The present disclosure relates fittings for conduits such as tubes and pipes, and in particular to a flare-less or grip-type fitting with a face seal to join a conduit to another component.
Flare-less and grip-type fittings use one or two collets (or ferrules) and a nut that cooperate with a body. A leak-proof seal is obtained as the collets are tightened onto a conduit through the axial thrust provided by the nut. The front collet provides a leak-proof seal when the nut and collets are drawn up a specified number of turns. The rear collet grips the conduit to prevent pull off. Other similar fittings use a single collet, and work in much the same way.
The body of a fitting is adapted not only to accept the conduit and nut from one end, but to be connected to another component at its opposite end. For this reason the body may have, for example, external or internal threads to join it to the other component, or a nipple for connecting it to a hose or a other conduit, or a fitting for a flare union.
In order to assemble a flare-less or grip-type fitting, it is necessary to insert an end portion of the conduit through the nut, through the collets, and into the body prior to tightening the nut. Once the collets are tightened onto the conduit, they cannot be removed easily, and disassembly of the fitting requires the conduit to be pulled out axially from the fitting body. This fact can make the use of flare-less and grip-type fittings difficult or impossible in some applications. For example, where a conduit must bend sharply, it may be impossible to install the conduit into mutually perpendicular fittings without bending and damaging the conduit.
The present application discloses a fitting for connecting a conduit to another component. The fitting combines a collet-seal with the conduit and a face seal for connecting to the other component. The fitting comprises includes subassembly that connects to a body, the body in turn is a body adapted to connect to the other component, or the body may be part of the other component. The body has a passage therethrough through it for carrying a fluid, and the passage terminates at a generally flat first face transverse to the passage. The fitting also subassembly comprises a gland having a passage therethrough through it for carrying a fluid, and the passage through the gland terminates at a generally flat second face transverse to the passage. The first and second faces are proportioned to be positioned in sealing engagement and with with each other so that the passage through the gland is in fluid communication with the passage through the body. The gland has an internal passage for receiving an end portion of the conduit. The fitting subassembly further comprises one or more collets (a collet assembly) proportioned to surround the conduit and adapted to be squeezed into sealing engagement with the outside of the conduit. A nut surrounds surrounding the gland is also part of and the subassembly. The nut is adapted to engage the body, to force the first face (on the body) and second face (on the gland) into sealing engagement with each other, and to force the collet assembly into sealing engagement with the conduit and the internal passage in the gland. The nut is movable between advanced and retracted positions. When the nut is in the advanced position, it engages the body, transmitting an axially compressive force to the first collet collet assembly and pressing the forward end face of the gland against the rear end face of the body. When the nut is in the retracted position, it has its forward end face is no farther forward than the plane of the forward end face of the gland, allowing the fitting subassembly to be moved laterally of the body without axial movement of the conduit away from the body. The collet assembly and the gland may be captured at least partially within the nut.
While the specification concludes with claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming the present invention, it is believed that the same will be better understood from the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
The fitting 10 shown in
The conduit 12 may be what is termed the a “tube”, a “pipe”, or any other type of device for carrying fluid under pressure. The fluid may be a liquid or gas, a combination, or even a slurry. The fluid may be at a higher or lower pressure than ambient.
The component 14 can be any device or object to or from which fluid from the conduit 12 is to flow. As illustrated in
The fitting 10 includes the body 16, a gland 28, and a nut 30. The body 16 includes a central passage 20 and a rear end face 22 generally normal to the axis of passage 20. The gland 28 includes a front end face 32. The two inter end faces 22 and 32 are proportioned to seat against each other. When the nut 30 is screwed onto the body 16 (moving to the right in
The rear end portion 38 of the body 16 includes threads 40. The threads 40 engage the threads 42 in the front end portion 44 of the nut 30. The threads 4240 and 4442 cooperate to pull the nut 30 over the body 16. The threads 4240 and 4442 may be replaced by any equivalent structure such as a pin and cam arrangement like those found in bayonet fittings or any other mechanism that can draw the nut 30 toward the body 16 with a suitable force to seal the faces 22 and 32 against each other.
The body 16 terminates at a rear end face 22. The rear end face 22 is generally flat and transverse to the axis of passage 20. Generally, the rear end face 22 may be normal to the axis of passage 2220. An annular recess 52 is formed in the end face 22 to hold a resilient O-ring seal 54 which helps seal the gland 28 to the body 16.
The gland 28 has a forward end face 32 and a central passage 62. The forward end face 32 is generally flat and transverse to the axis of passage 62. Generally, the forward end face 32 may be normal to the axis of the passage 62. When the fitting 10 is made up by turning the nut 30 onto the body 16, the forward end face 32 of the gland 28 presses against the rear end face 22 of the body 16 and compresses the O-ring 54 to make a fluid-tight seal between the gland and the body. The O-ring seal 54 can be omitted altogether and/or replaced with any suitable gasket or sealant to facilitate creating a fluid tight seal between the faces 22 and 32 when the fitting 10 is made up.
There are numerous types of face-to-face connections which may be used. The connection between the gland 28 in and the body 16 may be of the type described in SAE 1453, but many others are known and may be required for particular applications. In some the forward end face 32 of the gland 28 and the rear end face 22 of the body 16 may be provided with interlocking ridges and grooves rather than being completely flat. These ridges and grooves may be circumferential to provide a seal, or radial to provide for a particular angular alignment. In addition, as noted above, the rear end face 22 of the body 16 and the forward end face 32 of the gland 28 may be inclined with respect to the axis of the central passage 62 through the gland 28 and the central passage 20 through the body 16.
An annular face 64 in passage 62 enlarges the diameter of the passage 62 so that it can accommodate an end portion 66 of the conduit 12. The annular face 64 limits forward movement of the conduit 12 as it is inserted into the gland 28.
The fitting 10 may use two collets, front collet 70 and rear collet 72, to seal against the conduit 12 and to hold the conduit in place. The front collet 70 includes a cylindrical inside surface 74 that initially slides over the outside of the conduit 12, as shown in
The gland 28 (
The rear collet 72 (
The rear collet 72 may also include a tubular extension 90 which extends rearward from the annular shoulder 84. See
While the fitting 10 is described as using a front and rear collets 70 and 72, it is possible to use a single collet 120 in place of the front and rear collets, and single collet, flare-less fittings are well known. Such a fitting 10′ is shown in
As shown in
Before assembly, the gland 28, nut 32, and front and rear collets 70 and 72 are free of each other. Loose collets and a gland may be hard to manipulate and install correctly. Therefore the gland 28 and nut 30 are designed to retain the collets 70 and 72 prior to initial makeup of the fitting 10. To this end, the central passage 94 in the nut 30 includes an annular ridge 100. The annular ridge 100 includes the tapered surface 102 which faces the front of the nut 30 and a stop surface 104 which faces to the rear. The annular ridge 100 in the nut 30 cooperates with a similar annular ridge 106 located at the rear end of the gland 28. The ridge 106 in on the gland 28 includes a tapered surface 108 which faces rearward and a stop surface 110 which is more nearly perpendicular to the axis of the gland 28 and faces forward. The ridges 100 and 106 act as a one-way catch, allowing assembly but not disassembly of the nut 30 onto the gland 28 and capturing the collets 70 and 72 in position between the gland and nut prior to any assembly with the body 16. The gland 28, nut 30, and collets 70 and 72 (or collets) are termed herein a “fitting subassembly”.
To assemble When assembling the nut 30, collets 70 and 72, and gland 28, first the front collet 70 is first placed in the gland 28 with the tapered surface 78 of the front collet 70 touching the tapered surface 80 of the gland. Next, the rear collet 72 is positioned with its forward tapered surface 82 in contact with the tapered surface 88 at the rear of the front collet 70. Thereafter the nut 30 is placed over the two collets 70, 72 and the gland 28. As the ridge 106 at the rear of the gland passes the rear end of the threads 42, the tapered surface 108 of the ridge 106 engages the tapered surface 102 of the ridge 100. A slight force is required to squeeze the ridge 106 past the ridge 100, facilitated by the two tapered surfaces 108 and 102 and the relatively thin section 112 at the rear of the gland 28. As the gland 28 is forced further into the central passage 94 in the nut 30, the ridge 106 expands radially outward, and thereafter the stop surface 110 and the stop surface 104 on the gland 28 and nut 30, respectively, prevent the gland 28 from being removed. Thus the collets 70 and 72 and the gland 28 are captured within the nut 30, and it is therefore impossible to lose unlikely that the two collets 70 and 72 will get lost unless the gland 28 is forcibly removed, without destructively removing the gland 28. The position of the ridge 106 and the ridge 102 are selected so that the stop surfaces 104 and 110 engage each other as the nut is being moved rearward only after the end face 34 of the nut 30 has moved rearward of the end face 60 of the gland 28, as shown in
As an alternative to the ridges 100 and 106, a threaded arrangement may be used as shown in
Another alternative to the ridges 100 and 106 is to replace one of them with a spring clip 150 shown in.
Various techniques may be used to assure that the collets 70 and 72 remain properly aligned prior to insertion of the conduit 12 into the fitting 10 and initial makeup of the fitting on the conduit. One such arrangement is shown in
Other techniques may also be used to hold the collets 70 and 72 in alignment with the passage 92 through the nut 30 and the passage 62 through the gland 28. These techniques include adhesives and/or lubricants to hold the collets 70 and 72 and gland 28 in proper orientation. One product that may be used is wax which may hold the collets 70 and 72 in place. The adhesive and/or lubricant may be applied as a coating or it may be foamed to full fill the entire space between the collets 70 and 72 and the nut 30 except for a passage where the tube 12 will be inserted. As an alternative, the tubular extension 90 of the rear collet 72 may be extended so that even when the gland 28 is in its forward most position, the tubular extension is housed within the rear opening 92 in the nut 30. In this case the tubular extension may be provided with a dimple (not shown) which projects outwardly and contacts the passage 92 through the nut 30. Upon initial makeup of the fitting, the dimple is forced through the passage 92 in the nut, its purpose having been served.
To use the fitting 10, a conduit 12 is inserted into a subassembly consisting of the nut 30, the collets 70 and 72, and the gland 28. The conduit passes through the opening 92 in the nut 30, through the passage 86 through the rear collet 72, through the passage 74 through the front collet 70, and into the gland 28 until the leading end face of the conduit 12 contacts the annular face 64 in the gland. See
When it is necessary to disconnect the conduit 12 from the component 14, the nut 30 may be screwed back and then slid rearward until its end face 34 is rearward of the front face 32 of the gland 28, as shown in
The fitting assembly 10′″ includes a subassembly 158 comprising gland 28′″, nut 30, and collets 70 and 72. The subassembly 158 cooperates with the body 16′″ to form a fluid-tight seal. The difference between the embodiment shown in
The operation of the
The nut 164 is similar to the nut 10 except that it does not use inter-engaging ribs 100 and 106 to hold the nut on the body 16. Instead, the nut 164 has a pair of annular recesses 168 and 170, each receiving a resilient O-ring, 172 and 174, respectively. The O-rings 170 and 172 project part way into the central passage 176 through the nut 160.
The gland 166 is shaped to cooperate with the O-rings 172 and 174 to retain the collets 122 and 124 within the nut 164 and in alignment with the central passage 176 through the nut prior to the fitting 162 being made up for the first time and to keep the nut from sliding too far to the rear when it is disconnected from the body 16. To these ends the gland 166 has a cylindrical outside wall 180 leading rearward from the forward end face 182. The cylindrical wall 180 has a smaller diameter than the inside diameter of the O-rings 172 and 174. The rear region of the gland 166 includes an annular ridge 184 which cooperates with the O-rings to hold the nut 164 on the gland 166. The ridge 184 has a maximum diameter that is only slightly smaller than the inside diameter of the nut 160, and it is larger than the inside diameter of the O-rings 172 and 174 when they are in their normal or relaxed state.
The annular ridge 184 includes leading and trailing frusto-conical ramps 186 and 188 that cause the gland 166 to expand the O-rings 172 and 174 when the gland is forced past them. The O-rings 172 and 174 may be made of any suitable resilient material, such as conventional elastomeric O-rings, or they may be snap rings made of metal. If metal they may be annular, polygonal or zigzag in shape.
The fitting 162 is shown in its “finger tight” condition, the way it would be sold to a customer. The gland 166 has been pushed past both O-rings 172 and 174 and lightly engages the front and rear collets 122 and 124, respectively, to keep them properly oriented and centered for easy insertion of the conduit 12. When the fitting 162 is made up for the first time, the nut 164 and collets 122 and 124 move forward (to the right in
As with other fittings disclosed above, the location of the O-ring that forms the face seal can be in the body 16 as shown in
While the inventive principles have been illustrated by the description of various embodiments thereof, and while the embodiments have been described in considerable detail, it is not intended to restrict or in any way limit the scope of the appended claims to such detail. Additional advantages and modifications will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art. The invention in its broader aspects is therefore not limited to the specific details, representative apparatus, methods and examples shown and described. Accordingly, departures may be made from such details without departing from the scope or spirit of the general inventive principles.
This application is a continuation in part of application Ser. No. 13/287,965, filed Nov. 2, 2011, assigned to the assignee of this application.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 13287965 | Nov 2011 | US |
Child | 13659681 | US |