The present disclosure relates in general to shaft seals, and more particularly, to mechanical face seals employed with rotating shafts.
A mechanical face seal, which may be employed, for example, in a dishwasher pump, may include a stationary seal head assembly that mates with, and seals against, a rotating seal seat assembly. Typically, the seal seat assembly mounts to an impeller that is driven via a shaft by a motor. It is common for the impeller to be made of a plastic material. Such a conventional face seal assembly performs very well at sealing out water, and prevents the impeller from overheating because the water adjacent to the seal absorbs frictional heat generated by the seal. A rubber bellows or boot of the seal head assembly provides an axially flexible sealing membrane between the seal ring and the pump housing. A spring biases the seal ring against the seal seat. A concern with these conventional face seals is that a vibrating seal ring can emit annoying, loud seal squealing, squeaking, ringing, chirping, or moaning noises, especially sealing water-based fluids at elevated temperatures or under marginal lubrication.
Thus, it is desirable to have a face seal for a rotating shaft that will adequately seal water, and can also significantly reduce the vibration of the seal ring to prevent annoying, loud noises from being generated.
Accordingly, the present disclosure provides the rubber bellows or boot-type mechanical face seal with a constriction ring that constricts the normal outward bulging of the flex section of the rubber boot as it folds and tries to roll forward over itself during axial deflection. This constriction causes increased frictional hysteresis during compression and decompression of the boot flex section. The increased hysteresis, defined as the difference between the load/deflection curve resulting from axially compressing the seal from its free height to near its solid height and the load/deflection curve resulting from releasing the seal from near its solid height to its free height, increases the dampening capacity of the seal design four to six fold, or more, compared to conventional non-constricted designs. The increased dampening action suppresses high frequency frictional stick-slip vibrations between the rotating and stationary rubbing seal components, thus suppressing high frequency vibrations of the seal ring to prevent annoying noise generation.
Further areas of applicability of the present disclosure will become apparent from the detailed description provided hereinafter. It should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the disclosure.
The present disclosure will become more fully understood from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The following description of the preferred embodiment(s) is merely exemplary in nature and is in no way intended to limit the disclosure, its application, or uses.
With reference to
The seal assembly 10 includes a seal head assembly 18, mounted stationary relative to a pump housing 20, and a seal seat assembly 22, rotationally fixed to the shaft 12. A bearing 24 mounts to the shaft 12 with an inner race thereof abutting the shaft sleeve 16. The seal seat assembly 22 includes a seal seat 26 which abuts against the seal head assembly 18. A grommet 28 abuts against an impeller 30 and a washer 32 is captured between the grommet 28 and seal seat 26. The impeller 30 is preferably threaded onto the motor shaft 12, which clamps the washer 32 against the sleeve 16.
The seal head assembly 18 is press-fitted into the pump housing 20 by means of a spring seat 40. A rubber boot or bellows 42 includes a mounting portion at a first end 42a disposed between the spring seat 40 and housing 20. A second end 42b of the rubber boot 42 is disposed against a seal ring 44 and includes a retaining ring 46 disposed therein in order to provide a clamping fit with the seal ring 44. A spring 48 has a first end 48a disposed against the spring seat 40 and a second end 48b disposed against the second end 42b of rubber boot 42 which biases the seal ring 44 against the seal seat 26 of the seal seat assembly 22.
A constriction ring 50 surrounds the annular rubber boot 42 and is mounted to the housing portion 20. The constriction ring 50 can be formed of solid plastic, metal, or other materials. In addition, as shown in
In a preferred construction, the rubber boot flex section consists of a larger tubular section 42c (having a diameter longer than an inner diameter of the constriction ring 50) and a smaller tubular section 42d (having a diameter smaller than an inner diameter of the constriction ring 50) joined by an interconnecting tubular portion 42e having an S-shaped cross-section. During axial compression of the boot, the larger tubular portion 42c normally bulges outwardly as it folds and rolls over the smaller tubular portion 42d, as illustrated in
The constriction ring 50 is axially fixed to the housing portion 20 either by a diametrical cross-fit between the outside diameter of the constriction ring and an inner counter-bore or inner surfaces of protruding lugs in a counter-bore provided in the housing portion 20. Alternatively, heat melting and inward spreading of the melted lug tips around the front outer corner of the constriction ring 50 can also be utilized to hold the constriction ring in place.
The constriction ring 50, 50′ can take alternative shapes, such as a plain washer as shown in
The description of the invention is merely exemplary in nature and, thus, variations that do not depart from the gist of the invention are intended to be within the scope of the invention. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2521137 | Vedovell | Sep 1950 | A |
2769390 | Heimbuch | Nov 1956 | A |
2888280 | Meyer et al. | May 1959 | A |
3997805 | Dochterman | Dec 1976 | A |
4095808 | Glasson | Jun 1978 | A |
4136885 | Uhrner | Jan 1979 | A |
4415167 | Gits | Nov 1983 | A |
5797602 | Less | Aug 1998 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070108705 A1 | May 2007 | US |