In the following the invention is described in greater detail on the basis of exemplary embodiments shown in the drawing. Shown are:
a an enlarged section from
a an enlarged section from
The exemplary embodiment depicts the manner in which the encoder is mounted onto an electromotor for the purpose of recording the rotational movement of the motor shaft. Of the motor, a section of its housing 10 is depicted, as well as the shaft 12 protruding from the housing 10. Formed in the placement site of the housing 10 is a sunken recess or seat 14, in the shape of a circular disk designed to surround the shaft 12 concentrically. The encoder is inserted into this seat. External to the seat, and around it, are three brackets 16 positioned at angles of 120° relative to each other. Each of these brackets has a projection 18 that can be swiveled inward and over the seat 14.
The encoder exhibits a stator 20, which is slid coaxially onto the shaft 12, such that the shaft 12 passes through the stator 20 in freely rotating fashion. The stator 20 has a cylindrical housing, with a lower part 22 and a lid 24. Positioned in the lower part 22 is a lower guide plate 26, which essentially covers the base of the lower part 22; there is also an upper guide plate 28, which is axially spaced above this lower guide plate 26. The guide plates 26 and 28 are firmly attached to the lower part 22 of the stator 20.
The encoder also exhibits a rotor 30, which takes the form of a disk and is concentrically mounted on a bushing 32. The disk of the rotor 30 is located axially between the lower guide plate 26 and the upper guide plate 28 and runs on a plane parallel to them. The bushing 32 with the rotor 30 is able to freely rotate within the stator. In the outward direction, the bushing 32 projects axially over the lid 24 of the stator, and the end of the bushing 32 which projects over the lid 24 is axially slotted in the form of a collet 34. Seated on this end projecting over the lid and designed as a collet 34 is a tension ring 36. The inner diameter of the bushing 32 matches the diameter of the shaft 23, and the rotor 30, along with the busing 32, can be slid onto the shaft 12 axially and fixed in position on the shaft 12 by mounting the tension ring 36 by means of the collet 34.
The lower part 22 of the stator 20 is shaped like a cylindrical pot. Its lower face has an outer diameter which matches the inner diameter of the seat 14, so that the lower part 22 can be inserted into said seat 14 and centered on the shaft 12. At an axial distance from the lower floor area of the lower part 22, the outer circumference of the lower part 22 widens in the shape of a collar 38, with an outer diameter which is greater than the inner diameter of the seat 14. Above the collar 38 the outer diameter of the lower part 22 again grows smaller. The lid 24, which is mounted on the lower part 22 and is fixed in place, outwardly overlaps the upper rim of the lower part 22. As a result, a circumferential groove 40 is formed on the outer circumference of the lower part 22, between the lower edge of the lid 24 and the upper rim of the collar 38.
Inserted into this circumferential groove 40 is an elastic ring 42 made of plastic. The elastic ring 42 rests in the circumferential groove 40 as a closed, circular ring, and to this end the elastic ring 42 is slid onto the lower part 22 from above, before the lid is mounted. As is best seen in
In a manner known to the prior art, the rotor 30 supports a material measure that is either incrementally or absolutely coded. The lower guide plate 26 and the upper guide plate 28 support a scanner for this material measure, as well as the appertaining electronic equipment. The connections for the electronic equipment are led to the outside by a connector 46 located on the top of the lid 24. The material measure and the scanner may be designed in a conventional manner, either optically, magnetically, or inductively.
In assembling the encoder the lower guide plate 26 is first inserted into the lower part 22 of the stator 20. Then the rotor 30 and its bushing 32 are inserted, and then the upper guide plate 28 is inserted into the lower part. During this process, the rotor 30 can move freely between the lower guide plate 26 and the upper guide plate 28 in the axial direction. Then the elastic ring 42 is slid from the outside onto the lower part 22, and finally the lid 24 is fixed into position on the lower part 22.
To mount the encoder onto the electromotor the encoder is slid onto the shaft 12. Here the bushing 32 of the rotor 30 slides along the shaft, while the stator 20 can move freely in the axial direction relative to the rotor 30. The encoder is pushed along the shaft toward the housing 10, until the base of the lower part 22 engages with the seat and the elastic ring 42, with its supporting points 44, comes to rest on the housing 10 outside the seat 14. This situation is depicted in
When the stator 20 is held in this auxiliary position by the elastic ring 42, which in this state is free of tension, the rotor 30, with its bushing 32 on the shaft 12, is pushed downwards until the rotor 30 rests axially on the surface of the lower guide plate 26, as is shown in
Then the stator 20 is pressed down toward the housing 10 and against the elastic force of the elastic ring 42, until the collar 38 rests against the housing 10 with its lower nm, as shown in
This completes the assembly process. By pressing down the stator 20 over the axial distance ‘a’, the lower guide plate 26 is axially moved in the amount of that distance ‘a’ away from the rotor 30 secured to the shaft 12. The rotor 30 now lies at a defined axial distance from the lower guide plate 26 and the upper guide plate 28, so that said rotor 30 is able to rotate free of contact inside the stator 20. Here the axial distance from the lower guide plate 26 and the upper guide plate 28 is so chosen that tolerances for movement of the shaft 12 relative to the housing are acceptable. In general, the axial distance ‘a’ lies at an order of magnitude of several tenths of a millimeter, e.g., 0.4 mm.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06 018 418.1 | Sep 2006 | EP | regional |