the latter being defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 49 157 | Oct 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE03/01715 | 5/26/2003 | WO | 00 | 11/17/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/040715 | 5/13/2004 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5939812 | Wetzel | Aug 1999 | A |
20030006660 | Kehrer et al. | Jan 2003 | A1 |
20030117035 | Gerstenberger | Jun 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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4241405 | Jun 1994 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050205420 A1 | Sep 2005 | US |