The present application is based on Japanese Patent Application No. 2004-368133 filed on Dec. 20 2004, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Technical Field of the Invention
The invention relates to an electromagnetic switch used in a starter for starting an internal combustion engine mounted on a vehicle and particularly to the electromagnetic switch with a pull-out structure of a lead wiring which supplies an electric current to a solenoid coil incorporated in the switch.
2. Related Art
In general, a combustion engine installed in the vehicle is stared by a dedicated apparatus, called a starter. This starter incorporates an electromagnetic switch, which is turned on whenever the combustion engine is started. A conventional starter switch has a resinous molded cover which encloses a movable contact and a pair of stationary contacts. The conventional starter switch also has a main unit which incorporates various members such as magnetic circuit members having linkage with the solenoid coil (hereinafter referred as an excitation coil). The molded cover is press-fitted to a back end surface of the main unit.
A connector is fitted on an outer back end surface of the molded cover. This connector is wired to the excitation coil either inside or outside the molded cover. In this way, the connector is made to pass the electric current to the excitation coil.
An unexamined Japanese gazette JP-A-2002-313205 describes this kind of electromagnetic switch. This switch has a strip-like-shaped terminal whose base portion is tightly fitted to a coil bobbin and connected to the excitation coil wound around the coil bobbin. The terminal extends along the axial direction of the main unit in the molded cover, penetrates outward through a through-hole formed on the back end surface of the molded cover. A tip portion of the terminal protruded from the molded cover acts as a pull-out connector to a cable. The cable extends from an ignition switch to supply the electric current to the excitation coil.
The molded cover provides a cylindrical connector press-fitted to the protruded tip portion of the terminal. The cylindrical connector encloses the protruded tip portion of the terminal, which is connected to a tip portion of the cable.
In the wiring structure for supplying the electric current to the coil described in the aforementioned gazette, the terminal, whose protruded tip portion acts as the pull-out connector to the cable, is tightly fitted to the bobbin, the bobbin is mounted on the main unit, and the molded cover is press-fitted to the main unit.
In the aforementioned wiring structure for supplying the electric current to the excitation coil, however, there is a difficulty that a vibration of the terminal is not suppressed. The vibration of the terminal is mainly caused by the vibration of the cable supplying the electric current to the excitation coil.
The reasons for the above difficulty are as follows. The terminal is fixed to the bobbin, extended linearly in the axial direction, passed through the through-hole formed on the back end surface of the molded cover, and protruded from the molded cover outward in the axial direction. The protruded tip portion of the terminal therefore acts as the connector to the cable.
In this wiring structure, the protruded tip portion of the terminal from the molded cover is required to have a moderate length so as to be connected to the cable. Therefore the protruded tip portion of the terminal is forced to be vibrated in the axial, radial, and/or circumferential directions by the vibration of the cable, because the cable has a certain vibration mass. Consequently, the base portion of the terminal, fixed to the bobbin is repeatedly stressed. If the longitudinal length of the terminal is prolonged, the vibration mass of the terminal itself cannot be neglected, so that the stress induced by the vibration of the terminal acts on the base portion of the terminal. If vehicles are subjected to stronger vibrations, it is required to cope well with the above explained problem that yields a concentration of the vibration stress on the fixed portion of the terminal to the bobbin.
It may be possible to enlarge or strengthen the terminal, especially the base portion of the terminal, in order to solve the above problem. However, in such an enlarged or strengthened structure, various problems including increases in size and weight of the terminal will arise.
The present invention, which is made in view of the foregoing problem, has an object to provide an electromagnetic switch for a starter, the electromagnetic switch improving tolerance against a vibration imposed on a current-receiving terminal to an excitation coil arranged in the switch.
To achieve the foregoing object, as one aspect, the present invention provides an electromagnetic switch for a starter comprising; a plunger rod driven by an electro-motive force; an excitation coil generating the electromotive force in response to an electric current to be supplied; a terminal receiving the electric current and supplying the received current to the coil; and a vibration absorber configured to absorb a vibration imposed on the terminal.
Therefore, if a vibration is imposed on the terminal, the vibration absorber operates to absorb the imposed vibration so as to prevent or suppress the vibration, resulting in that the tolerance of the terminal against the vibration can be improved, raising the durability of the electrometric switch.
Preferably, in the above fundamental structure of the invention, as one example, the vibration absorber is composed of a bent portion of the terminal having a strip-like shape providing a longitudinal direction and a thickness direction.
Still, in the above preferred structure, the electromagnetic switch further comprises a bobbin wound by the coil, wherein the bent portion is formed into a crank shape when viewed along the thickness direction and formed to have two bends consist of a first bend and a second bend which are positioned at mutual different positions and the terminal has a base portion which extends from a first position where the terminal is fixed to the bobbin to a second position where the terminal first encounters the first bend.
As another aspect, the present invention provides an apparatus comprising an external connector allowing an electric current pass through from a power supply to the apparatus, and a vibration absorber configured to absorb a vibration imposed on the external connector, wherein in particular the external connector has the vibration absorber. Thus, a vibration imposed on the external connector is absorbed well by the vibration absorber with steadiness.
Other objects, features and advantages of embodiments will become more apparent from the following detailed description made with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Embodiments of an electromagnet switch for a starter according to the present invention will now be, described in the following.
Refereeing to
An electromagnetic switch SW according to this embodiment is mounted on a starter ST, as shown in
The general structure of the switch will now first be described.
Of these, the main unit 1 comprises a plunger rod 2 and a movable contact member 3 and accommodates the other main members. The molded cover 5 is press-fitted to the main unit 1 with a packing therebetween and is equipped with a contact chamber 4 and a pair of bolt-shaped stationary contact members 6 and 7. The contact chamber 4 is an inner space partitioned by the molded cover 5 and accommodates the movable contact member 3. This movable contact member 3 is formed to extend along the radial direction of the plunger rod 2 and is driven to move, together with the plunger rod 2, in the axial direction of the plunger rod 2.
As a variation, the movable contact member 3 may be provided on the tip portion of the plunger rod 2 opposing the stationary contact members 6 and 7.
An excitation coil 8 is incorporated in the main unit 1. The excitation coil 8 comprises both an attracting coil 8A and a holding coil 8B. Both coils 8A and 8B are wound around a bobbin 9. A magnetic circuit is formed to conduct a magnetic flux generated by the excitation coil 8 operative in response to supplying an electric current thereto. The magnetic circuit is composed of a cylindrical and bottomed yoke 11 which surrounds an outer circumference of the excitation coil 8, a stationary core 12, and the plunger 13 which is also referred to as a movable iron material. The plunger 13 is slidably inserted in an opening formed by an inner circumference surface of the bobbin 9 in the axial direction, with a cylindrical sleeve 21 therebetween. A return spring 14 is provided between the stationary core 12 and the plunger 13 in order to push the plunger 13 forward in the axial direction thereof.
The plunger 13 has a recess formed to open on the frontal end surface thereof. Both of a lever driving rod 15 and a lever spring 16 which pushes the lever driving rod 15 are accommodated in the recess. The base end of the lever spring 16 is hitched on a collar 17 hitched on the front end of the plunger 13, while the pushing end of the lever spring 16 is located to push backward the back end of the lever driving rod 15.
The plunger rod 2 protrudes from the back end surface of the plunger 13 along an axis thereof, extends backward through the stationary core 12 to come into the contact chamber 4. A brush 18 is press-fitted to the tip end (opposing the stationary contact members 6 and 7) of the plunger rod 2 in a movable manner in the axial direction. The movable contact material 3 is tightly fitted to the brush 18 and extends in the radial direction. The brush 18 is pushed backward by the contact spring 19. A washer 20, which functions as a stopper preventing the movable part 3 from moving over the tip of the plunger rod 2, is fixed to the tip portion of the plunger rod 2. In
When turning on an ignition key (not shown), supplying the electric current to the excitation coil 8 is started. In response to this current supply, the plunger 13 is attracted backward in the axial direction so that the plunger 13 is retreated from a predetermined initial position, as shown in
Responsively to this retreat, the plunger 13 is obliged to push the contact spring 19 so as to make this spring 19 progress backward in the axial direction. Finally the plunger 13 stops when it reaches the front end surface of the stationary core 12 (refer to an “active state” position in
When the electric current supply to the excitation coil 8 is turned off after starting of the engine, the magnetic flux generated by the coil 8 is extinguished. In response to this, the plunger 13 is forced to be pushed by the return spring 14 to return to the predetermined initial position. As a result, the movable contact part 3 is disconnected from the pair of stationary contact members 6 and 7, and the electromagnet switch SW is shut down.
A further description about the structure of the main unit 1 will be omitted, because the general structure of this kind of electromagnetic switch are well known. The characteristic part of the electromagnetic switch SW according to the present embodiment is directed to a cantilever type of terminal 100 which is in charge of reception and supply of current to the excitation coil 8. Hence, hereinafter, the description of the terminal 100 will now be focused in connection with
As shown in
Adjoining to the contact chamber 4, a cavity 40 for accommodating the terminal 100 is formed in the molded cover 5. The terminal 100, which is almost formed in a strip-like shape with an approximately crank-shaped bent portion BT, is coupled with a cylindrical terminal-supporting pillar 90 fixedly arranged to protrude from a backward side surface of the bobbin 9. The terminal-supporting pillar 90 is located at a radially outer position and extends in the axial direction, as shown in
The terminal 100 has both axial ends, as shown in
In addition, as shown in
The cavity 40 is doubly sealed with both first and second flexible members 1010 and 1020, which are made of rubber material or rubber containing specific powder, for example. The first flexible member 1010 is arranged on the backward surface of the terminal-supporting pillar 90 to not only support a fixed end portion of the terminal 100 to the pillar 90 but also seal an axially-bobbin-side space of the cavity 40 partitioned by the member 1010. The position of the first flexible member 1010 is not limited to the above, but may be shifted, in the axial direction, to a position which is nearer to or abutting on a bend 81 (refer to
The terminal 100, which is formed into a long strip-like plate made of electrically conductive material, includes, by itself, two bends B1 and B2 formed predetermined longitudinal positions of the terminal 100, as shown in
More precisely, the terminal 100 itself is bent twice at two predetermined longitudinal positions thereof in directions oblique to the surface of the terminal 100 so that the two bends B1 and B2 are formed. Thus, these two bends B1 and B2 divide the single terminal 100 into three segments consisting of a base segment 101, an intermediate segment 102, and a tip-side segment 103. Of these segments, the base segment 101 is partly fixed in the terminal-supporting pillar 90, which allows the pillar 90 to support the terminal 100 in the axial direction of the switch SW and to provide the tip 104 of the tip-side segment 103 as a free end. This tip 104 is connected with the external cable CB within the bore BR of the connection port 5A.
In a thickness direction of the terminal 100 perpendicular to the longitudinal direction thereof, the intermediate segment 102 is bent, at a given first longitudinal position of the plate member (i.e., the terminal 100), obliquely to the plate surface of the base segment 101 to form the first bend B1. The tip-side segment 103 is folded back (i.e., bent), at a given second longitudinal position of the plate member which is near to the free end thereof, obliquely to the plate surface of the intermediate segment 102 so that the second bend B2 is formed and the tip-side segment 103 is, for instance, almost in parallel with the base segment 101. The tip-side segment 103 is positioned in the axial direction to extend through the through-hole 50 toward the bore BR of the connection port 5A. The bent angles θ of the bend B1 and B2 (refer to
From a further point of view, the bends B1 and B2 can be defined as parts of the terminal at which deformation is localized.
As a result, a central portion of the terminal 100, which includes the intermediate segment 102 and the two bend B1 and B2 on both sides of the segment 102, composes the foregoing bent portion BT which works, as mentioned above, as a kind of spring having a spring effect. This spring effect provides flexibility against vibration applied to the tip-side segment 103.
The number of bends, the longitudinal positions of the bends, the bent angles θ of the bends, and the dimensions of the terminal 100 are determined depending on how large spring effect is desired.
In addition, the base segment 101 is partly projected and bent upward (as illustrated in
The terminal 100, which is formed as above, is press-fitted into the terminal-supporting pillar 90 of the bobbin 9 as shown in
Incidentally, in
Referring to
The primary advantage is to reduce the stress concentration on the terminal-supporting pillar 90, which is achieved by employing the foregoing bent portion BT in the terminal 100.
When vibration is applied to the tip 104 of the tip-side segment 103 of the terminal 100 in the axial direction of the switch SW, the vibration will be transmitted to the intermediate segment 102 and will cause this segment 102 to oscillatory motions in an arch-like direction shown by a reference X in
Further, if without any means, the oscillatory motions of the base segment 101 in the arch-like direction Y would force a pillar-inserted portion 99 of this segment 101 to resist stress resultant from such oscillatory motions of the segment 101. This stress would be oriented in a thickness direction of the base segment 101. However, in the structure of the present embodiment, the foregoing first flexible member 1010 is arranged at the pillar-inserted portion 99, whereby this flexible member 1010 is able to relieve or absorb the stress to be applied to pillar-inserted portion 99 of the base segment 101.
In addition, thanks to the above functions, the stress concentration on the terminal-supporting pillar 90 on the bobbin 9 can be suppressed well.
As a result, vibration (load) applied in the axial direction or vibration including an axial vibration component can be reduced with effectiveness. Hence the electromagnetic switch SW having enough tolerance against vibrations can be fabricated.
Another advantage comes from the installation of the second flexible member 1020. Since, the bent portion BT including the intermediate segment 102 is located at or near the axial center of the terminal 100, this location sometimes makes it difficult to acquire a stable, precise position of the tip-side segment 103 of the terminal 100, unless the second flexible member 1020 is not installed. In the present embodiment, however, the second flexible member 1020 is installed as described above, so that the member 1020 can be used as a suppressing member toward the tip-side segment 103. This means that suppressing the tip-side segment 103 can adjust a positioning error of the axial tip 104 of the terminal 100 in the radial direction. Therefore the positioning precision can be improved.
Still further, the second flexible member 1020 also effectively absorbs vibration in the perpendicular directions to the axial direction of the terminal 100.
The second flexible member 1020 in the through-hole 50 is able to appropriately seal the cavity 40.
It is also preferred that the electromagnetic switch SW is mounted in a vehicle so that the longitudinal direction of the base portion 101 almost becomes parallel to the horizontal plane presented by a vehicle. In such installation geometry, if necessary, the terminal 100 can be adjusted in its installed attitude by changing the installation angels thereof so that the longitudinal direction of the base portion 101 is almost in agreement with the horizontal plane.
Therefore, compared with the conventional terminal with no above-described bent portion BT or the other countermeasures against vibration, tolerance for the load imposed on the terminal-supporting pillar 90 can be improved more with effectiveness, because the vibration at the pillar-inserted portion 99 of the terminal 100 can be reduced more largely. Generally, vibration imposed on the terminal 100 in the actual use occurs in a substantially vertical direction, because the weight of the power supply cable CB is imposed on the tip 104 of the terminal 100 and vibration generated from the engine during the run of the vehicle operates as a force directed essentially downward in the vertical direction.
In considering the fact that the width of the terminal 100 is designed to be larger than the thickness thereof, making the thickness direction of the terminal 100 agree to the vertical direction when the switch SW is installed into a vehicle provides a further improvement of the vibration tolerance of the base portion 101 of the terminal 100.
According to inventor's findings, it is preferred that the longitudinal axis (direction) of the base portion 101 is kept from −15 degrees to +15 degrees relative to the horizontal plane of a vehicle when the switch SW is mounted in the vehicle.
By the way, any resinous material can be used as a material for the first and second flexible members 1010 and 1020, as long as the resinous material is more flexible than the molded cover 5. The first and second flexible members 1010 and 1020 are designed to effectively absorb the energy of vibration occurring in the thickness direction perpendicular to the surface of the terminal 100, whereby the members 1010 and 1020 are able to reduce not only the stress concentration on the terminal-supporting pillar 90 but also the stress concentration in the pillar-inserted portion 99 of the terminal 100.
It is allowable that at least one of the first and second bends B1 and B2 is moderately bent with a specific radius of curvature. This curved-bent structure also provides the same improvements as those explained above.
Referring to
Referring to
For example, as shown in
Referring to
As shown in
Referring to
As shown in
As other modified embodiments which allow the terminal 100 to have a vibration absorbing function, two further structures may be provided. The structure shown in
Referring to
The most conceptual form of the terminal 100 according to the present invention is shown in
This terminal structure shown in
It should be noted that the scope claimed for the invention, as set out in the appended claims, is not limited to the foregoing embodiments, and possible alternations or variations of the concepts of these embodiments with other known technical features to produce the electromagnetic switch would be within the scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2004-368133 | Dec 2004 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4540962 | Gresley et al. | Sep 1985 | A |
5157367 | Itoh et al. | Oct 1992 | A |
5332926 | Ueno et al. | Jul 1994 | A |
5939960 | Godel et al. | Aug 1999 | A |
6049263 | Vilou | Apr 2000 | A |
6762663 | Andoh et al. | Jul 2004 | B2 |
6888362 | Eldridge et al. | May 2005 | B2 |
7157996 | Enomoto et al. | Jan 2007 | B2 |
20040169573 | Andoh et al. | Sep 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
U-2-3631 | Nov 1990 | JP |
U-5-94759 | Dec 1993 | JP |
A 2001-313205 | Oct 2002 | JP |
A 2002-313205 | Oct 2002 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060132268 A1 | Jun 2006 | US |