1. Field of the Invention
The invention concerns a drive for a track-laying vehicle having a drive shaft in connection with an electrical machine which can be operated as a generator and an electric motor and which can be connected to an internal combustion engine.
2. Description of the Related Art
Hybrid drives are widely known as drives for passenger vehicles. Hybrid drive vehicles with electric motor drives have been developed as a result of the search for fuel-saving possibilities. The electric current for the drive is supplied by a generator, which is driven by an internal combustion engine. Design concepts are known in which all of the mechanical energy of the internal combustion engine is transformed to electrical energy and then transformed back to mechanical kinetic energy by an electric motor. Other design concepts use a portion of the mechanical energy of the internal combustion engine directly for driving the vehicle and transform the remaining portion to electrical energy. The electrical energy can be used for drive purposes via an electric motor or can be stored in a battery. The vehicle can then draw drive power for the electric drive motor from the battery independently of the internal combustion engine.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,998,591 describes an electromechanical power plant for a full-track vehicle. The power of an internal combustion engine is transformed to electrical energy by a generator and then used again as mechanical drive power via electric motors. To this end, an electric drive motor is provided, which drives a central shaft, which is connected to each of the two track drive gears by a differential gear system. An electric steering motor is provided to steer the track-laying vehicle. This motor has a zero shaft, which engages the differential gear systems from the opposite direction.
An objective of the present invention is to create an improved drive for a track-laying vehicle.
The object is achieved by a drive for a track-laying vehicle with a drive shaft which drives two chain drive wheels. The drive includes at least one differential gear system and a steering drive, wherein the rotational speed of a steering drive can be superimposed on at least one of the chain drive wheels. The drive shaft is in drive connection with at least one electrical machine which can be operated as a generator or as an electric motor. The electric motor can be connected to at least one internal combustion engine by an engaging and disengaging clutch. An electrical energy storage device is connected to the electric motor so that it can be charged during operation in generator mode.
The power-consuming devices in the track-laying vehicle can be supplied with electrical energy by a drive in accordance with the invention. In military vehicles such as, for example, tanks electric weapons can be supplied with electrical power.
The maximum speed of a track-laying vehicle may be increased compared to a conventionally driven track-laying vehicle by supplying electric power from an electrical energy storage device. The maximum possible acceleration can likewise be increased, and silent low-speed travel is also possible with a track-laying vehicle in accordance with the present invention.
During braking, energy can be fed back into batteries or other electric, mechanical or hydraulic energy storage devices by a starter/generator combination.
A track-laying vehicle according to the invention can be started when the engaging and disengaging clutch is engaged. Here the required electric power can be generated by the starter/generator.
Other objects and features of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood, however, that the drawings are designed solely for purposes of illustration and not as a definition of the limits of the invention, for which reference should be made to the appended claims. It should be further understood that the drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale and that, unless otherwise indicated, they are merely intended to conceptually illustrate the structures and procedures described herein.
In the drawings, wherein like reference characters denote similar elements throughout the several views:
The electrical machine 3 is operable as an electric motor when the electric machine 3 is supplied with electric power from, e.g., an electrical energy storage device 4 within the vehicle itself. More specifically, the electric machine 3 may be operable as a starter for starting the internal combustion engine 1 when the clutch 2 is engaged. The electrical machine 3 may be a starter/generator combination such that it is also operable as a generator. The electrical machine 3 and the electrical energy storage device 4 are designed such that it is also possible, when the clutch 2 is disengaged, to drive the track-laying vehicle using the electric machine 3 alone. When the internal combustion engine 1 is shut off and the clutch 2 is disengaged, the electric machine 3 can drive the track-laying vehicle noiselessly, so that silent, low-speed travel is possible.
The clutch 2 may also be shifted under load.
To increase the acceleration and the maximum speed of the vehicle, the electric machine 3, supplied by the electrical energy storage device 4 or another electric energy storage device, supplies additional drive power to the drive in addition to the internal combustion engine 1 when the clutch 2 is engaged.
The electrical machine 3 is preferably designed such that when the electric machine is operating in the generator mode, the electrical machine 3 provides power to the vehicle and to the installed electric power-consuming devices such as, for example, electric weapons in tanks.
During braking, the kinetic energy of the track-laying vehicle may be transformed to electrical energy by the electrical machine 3 operating in the generator mode for charging the electrical energy storage device 4. Additional mechanical and/or hydraulic energy storage devices 4.1 may also be charged by the kinetic energy of the vehicle during braking.
The internal combustion engine 1 of a track-laying vehicle according to the present invention may be started when the clutch 2 engaged. The electric power required for this can be generated by the electric machine 3.
A torque converter 5 acting on a gearshift mechanism 7 via a drive linkage 6 such as, for example, a spur gear drive is connected between the electrical machine 3 and the chain wheels 18. The gearshift mechanism 7 may, for example, comprise an automatic powershift transmission with several speeds, which adapts the torque requirement to the chain drive wheels 18, depending on the wishes of the driver and on the terrain. The gearshift mechanism 7 may also include a reverse gear, which reverses the rotational direction of the output of the gearshift transmission 7. The gearshift mechanism 7 is preferably in working connection with two differential gear systems 13 via a central shaft 8. Each differential gear system 13 is in turn connected to one of the chain drive wheels 18. Each chain drive wheel 18 drives a track-laying track 19 on one side of the vehicle. A side reduction gear 17 is preferably installed on each side between the differential gear system 13 and the chain wheel 18. The side reduction gear 17 is connected when necessary to the output of the differential gear 13 via a drive linkage 16, e.g., a spur gear train, and a fast-release clutch 15.
To steer the track-laying vehicle, the tracks 19 of the two sides of the vehicle must be driven at different speeds. To this end, the rotational speeds of a steering drive 10 are superimposed on the drive by the differential gear systems 13. The steering drive 10 preferably includes a hydraulic pump that interacts with a hydraulic motor. The hydraulic pump is driven by the internal combustion engine 1 or the electric motor 3 by a steering drive linkage 10a and the drive linkage 6. The hydraulic motor of the steering drive 10 drives a zero shaft 12 using another drive linkage 11. The zero shaft 12 is in working connection with sun gears of each of the differential gear systems 13, working in opposing rotational directions. The rotational speed of the steering drive 10 is superimposed on the rotational speed of the central shaft 8, which is in working connection with the differential gear systems 13 via the ring gears. On one side, the steering speed is added to the power takeoff proceeding via the sun wheel of the differential gear system 13 to the chain drive wheel 18, whereas, on the other side, the steering speed is subtracted from the power takeoff. Drive power thus flows from one drive side to the other, which is also referred to as regenerative steering.
This continuously variable steering with superimposed speeds may also be realized with an electrically driven zero shaft instead of with the hydrostatic drive described above.
It is also possible to provide only one differential gear system 13 and to superimpose the rotational speed of the steering drive 10 on only one chain drive wheel 18.
The drive of the invention illustrated as an example here has three independent braking systems: a hydraulic brake 9, functioning as a so-called retarder, which acts on the central shaft 8; mechanical brakes 14, each of which is provided at the power takeoff ends of the differential gear systems 13; and the electrical machine 3, which acts as an electric brake during generator operation.
The essential core of the present invention is that two independent drive motors are integrated into a transmission concept for a track-laying vehicle with continuously variable superimposed steering. The two independent drive motors, when used simultaneously, are able to increase significantly the driving performance of the track-laying vehicle, and can also supply power to the electric power-consuming devices by the operation of the electrical machine in generator mode.
The well-known advantage of diesel/electric drives, namely, that the internal combustion engine and the generator can be installed anywhere in the vehicle regardless of where the transmission is located, may be realized in the present invention by connecting the internal combustion engine or several internal combustion engines to the vehicle drive via universally jointed shafts. Likewise, gas turbines can be used instead of internal combustion engines.
The installation of an electric machine 3 with a high overload capacity allows torque to be produced while the vehicle is traveling and the internal combustion engine or the gas turbine is running in a low-torque range. Especially when the vehicle is to be started off from a standstill, it is possible in this way to apply the maximum torque, even if the torque converter 5 is not used. The internal combustion engine/gas turbine may be jump-started as soon as the vehicle is traveling at a specified speed. Electrical energy storage devices, e.g., capacitors, may be used to supply electric power quickly and for short periods of time. Due to the temperature restrictions of these components, they are preferably installed outside of the engine compartment, e.g., alongside the passenger compartment.
If the track-laying vehicle is a tank, the electrical energy needed to operate the electric motor may be drawn from, and returned to, an electrical ballistic protection system mounted on the outside on a tank hull. So that the tank will still be protected, only the surfaces which are exposed to a low level of threat from outside action (e.g., the rear of a battle tank), for example, may be discharged, and preferably only partially discharged, by computer control.
In an alternative embodiment of the present invention, the electric motor is not installed between the internal combustion engine and the transmission but rather at each of the two power takeoffs 16 on the sides. As shown in
If the zero shaft 12 is eliminated, the electric motors in the differential gear systems 13 can be used under suitable computer-monitored control both to drive the vehicle (boost mode) and to steer. The energy is now transferred from the inside-curve track (motor in generator mode) to the outside-curve track (motor in drive mode) by electrical connections.
The electrical computer-aided automatic control of the parallel hybrid drive ensures that the energy storage device is always sufficiently charged. This can also mean that the storage device can be charged rapidly when the vehicle is being operated at high engine speeds. While the vehicle is coasting to a stop, braking, or even traveling downhill, the energy storage device can also be charged by transformation of the kinetic energy to electrical energy.
Thus, while there have shown and described and pointed out fundamental novel features of the invention as applied to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood that various omissions and substitutions and changes in the form and details of the devices illustrated, and in their operation, may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the invention. For example, it is expressly intended that all combinations of those elements which perform substantially the same function in substantially the same way to achieve the same results are within the scope of the invention. Moreover, it should be recognized that structures and/or elements shown and/or described in connection with any disclosed form or embodiment of the invention may be incorporated in any other disclosed or described or suggested form or embodiment as a general matter of design choice. It is the intention, therefore, to be limited only as indicated by the scope of the claims appended hereto.
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