This application is a 35 U.S.C. ยง371 National Stage Application of PCT/EP2010/066302, filed on Oct. 28, 2010, which claims the benefit of priority to Serial No. DE 10 2009 055 228.6, filed on Dec. 23, 2009 in Germany, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
The disclosure relates to a piston pump for a hydraulic vehicle braking system. Piston pumps of this type are known from slip-controlled vehicle braking systems and they are also designated as recirculating pumps.
A piston pump of this type is disclosed in the laid-open publication DE 10 2006 035 055 A1. The known piston pump has a pump piston which can be driven in a to-and-fro lifting movement in a pump bore. What serves as the drive is a rotatably drivable eccentric which is arranged on one end face of the pump piston and against the circumference of which the pump piston bears with its end face.
To control a brake fluid throughflow direction, the known piston pump has two spring-loaded nonreturn valves, one of which forms an inlet valve and the other of which an outlet valve of the piston pump. Balls are customary as shut-off bodies of the nonreturn valves. In the known piston pump, one of the two nonreturn valves has a disk-shaped shut-off body, to be precise the inlet valve which is arranged on an eccentric-remote end face of the pump piston.
The piston pump according to the disclosure has a spring-loaded nonreturn valve, the shut-off body of which has a damper body together with which it is movable. During the opening of the nonreturn valve, the shut-off body is lifted off from a valve seat of the nonreturn valve and the damper body moves in accompaniment with the shut-off body. For closing, a valve closing spring loads the shut-off body, together with the damper body, against the valve seat. The shut-off body is not connected rigidly to the damper body, but instead is movable with respect to the damper body in the opening and the closing direction. The damper body is received in a damper chamber which, for example, may be a blind hole, out of which said damper body displaces fluid during the opening of the nonreturn valve. The fluid is the fluid which is also conveyed by the piston pump, that is to say brake fluid in a hydraulic vehicle braking system. The fluid may be displaced, for example, through one or more ducts or through a gap between the damper body and a wall of the damper chamber. The list is not conclusive. The displacement of fluid out of the damper chamber by the damper body during the opening of the nonreturn valve has the effect that an opening movement of the nonreturn valve is damped.
Advantageous refinements and developments of the of features of the disclosure are set forth below.
So that the shut-off body is oriented at the valve seat during the closing of the nonreturn valve, said shut-off body is movable transversely to the opening and closing direction. The shut-off body may be movable with respect to the damper body (claim 3) and/or the damper body, together with the shut-off body, may be movable transversely to the opening and closing direction (claim 4).
In particular, the nonreturn valve according to the disclosure is intended as the outlet valve of the piston pump (claim 8) and is arranged at an eccentric-remote end of a cylinder of the piston pump.
The disclosure is explained in more detail below by means of embodiments illustrated in the drawing in which:
The piston pump 1 according to the disclosure, illustrated in
The cylinder 3 is introduced into a pump bore 6 in a pump casing 7, and the pump bore 6 guides the pump piston 2 axially displaceably at a near-eccentric end projecting out of the cylinder 3.
The piston pump 1 may have a separate pump casing 7. In the illustrated embodiment of the disclosure, the pump casing 7 is formed by a hydraulic block, in which, in addition to the piston pump 1, further hydraulic structural elements, such as solenoid valves, of a slip control of the hydraulic vehicle braking system are arranged and are connected hydraulically to one another by means of bores. Such hydraulic blocks are known from slip-controlled vehicle brake systems and will not be explained any further here.
An inlet 8 of the piston pump 1 takes place through a bore which intersects the pump bore 6 radially outside the cylinder 3. The inlet 8 leads, further, through mutually intersecting radial bores 9 into an axial blind hole 10 in the pump piston 2. An inlet valve 11, illustrated as a symbol in the drawing, is integrated in the pump piston 2 or is arranged on that end face of the latter which is located in the cylinder 3. The inlet valve 11 is a spring-loaded nonreturn valve.
The cylinder 3 has a bottom 12 on which the piston spring 5 is supported. The bottom 12 has a middle hole which forms a passage 13 of an outlet valve 14 of the piston pump 1. The outlet valve 14 is arranged in a blind hole 15 of a cylinder head 16 which is placed onto the bottom 12 of the cylinder 13. The cylinder head 16 forms a valve casing of the outlet valve 14.
The outlet valve 14 is a spring-loaded nonreturn valve with a mushroom-shaped shut-off body 17. The shut-off body 17 has a head 18 with a spherical surface which co-operates with a conical valve seat 19 formed at a mouth of the passage 13 in the bottom 12 of the cylinder 3. The shut-off body 17 has a shank 20 on a flat underside of the head 18.
The shank 20 of the shut-off body 17 passes through a middle hole 21 in an end wall 22 of a tubular damper body 23. The shank 20 of the shut-off body 17 of the outlet valve 14 has a smaller diameter than the middle hole 21 in the end wall 22 of the damper body 23. The shut-off body 17 is consequently movable transversely to its opening and closing direction, that is to say radially to the cylinder 3, and is oriented on the valve seat 19 during the closing of the outlet valve 14. Any offset of the passage 13 having the valve seat 19 with respect to the cylinder head 16 forming the valve casing is compensated.
A valve closing spring 24, which is designed as a helical compression spring in the illustrated embodiment of the disclosure, loads the damper body 23 and, via this, the shut-off body 17 against the valve seat 19. The valve closing spring 24 is supported on a base of the blind hole 15 in the cylinder head 16.
When the pump piston 2 displaces brake fluid out of the cylinder 3 during a stroke in the direction of the bottom 12 of the cylinder 3, the shut-off body 17 is lifted off from the valve seat 19 and the outlet valve 14 is thereby opened. The damper body 23 moves in accompaniment with the shut-off body 17, the shut-off body 17 being movable with respect to the damper body 23. During the opening of the outlet valve 14, the damper body 23 is pressed into the blind hole 15 in the cylinder head 16 and displaces brake fluid out of the blind hole 15 through an annular gap 25 surrounding the damper body 23 in the blind hole 15. The displacement of brake fluid out of the blind hole 15 has the effect of damping the opening movement of the outlet valve 14. The blind hole 15, because of its action damping the opening movement of the outlet valve 14 in co-operation with the damper body 23, may also be interpreted as a damper chamber 26 and the damper body 23 also as a damper piston 27.
Brake fluid displaced out of the piston pump 1 through the outlet valve 14 flows through radial outlet ducts 28 into a ring line 29 and from there into an outlet 30 which issues radially in the pump casing 7 into the pump bore 6. The ring duct 29 is enclosed between the cylinder 3 and the pump bore 6 and surrounds the cylinder 3 near the outlet valve-side end of the latter.
The mushroom shape of the shut-off body 17 of the outlet valve 14 is not mandatory for the disclosure, and, for example, the shut-off body may also be in the shape of a hemisphere or sphere or a disk.
The shut-off body 31 is received in a tubular damper body 33 which may also be interpreted as a damper piston. The shut-off body 31 is axially displaceable in the damper body 33, that is to say movable in the opening and the closing direction. In contrast to
As in
With the exception of the differences explained, the piston pump 1 from
A conical valve seat 19 is not mandatory for the disclosure. The valve seat may also be formed, for example, by a peripheral edge at the mouth of the passage 13 (not illustrated). The list is not conclusive.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 055 228 | Dec 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/066302 | 10/28/2010 | WO | 00 | 6/21/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/076467 | 6/30/2011 | WO | A |
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3811801 | Buse et al. | May 1974 | A |
4373872 | Kemmner et al. | Feb 1983 | A |
5156448 | Kirstein | Oct 1992 | A |
5529466 | Tackett | Jun 1996 | A |
5980224 | Regueiro | Nov 1999 | A |
20020028149 | Siegel | Mar 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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27 03 761 | Aug 1978 | DE |
102 32 384 | Feb 2003 | DE |
10 2004 052 817 | May 2006 | DE |
10 2006 035 055 | Jan 2008 | DE |
52-14221 | Feb 1977 | JP |
64-39976 | Mar 1989 | JP |
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2001-50174 | Feb 2001 | JP |
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Entry |
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Machine Translation of DE 27 03 761 (Patent Translate) Espacenet May 14, 2015. |
International Search Report corresponding to PCT Application No. PCT/EP2010/066302, mailed Apr. 1, 2011 (German and English language document) (5 pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120263613 A1 | Oct 2012 | US |