A compressed gas driven piston nailing or plug-mounting device with a compressed gas supply in the form of a fuel cartridge containing the liquid-state compressed gas in an inner casing. In addition to the fuel the cartridge contains, between the inner and outer casing, a propellant to keep the fuel in a liquid state. A male outlet nozzle is connected to the inner casing and projects through the outer casing.
At each firing, a specific dose of compressed gas is injected from the fuel cartridge into a combustion chamber in the mounting device, said quantity being correctly determined only if the compressed gas is in a liquid state.
To determine the quantity of compressed gas injected into the combustion chamber, mounting devices often include a solenoid valve with a compressed gas intake nozzle.
Known intake systems, such as that described in FR 2 771 796, use a male intake nozzle, inside a socket formed by a peripheral protective skirt. This intake nozzle is designed to cooperate with an outlet valve on the cartridge, removing the valve from its seat to allow the gas to be transferred from the cartridge into the device's intake system. During the transfer operation, leaks must be prevented around the cartridge valve and the device's intake nozzle. To this end, often, and in particular in the case of the cartridge described in FR 2 771 796, the cartridge's outlet valve extends into a male nozzle, which cooperates with the device's male intake nozzle inside an appropriately outfitted coupling.
The coupling contains a gasket extending along both sides of the mating surfaces of both male nozzles and is held inside an adaptor covering inserted into the mounting device's solenoid valve protective socket as well as a protective socket on the compressed gas cartridge.
This invention attempts to overcome this multiplicity of components.
To this end, the invention covers a coupling for a compressed gas mounting device fuel cartridge outlet nozzle and an intake nozzle in the device's gas intake system, designed to prevent leaks between the two nozzles and the means to prevent leaks between the cartridge and the intake system, said coupling consisting of a single piece and shaped to prevent leaks between the cartridge and the intake system.
The sealing and holding coupling may include a tubular sealing and holding adaptor around the two nozzles, which may be extended by a ring shaped holding base.
The adaptor's inner wall may be shaped to form a seal between the two nozzles by their lateral walls, with the possibility of an internal recess for containing any leaked gas.
The sealing adaptor may also be equipped to provide a seal between the two nozzles with ring-shaped surfaces against the cartridge's and the intake system's transverse shoulders.
In this case, the adapter may be a smooth adaptor or a bellows-shaped adaptor.
The adapter may also seal the ends with o-rings placed in the adapter's recesses.
In another implementation, the coupling is formed to be force mounted between the cartridge and the intake system, with the means for sealing and counter-coupling placed in the cartridge to maintain the seal.
The invention will be better understood with the following description of several coupling implementations, referencing the attached drawing, on which:
Referencing
Intake nozzle 3 extends inside socket 5 formed by peripheral skirt 6 of solenoid valve 4.
Base 7 of socket 5 defines a ring-shaped “transverse” shoulder 8.
Outlet nozzle 1 extends outside socket 9 formed by peripheral skirt 10 on cartridge 2 and extends upwardly from central contact stud 11 which forms a ring-shaped “transverse” shoulder 12.
Coupling 13, providing a seal between nozzles 1 and 3, is a single piece. Its shape allows it to fulfill its sealing function and its holding function between cartridge 2 and solenoid valve 4.
Coupling 13 is made up of tubular sealing and holding adaptor or tubular section 14 and ring-shaped holding base section 15.
Adapter 14 has a straight cylindrical outer lateral surface 16, on the same axis 17 as the solenoid valve and the cartridge. Adapter 14 further has an irregular inner lateral surface 18, forming an internal recess 19 for holding leaked gas. Adapter 14 further has two ends 20, 21 respectively defining end surfaces 20a, 21a of adaptor 14. Holding recess 19 is located between sections 18a, 18b of inner lateral surface 18 and extends on both sides of the mating surface 55 of both nozzles. When the nozzles are placed end to end, a seal is provided by outer lateral (vertical as shown in
Coupling 13 is thus held between shoulders 8 and 12 by ends 20 and 21 of adaptor 14.
More particularly, the pressures which are exerted (a) by sections 18a, 18b of the adapter 14 on either side of recess 19 against outer lateral walls 31, 33 of the two nozzles, (b) by end surfaces 20a, 21a at the ends 20, 21 of adaptor 14 against shoulders 8 and 12, and (c) by holding base section 15 against central contract stud 11 and skirt 10, hold coupling 13 in operating position between the solenoid valve and the cartridge. Holding base section 15 includes central disk 22. Disk 22 is orthogonal to axis 17, extended by peripheral skirt 23, noticeably cylindrical, along axis 17, and ends in flange 24 placed, with light force, in recess 25 located on the inner wall 26 of skirt 10 of the cartridge.
The invention coupling implementations in
Coupling 213 in
Coupling 313 in
Coupling 413 in
Coupling 523 in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02 04347 | Apr 2002 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3514129 | Holdren | May 1970 | A |
4619297 | Kocher | Oct 1986 | A |
5962805 | Saxby | Oct 1999 | A |
6217085 | Toulouse | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6523860 | Shkolnikov et al. | Feb 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 278 873 | Aug 1988 | EP |
2771796 | Jun 1999 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040011844 A1 | Jan 2004 | US |