The present disclosure relates generally to a housing for a vehicle driveline unit.
In general, vehicle drivelines transmit torque from a vehicle's engine to its wheels. Automotive drivelines, such as all-wheel drive (AWD) drivelines, commonly employ final drive units (FDUs) for transmitting torque to left and right sideshafts that are located downstream an engine and downstream of a transmission—oftentimes, FDUs receive driven torque from a propshaft. Final drive units can be mounted at the rear of an automotive driveline or at the front, depending on the architecture of the particular driveline and the location of its engine and transmission. And FDUs can include differential gearsets that allow wheels on one sideshaft to spin faster or slower than wheels on the other sideshaft, and that apportion driven torque between the sideshafts. The FDUs may have cast metal housings that are relatively large and heavy to handle so that they can withstand the loads applied thereto, and to suitably mount and support a torque tube for the propshaft.
In at least some implementations, a housing for a driveline unit includes a body defining an interior and having a central portion with an inner surface defining part of the interior and an outer surface defining part of an exterior of the housing, and a plurality of openings through the housing each adapted to receive a driveline shaft with rotation of each driveline shaft relative to the body. The body includes a mounting body having a mounting surface adjacent to and defining one of the openings, the mounting surface includes a plurality of mounting holes, the mounting surface has a peripheral length greater than a peripheral length of the central portion. The body includes a plurality of support walls extending between the central portion and the mounting body, the support walls extend axially relative to an axis of rotation of a shaft received through the opening defined by the mounting surface, and at least a majority of the support walls extend radially and a plane through and parallel to each of the at least a majority of the support walls intersects an axis of the mounting holes and the axis of rotation. And the support walls are circumferentially spaced apart and spaces defined between the support walls span a majority of a circumference of an imaginary circle that intersects each of said at least a majority of the support walls.
In at least some implementations, at least a majority of the support walls are circumferentially aligned with a mounting hole and include a circumferentially wider portion in which a mounting hole is at least partially defined, the wider portion is axially adjacent to the mounting body and said at least a majority of the support walls have a circumferentially thinner portion extending axially from the wider portion. The wider portions may be wider than the diameter of the mounting holes and axially longer than the axial depth of the mounting holes. In at least some implementations, in said at least a majority of the support walls that have a wider portion, a thickness in the circumferential direction of said at least a majority of the support walls at a location axially spaced from the respective wider portion is between 10% and 40% of the thickness in the circumferential direction of the wider portion. In at least some implementations, one support wall that is not part of said at least a majority of support walls that includes a wider portion extends axially from the mounting body and is circumferentially located between two support walls of said at least a majority of support walls that includes a wider portion.
In at least some implementations, the support walls are spaced apart circumferentially by at least forty degrees. In at least some implementations, the distance from the axis of rotation of a shaft received through the opening defined by the mounting surface to an outer surface of the central portion is between 30% and 75% of the distance between the axis of rotation of a shaft received through the opening defined by the mounting surface and the outer edge of a support wall.
In at least some implementations, the housing includes a connecting wall that extends between two support walls and which connects together and is circumferentially between two mounting holes. The connecting wall may be connected to a support wall that extends radially relative to the axis of rotation.
In at least some implementations, a driveline unit for a vehicle includes a propshaft driven for rotation about an axis, a torque tube surrounding at least part of the propshaft, two sideshafts each adapted to be coupled to a respective vehicle wheel, differential gears coupled to the sideshafts, a drive gear coupled to the propshaft for rotation with the propshaft, a driven gear driven for rotation by the drive gear and coupled to a gear of the differential gears, and a housing. The housing has a body with a first opening through which one sideshaft extends, a second opening through which the other sideshaft extends, a third opening through which the propshaft extends, a mounting surface to which the torque tube is mounted by a plurality of bolts extending into a plurality of mounting holes formed in the mounting surface, wherein the differential gears and drive gear are received within an interior of the housing, wherein the body that includes a plurality of support walls extending between the central portion and the mounting body, the support walls extend axially relative to an axis of rotation of the propshaft, and at least a majority of the support walls extend radially and a plane through the at least a majority of the support walls intersects an axis of the mounting holes and the axis of rotation.
In at least some implementations, the support walls are circumferentially spaced apart and spaces defined between the support walls span a majority of a circumference of an imaginary circle that intersects each of said at least a majority of the support walls. In at least some implementations, the body has a central portion with an inner surface defining part of the interior and an outer surface defining part of an exterior of the housing, and wherein the body includes a mounting body that includes the mounting surface, and the mounting surface has a peripheral length greater than a peripheral length of the outer surface of the central portion.
In at least some implementations, at least a majority of the support walls are circumferentially aligned with a mounting hole and include a circumferentially wider portion in which a mounting hole is at least partially defined, the wider portion is axially adjacent to the mounting body and said at least a majority of the support walls have a circumferentially thinner portion extending axially from the wider portion. In said at least a majority of the support walls that have a wider portion, a thickness in the circumferential direction of said at least a majority of the support walls at a location axially spaced from the respective wider portion may be between 10% and 40% the thickness in the circumferential direction of the wider portion.
Various features and components may be combined together except where they are mutually exclusive, in accordance with the description below, which is intended to illustrate the various features rather than limit the inventions described herein.
The following detailed description of preferred implementations and best mode will be set forth with regard to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring in more detail to the drawings,
The PTU 22, also known as a power take-off unit, is a multi-piece mechanism with gears, shafts, and other components that work together to transmit torque to the propshaft 24. The FDU 10 also may include gears, shafts, and other components that work together to transmit torque from the propshaft 24 to the rear sideshafts 28. Together, the driveline components transmit torque from the engine 16 and to the wheels 30, 32. Still, the driveline 14 could have other architectures in other examples and might include more, less, and/or different components than those depicted in
While described below with specific referent to an embodiment of a final drive unit 10, the automotive driveline unit can be, for example, a power transfer unit (PTU), a final drive unit (FDU) or a rear drive unit (RDU). In this regard, the phrase “automotive driveline unit” is used in a broad sense to embrace PTUs, FDUs, and RDUs and related devices. Furthermore, as an aside, relational terms such as “above” or “below” refer to the normal orientation of the unit and with respect to the direction of the force of gravity.
Referring to
The housing 36 serves as a casing and support for other components of the FDU 10. Lubricant such as oil is held in the housing 36 to facilitate lubricating the gears, clutch plates, bearings, and other items enclosed in the FDU 10 as those items rotate, mesh, move, and engage during use. The housing 36 is filled only partway with lubricant to make a resulting lubricant bath 48—in
The final drive gearset 38 receives torque transmission and driven rotational input from the propshaft 24. The final drive gearset 38 can take different forms in different embodiments. In
The clutch 12 enables selective connection and torque transmission between the final drive gearset 38 and one of the rear sideshafts 28. The clutch 12 can take different forms in different embodiments. In the embodiment shown in
When the clutch 12 is actuated by the actuator 40, the clutch plates 58 are compressed together, the inner plate carrier 56 is coupled to the outer plate carrier 60 and rotation/torque is transmitted from the final drive gearset 38 and to the rear sideshaft 28. When the clutch 12 is not actuated by the actuator 40, the clutch plates 58 are separated apart from one another to disconnect the inner plate carrier 56 and the outer plate carrier 60. The disconnection ceases the transmission of rotation from the final drive gearset 38 to the rear sideshaft 28.
The actuator 40 controls actuation of the clutch 12 to selectively connect and disconnect the final drive gearset 38 and the respective rear sideshaft 28. The actuator's functionality can be managed by an electronic control unit (ECU) or another type of controller. The actuator 40 can take different forms in different embodiments.
In the embodiment shown in
The differential gearset 42 performs differential functionalities between the rear sideshafts 28 of the driveline 14. The differential gearset 42 can take different forms in different embodiments. In the embodiment shown in
The brake 44 retards and may preclude unwanted rotations that might occur from the deactivated clutch 12 and to the final drive gearset 38 as a consequence of adhesion between the clutch plates 58 and backdriving. The brake 44 can have many designs, constructions, actions, and components depending on, among other influences, the designs and constructions of the final drive gearset 38 and wet clutch 12 and actuator 40. In the embodiment presented by
To facilitate journaled rotation of the left rear sideshaft 28, the third opening 100 may be defined by an annular surface 102 of the housing 90. The surface 102 may include a bearing support and/or retention surface against which a bearing for the left rear sideshaft 28 may be received to enable smooth rotation of the left rear sideshaft relative to the housing 90.
To facilitate receipt of and connection to the housing 90 of the final drive gearset, differential gearset, clutch, actuator, etc, the second opening 98 may be defined at least in part by an enlarged mounting surface 104 for a cover 106 (
The third opening 100 may be defined at least in part by a torque tube mounting surface 112 that may extend at a nonparallel angle (e.g. perpendicular, as shown) to the axis 110 about which the propshaft 24 rotates. The torque tube surrounds at least part of the propshaft 24 and is mounted to the housing 90 by a plurality of bolts received in mounting holes 114 (labeled in
The housing 90 may be formed from a cast metal and may include a central portion 118 that has an outer surface 120 which may be generally cylindrical and which bounds a surface area smaller than an outer surface 122 of the torque tube mounting surface 112. The central portion 118 has an inner surface 124 that may define the propshaft bearing surface (or support for a bearing) and support the propshaft 24 and/or gears driven by the propshaft and/or a disconnect mechanism, as is known in the art. In at least some implementations, the distance between the inner surface 124 and outer surface 120 of the central portion 118 (e.g. the radial thickness of the central portion) is between 3 mm and 5 mm. The torque tube mounting surface 112 may be defined in or by a mounting body 126 coupled to and preferably integrally formed in the same casting with the central portion 118 by multiple support walls 128 that extend outwardly from the outer surface 120 of the central portion 118 to a rear of the mounting body 126, where the front of the mounting body 126 defines the torque tube mounting surface 112. The mounting body 126, support walls 128 and central portion 118 are all integrally formed, at the same time, when the housing 90 is formed (e.g. in the same metal casting).
As shown in
To provide sufficient surface area for the mounting holes 114 by which the torque tube is mounted to the housing 90, the support walls 128 are circumferentially wider or thicker at their axial front portion (nearer the mounting body 126/mounting surface 112) providing a wider portion 136 in which a mounting hole 114 is formed in at least a majority of the support walls 128. The mounting surface 112 may be circumferentially continuous and joined to the axially forward portion 131 of each support wall 128. Circumferentially between the support walls 128 and the wider portions 136 thereof, the mounting body 126 may be axially thinner than combined thickness of the mounting body 126 and the wider portions 136, which may further enable production of a lighter housing 90.
The mounting holes 114 in the torque tube mounting surface 112 may be defined by blind bores that are formed in the mounting body 126 and are open through the mounting surface 112. As shown in
In at least some implementations, at least half (e.g. a majority) of the support walls 128 are radially oriented relative to the axis 110 of the third opening and extend through or are aligned with an axis 140 of the mounting hole 114 in such a support wall 128. In such an arrangement, an imaginary plane extends through and parallel to each respective one of these support walls (i.e. a separate plane for each such support wall) and intersects the axis 140 of the mounting holes 114 and the axis 110 of the propshaft. The support walls 128 may be circumferentially spaced apart by at least forty degrees, and in some implementations, by at least fifty degrees. The support walls may extend a radial distance between the outer surface 120 of the central portion 118 and the radial outer surface of the support walls. A distance from the axis 110 to the outer surface 120 of the central portion may be between 30% and 75%, and in some implementations between 40% and 65% of the distance between the axis 110 and the outer edge of a support wall 128. In at least some implementations, support walls not including a mounting hole may have a distance from the axis 110 to the outer surface 120 of the central portion that is between 50% and 75% of the distance between the axis 110 and the outer edge 132 of such a support wall 128. In at least some implementations, support walls that include a mounting hole may have a distance from the axis 110 to the outer surface 120 of the central portion that is between 35% and 50% of the distance between the axis 110 and the outer edge 132 of such a support wall 128.
One or more support walls 128 may extend to the mounting body 126 at a location in which no mounting hole 114 is provided and such support wall(s) may, but need not, include a wider portion 136. In the example shown, a support wall 142 (labeled as 128, 142 in
As shown in at least
As shown in
The connecting wall 144 may be located at a vertically upper portion of the mounting surface 112 or mounting body 126 and extend axially and laterally (radial direction, perpendicular to the axis but spaced from the axis 110) along an upper surface of the housing 90. The connecting wall 144 may be radially spaced from the central portion 118 and extend laterally beyond the central portion 118 so that that connecting wall defines part of the open space between the circumferentially adjacent support wall 128 on either side of the central portion. The connecting wall 144 may have a flat portion 150 (
As shown in
In at least some implementations including that shown in
As shown in
In the example shown, a front of the interior space 156 is open to facilitate placing a component, such as the magnet 170, within the interior space 156. As shown in
Accordingly, the component 170 is trapped in position by the retention features of the first housing 90 and second housing 106. Previously, a magnet 170 had to be glued in place or secured with a mechanical fastener such as a screw or clip. The magnet 170 could be damaged by the screw or glue, and/or the process to assembly the magnet 170 into the housing 90 was labor intensive and costly. With the retention surfaces, the magnet 170 is retained in position by without requiring any fastener, adhesive or other retainer, and without requiring an additional assembly step to separately secure the magnet.
While the forms of the invention herein disclosed constitute presently preferred embodiments, many others are possible. It is not intended herein to mention all the possible equivalent forms or ramifications of the invention. It is understood that the terms used herein are merely descriptive, rather than limiting, and that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention.
All terms used in the claims are intended to be given their broadest reasonable construction and their ordinary meanings as understood by those skilled in the art unless an explicit indication to the contrary is made herein. In particular, use of the singular articles such as “a,” “the,” “said,” etc. should be read to recite one or more of the indicated elements unless a claim recites an explicit limitation to the contrary.
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