The invention relates to a device for controlling the contact pressure of the transmission mechanism of a continuously variable transmission.
Such continuously variable transmissions are, for example, in the form of toroid drives or traction mechanism drives, the contact pressure of the transmission means, such as a link chain or thrust link conveyor, being controlled for the most part as a function of torque. The purpose of such transmissions is on the one hand to permit transmission of the drive torque as free of slippage as possible but on the other to counteract efficiency losses and wear resulting from application of too great a contact pressure force to the transmission means.
DE 42 01 692 A1 also discloses additional configuration of the contact pressure so that it is not dependent on the transmission ratio, for example, the contact pressure on the link chain in a traction mechanism drive being higher with a smaller effective belt contact radius on the drive side and lower with a greater belt contact radius on the drive side.
The object of the invention is to present a device for control of the contact pressure of the transmission means of a continuously variable transmission which, while being of simple and rugged design, effects continuous adjustment of the contact pressure as a function both of torque and of transmission ratio.
It is claimed for the invention that this object and other advantageous developments are attained by the characteristics specified in the claims.
While rolling elements or balls which move up corresponding frontal ramps on the driving transmission element and on the driven transmission element are used in the disclosed device for contact pressure control (see, for example, FIG. 2 of DE 42 01 692 A1 referred to above), it is proposed in accordance with the invention that use be made of levers, ones which, in accordance with the characteristics formulated in the claims, are of lengths which may be varied as a function of the moving pulley position assigned and which then act upon the transmission element bringing about the contact pressure by way of rolling elements, either additionally by way of ramps or directly without ramps.
The contact pressure control may be exerted either directly, by way of the levers and the rolling elements, or indirectly by throttle control of superimposed hydraulic contact pressure.
Other features and advantages as well as a description of the invention will be presented below in conjunction with the diagrams presented in the accompanying drawings, in which:
A continuously variable belt contact transmission 10 of conventional design not thus far described is shown in a sectional view in
The belt contact transmission 10 has a conventional driving wheel pair 12 rotatably mounted with a drive shaft 14 in a transmission housing not shown and drives a driven wheel pair (not shown) by way of a link chain 16.
The driving wheel pair 12 (and, of course, the driven wheel pair as well) has a fixed wheel 18 and a non-rotating gearing wheel 20 which nevertheless may be moved axially by way of gearing 19; the link chain 16 may be continuously adjusted, by hydraulic adjustment of the gearing wheel 20 relative to the fixed wheel 18, within the two end positions illustrated for the purpose of assigning a desired transmission ratio. For this purpose pressurized hydraulic fluid from a hydraulic control unit not shown is delivered by way of channel 22 in the drive shaft 14 to a first hydraulic chamber 24 or drained from it.
The gearing wheel 20 has non-rotatably mounted on it a drive bell 26 which pushes axially oriented sliding guides 30 by way of carriers 28 projecting inward through straight-line levers 32 (also see
The carriers 28 also engage longitudinal grooves 34 of a ringshaped control sleeve 36 which is guided on the shaft 14 by a hub section (or control edge) 38b the annular edge of which forms a choke in conjunction with a drain channel 40.
Hydraulic fluid may be fed to the hydraulic chamber 44 bounded by the control sleeve 36 and an annular partition 42 rigidly connected to the shaft 14 by way of a channel 46 in the shaft 14 also connected to the hydraulic control unit and another channel 48 in the partition 42, it being possible to control the pressure (=contact pressure of the link chain 16) among other means by way of the choke 38a.
Six levers 32 distributed over the circumference are provided, each of which is hinge connected by way of bolts 50 to a driving gear wheel 52 of the belt contact transmission 10.
The levers 32 support, between the support point on the carriers 28 and the bolt connection 50, a roller 58 which is rotatably mounted on a bolt 60 of the levers 32 and operate each in conjunction with a ramp 62, the ramps 62 being formed by molding in the control sleeve 36. It is also to be noted that the carriers 28 on the drive bell 26 are guided with zero backlash in the sliding guide 30 and the control sleeve 36 and keep the control sleeve 36 nonrotatable by way of longitudinal grooves 34.
Contact pressure control of the link chain 16 by way of the gearing wheel 20 is as follows:
If driving torque is introduced by way of the driving gear wheel 52, such torque is transmitted by the six levers 32 (see
The control sleeve 36 is pretensioned to the left by the pressure of the hydraulic fluid in the hydraulic chamber 44 as shown in
If the torque increases, the levers 32 overcome the hydraulic prestressing force and are deflected, the rollers 58 displacing the control sleeve 36 in
Since the gearing wheel 20 and thus the drive bell 26 are displaced axially over a distance s (see
As is to be seen in
The balls 84, 86 of the three levers are guided in annular rolling bearing cages 88, 90; the bearing cages 88, 90 have radially projecting carriers 92, 94 which extend into obliquely oriented guide slots 96, 98 in an annular extension 100 on the drive bell 26′.
The guide slots 96, 98 per lever 70 are convergent, as is to be seen in
The constant lever length a results from the distance between the bolt connection 74 of the arms 72 and the point of engagement of the arms 76 of the pocket-shaped recesses 78 in the partition 42′.
The balls 84, 86 in turn act on a radial, annular stopping face 102 on the control sleeve 36′.
When drive torque is transmitted from the driving gear wheel 52′ by way of the levers 70 to the partition 42′ rigidly connected to the shaft, the levers 70 are rotated around the bolts 74, where the control sleeve 36′ is correspondingly displaced by way of the arms 80, 82 (on application of tractive or thrust force) and the balls 84, 86. The function is as described previously in connection with
In the event of change in the transmission ratio of the belt contact transmission 10 the gearing wheel 20 is displaced with that of the drive bell 26′, the rolling bearing cages 88, 90 with the balls 84, 86 being rotated in opposite directions relative to each other and the balls 84, 86 being moved toward or away from each other by way of the oblique guide slots 96, 98 and the carriers 92, 94 for the purpose of changing the lever length b.
Contact pressure control is applied by way of the control sleeve 36′ in the drive direction (tractive load application) by the balls 84 and in the event of propulsive load application by the balls 86 (or conversely).
If in the event of axial displacement of the gearing wheel 20 and the drive bell 26′ the rolling bearing cages 88, 90 with the balls 84, 86 are rotated so that the ball (e.g., 84) relevant in the case of drive torque is moved closer to the swivelling axis (bolt 72) of the levers 70, the hydraulic pressure application of the link chain 16 as already described in the foregoing increases as a result of reduction of the length of lever arm b (see
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3224287 | Werner et al. | Dec 1965 | A |
4261213 | Rattunde | Apr 1981 | A |
5094652 | Sakakibara et al. | Mar 1992 | A |
5184981 | Wittke | Feb 1993 | A |
6190274 | Walter | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6336878 | Ehrlich et al. | Jan 2002 | B1 |
6506136 | Schmid et al. | Jan 2003 | B2 |
6669588 | Schmid | Dec 2003 | B2 |
6758775 | Heinrich et al. | Jul 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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42 01 692 | Aug 1992 | DE |
196 44 030 | May 1998 | DE |
195 45 492 | Oct 1999 | DE |
2 331 791 | Jun 1999 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040259671 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |