The invention relates to a device for adjusting camber and/or toe of a motor vehicle wheel according to the preamble of claim 1.
When cornering, the lateral forces acting on the vehicle wheel generate a very high tilting moment that acts on the wheel carrier. It is therefore necessary, to construct especially the wheel bearing that is integrated in the wheel carrier very stiff in camber direction.
WO 2010 034 370 A1 discloses a generic prior art in which a bearing assembly, comprised of the wheel-side and axle-side rotary parts, is axially clamped between a wheel-side carrier part (i.e. brake caliper support) and an axle-side guide part. The axle-side guide part supports an electric motor for rotating the axle-side rotary part. In addition, control arms of a wheel suspension can be articulated to the axle-side guide part. The wheel-side carrier part is provided for rotatable support of the vehicle wheel and supports a brake caliper which interacts with the brake disc of the vehicle wheel.
In WO 2010 034 370 A1, the rotary parts are rotatably mounted relative to one another and in relation to the carrier part and the guide part. Moreover, a wheel bearing for the vehicle wheel is integrated in the wheel-side guide part, so that overall four bearing points are established, which are arranged in series in a wheel force flux. Such a series arrangement of four bearing points is accompanied by a reduction of the camber stiffness of the arrangement. As a result, the bearing points have to be configured very stiff in the camber direction through appropriate measures (increase of bearing diameter, etc., for example). This causes increased space demands as well as an increase in weight of the structure.
WO 1998/016418 A1 represents another prior art in which a standardized brake system, as installed in common axle concepts, cannot be used. In the WO-publication, a vehicle wheel is rotatably mounted in a wheel bearing of a wheel carrier. The wheel carrier is made of two parts with wheel-side and axle-side rotary parts that are adjustable relative to one another. The rotary parts interact with confronting slanted cylindrical surfaces which define the rotation axis that is inclined in relation to the rotation axis of the axle-side rotary part. The toe/camber adjustment is implemented by turning the rotary parts in a same direction or in opposite directions, so that the vehicle wheel pivots by corresponding angle degrees in the toe and camber angle. The wheel-side rotary part of the wheel carrier forms in addition a radially outer bearing housing of the wheel bearing for rotatably accommodating a wheel hub portion of a wheel flange that supports the vehicle wheel. As mentioned above, such an axle concept is unsuitable for use with a standardized brake system, comprised of a brake caliper which is mounted to the wheel carrier and is engageable with a brake disc mounted to the vehicle wheel. The reason being that the brake disc in such a brake system is to be secured on the conjointly pivoting wheel hub, and the brake caliper has to be secured to the wheel carrier in order to be able to transmit the braking torques. For this purpose, above WO publication fails to provide any support structure to which the brake caliper can be mounted.
The object of the invention is to provide a device that is both easy to produce and can be configured sufficiently stiff with respect to encountered wheel forces.
The object is achieved by the features of claim 1. Preferred refinements of the invention are disclosed in the dependent claims.
The invention is based on the problem that in the prior art according to WO 2010 034 370 A1 during braking or cornering a total of four bearing points of the wheel carrier are established in the wheel force flux from the vehicle wheel to the vehicle body, so that these four bearing points are to be constructed correspondingly robust. Against this background, the wheel-side carrier part (that is, the brake caliper support) is supported via a pivot bearing on the wheel-side rotary part.
In accordance with the invention, the wheel bearing is, therefore, no longer (like in WO 2010 034 370 A1) directly mounted to the wheel-side carrier part. The wheel-side carrier part thus no longer supports directly the wheel bearing, but merely the brake caliper and, possibly, the drive motor for the wheel-side rotary part. As a result, the bearing point between the wheel-side rotary part and the wheel-side guide part (i.e. the brake caliper support) is removed from the wheel force flux and thus relieved from any force. This results in only three bearing points that are positioned in series in the wheel force flux. The fourth bearing point, i.e. the pivot bearing between the wheel-side carrier part and the wheel-side rotary part, can be dimensioned in contrast thereto smaller since any forces and torques acting upon this pivot bearing from the brake system for example are much smaller. Furthermore, the removal of the fourth bearing point from the wheel force flux increases the camber stiffness of the bearing assembly, so that the remaining bearing points again can be dimensioned smaller while maintaining the camber stiffness constant. Overall, compared to the art, the demand for installation space and the structural weight of the device are significantly reduced.
Preferably, the wheel-side carrier part can be arranged radially outside the wheel-side rotary part so that the device can be designed particularly compact in axial direction. In this case, the carrier part can be supported via a radially inner bearing surface upon a radial outer bearing surface of the wheel-side rotary part with interposition of the pivot bearing.
The axle-side rotary part and the wheel-side rotary part can each be in driving connection with a drive motor. Preferably, the rotary parts can each be components of a gear drive in which the electric motor drives the axle-side and/or wheel-side rotary part via a gear stage. As the rotary parts rotate in a same direction or in opposite directions, the carrier part pivots about a predefined toe and/or camber angle. A particular space-saving arrangement is established, when the wheel-side rotary part has a gear portion which is a component of the afore-mentioned gear drive and arranged, as viewed in axial direction, between the carrier-part support point and the slanted surface of the wheel-side rotary part.
According to an optional refinement of the invention, the wheel-side rotary part may at the same time assume the dual function of forming the outer bearing housing of the wheel bearing. In correspondence thereto, a wheel hub portion may be rotatably mounted radially inwards of the rotary part forming the outer bearing housing and transitions in transverse direction outwardly into a wheel flange supporting the vehicle wheel. The outer bearing races of the wheel bearing may be incorporated directly on the inner circumference of the wheel-side rotary part. It may, however, be preferred in terms of a simpler customer service, to use a wheel bearing that can be dismantled and has bearing outer races that are not directly incorporated on the inner circumference of the wheel-side rotary part.
To enable simple incorporation of the device in a conventional wheel suspension in a simple manner in terms of manufacture, the wheel carrier can have an axle-side guide part. The control arms, the stabilizer coupling points and/or dampers/springs of the wheel suspension of the vehicle can be articulated to the axle-side guide part. In addition, the guide part can be supported on the axle-side rotary part in a dynamically decoupled manner, i.e. via a pivot bearing. The guide part can be arranged radially outside of the axle-side rotary part, like the wheel-side carrier part. In this case, the guide part can be supported via a radially inner bearing surface upon a radial outer bearing surface of the axle-side rotary part with interposition of the pivot bearing.
A torque transmitting element can, preferably, be positioned between the carrier part and the guide part, while forming a torque path, in which a torque, in particular a braking torque, is transferred from the carrier part to the guide part, and the axle-side and wheel-side rotary parts are bridged.
The configurations and/or refinements of the invention, as described above and/or set forth in the subclaims may be used individually or also in any combination with one another—except, for example, in cases of unambiguous dependencies or incompatible alternatives.
The invention and its advantageous configurations and refinements as well as their advantages will be described in greater detail hereinafter with reference to drawings.
It is shown in:
For ease of understanding,
The wheel carrier 1 includes a carrier part 3, in which a wheel flange 5 is rotatably mounted with its hub portion 7 in a wheel bearing 12. A brake disc 11 and a vehicle wheel 13 with its rim are mounted to the wheel flange 5. The brake disc 11 together with a brake caliper 15, mounted on the carrier part, are components of a brake system. Guided through the wheel carrier 1 is a cardan shaft which propels the vehicle wheel 13 and has a constant-velocity joint (shown only in
In addition, the wheel carrier 1 includes an axle-side guide part 17 to which a control arm 19 of the wheel suspension is articulated in
Provided to each of the carrier part 3 and the guide part 17 is an electric servomotor 29 which is in driving relation with the rotary parts 21, 23 via gear drives 30. The servomotors 29 are able to rotate the two rotary parts 21, 23 in a same direction or in opposite directions in both rotation directions, so that the carrier part 3 executes a pivotal movement or wobble movement about a momentary pole MP (
In
Deviating from
As is further apparent from
The axle-side guide part 17 is supported—analogous to the carrier part 3—to a pivot bearing 51 radially outwards upon the axle-side rotary part 23. In the further course in the vehicle transverse direction y inwardly, a further gear portion 55 is formed, for example, on the outer circumference of the axle-side rotary part 23 and represents also part of the gear drive 30. The gear portion 55 of the axle-side rotary part 23 is positioned in an annular space 57 which is bounded in the vehicle transverse direction y to the outside by the pivot bearing 51 and to the inside by an annular seal 59 which is arranged between the guide part 17 and the axle-side rotary part 23. The annular seal 59 in addition to the mobile seal 63 (i.e. rubber sleeve) is depicted only by way of example. Furthermore, seals may, of course, also be attached at all other bearing points.
In accordance with the invention, the wheel-side carrier part 3 supports—in addition to an electronic parking brake for example—only the brake caliper 15, the drive motor 29 for the wheel-side rotary part 21, and the torque support 61, to be described later, but does no longer support the wheel bearing 12. As a result, the pivot bearing 43 in particular between the carrier part 3 and the wheel-side rotary part 21 is removed from the wheel force flux. In terms of the encountered wheel forces, this results in that three bearing points only are arranged in series, i.e. the wheel bearing 12, the pivot bearing 31 and the support bearing 51, but not the bearing point 43 where the carrier part 3 is supported on the wheel-side rotary part 21. Therefore, the bearing point 43 placed on the wheel-side rotary part 21 can be dimensioned significantly smaller since the wheel forces and torques encountered there are much smaller. By removing the bearing point 43 from the wheel force flux, camber stiffness of the bearing assembly is increased in addition, so that the remaining bearings, i.e. the wheel bearing 12, the pivot bearing 31, and the support bearing 51, can be dimensioned smaller—compared to the state of the art—while maintaining camber stiffness.
A connection rod 61 is mounted in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2014 011 191.1 | Jul 2014 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/001392 | 7/8/2015 | WO | 00 |