This application is the US national phase of PCT application PCT/EP2005/000426, filed 18 Jan. 2005, published 1 Sep. 2005 as WO2005/080851, and claiming the priority of Italian patent application MI2004A000320 itself filed 25 Feb. 2004, whose entire disclosures are herewith incorporated by reference.
The present invention refers to a fitting particularly for high-pressure pipes.
As known, there are numerous types of fittings for a wide variety of uses. In particular, fittings for high-pressure pipes suitable for use on industrial construction machines, such as earth-moving machines or lifting machines and the like, must be able to be assembled easily, also on a building site, and ensure an excellent seal together with good strength and long life.
Normally, the known fittings have a nut suitable for hydraulic connection with a connection element, which can be a pipe union or similar that is held at the end of the high-pressure pipe through an additional element, which can be a ring fixed integrally to the end of the pipe. Retention of the ring to the pipe is made essentially by bending the end of the pipe by about 90° so as to form a small collar, obtained by squashing of the material, which prevents the ring from slipping off the pipe and consequently also from the nut.
This technical solution, for example, has the drawback that the small collar that is not as thick as the walls of the pipe, forming a weak point thereof. Moreover, the ring must be slotted onto the pipe at a specific spacing from its end to be bent, making such an operation complex. Moreover, the ring must also be held radially by the pipe, otherwise it tends to slip off both due to the operating pressure and when the nut is tightened. Last but not least, the particular squashing processing by dragging of the small collar means that its front surface has an uncontrolled degree of roughness that could compromise the seal with the gasket with which it is associated.
The object of the invention is eliminating the aforementioned drawbacks of the prior art.
In this technical task an important further object of the invention is to devise a fitting that has the front surface in contact with the sealing gasket and that has a predetermined degree of roughness such as to optimize the fluid-dynamic seal.
Yet another object of the invention is to make a fitting that prevents the possible slipping of the connection nut in time and that can have its front surface treated to increase its mechanical hardness.
The last but not least object of the invention is to make a fitting in which the front surface has the same thickness as the wall of the pipe or even a greater thickness and that also allows the vibrations caused by its use in particular fields of use to be dampened.
This and other objects are attained by a fitting particularly for high-pressure pipes, characterized in that it comprises means for holding a nut at the end of a high-pressure pipe defined by at least one deformation of the walls of the end zone of the pipe and reinforcement for keeping the deformation substantially unaltered.
Further characteristics and advantages of the invention shall become clearer from the description of a preferred but not exclusive embodiment of the fitting particularly for high-pressure pipes, according to the invention, for illustrative and not limiting purposes in the attached drawings, in which:
With particular reference to the figures described above, the fitting particularly for high-pressure pipes according to the invention, generally indicated with reference numeral 1, comprises means, generally indicated with reference numeral 2, for holding a nut 3 at the end of a high-pressure pipe 4.
The holding means 2 are defined by at least one deformation 5 of the walls of the end of the pipe 4.
Moreover, there is a reinforcement or reaction means, generically indicated with 6, for keeping the obtained deformation 5 substantially unaltered. In particular, the deformation 5 comprises various enlargements extending annularly on the end of the pipe 4 with different sized diameters and more precisely it comprises first and second enlargements 7 and 8, the latter having a greater diameter than the former.
In a first embodiment shown in
In a second embodiment shown in
Indeed, the presence of the first bend 13 or of the cap 9 on the end of the pipe 4 allow the deformation 5 and in particular the configuration of the first and second enlargements 7 and 8 to remain unaltered when the nut 3 is screwed onto a connection element 15, which can, for example, be a pipe union or similar threaded connector.
The nut 3, indeed, screwing with the connection element 15 going into abutment against an axially inwardly directed face 21 lying in a plane perpendicular to the axis A and formed on the second enlargement 8 would tend to deform it without either the cap 9 or the first bend 13. The fitting also has engagement means, indicated with 18, with a first sealing gasket 19 with the connection element 15. The engagement means are arranged at the front end of the pipe and are respectively defined by an axially outwardly directed front face of the head 10 of the cap or by the front surface of the first bend 13, this face lying in a plane perpendicular to the axis A.
Thanks to this solution it is possible to fine-machine the surface in contact with the gasket 19 so as to obtain a perfect seal with it (controlled roughness). For example, the front surface of the cap, as well as having a greater thickness with respect to the walls of the pipe, can also be subjected to heat treatment so as to increase its hardness.
In the case of use of the cap 9, the fitting has second engagement means with a second gasket 20. In particular, the second engagement means are defined by the inner seat determined by the second enlargement 8 suitable for housing the second gasket 20 that engages with the head 10 of the cap 9.
In this way a further advantage is obtained determined by the presence on the fitting of two gaskets 19 and 20 that damp vibrations from the connection element to the pipe and vice-versa above all if mounted on industrial construction equipment, as is usually the case.
Also forming the object of the present invention is a process for making a fitting particularly for high-pressure pipes that consists of slotting the nut 3 in the pipe 4 and radially deforming the end zone of the pipe through a rotary tool movable axially and radially. This way, the reinforcement are made for keeping the deformation substantially unaltered when subjected to the pulling force of the nut when it is associated with a connection element.
In particular, the making of the reinforcement consists of introducing a cap into the end of the pipe or of making a bend radially to the pipe.
The invention thus conceived can undergo numerous modifications and variants, all of which are covered by the inventive concept; moreover, all of the details can be replaced with technically equivalent elements.
In practice, the materials used, as well as the sizes, can be whatever according to the requirements and the state of the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
MI2004A000320 | Feb 2004 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2005/000426 | 1/18/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/24/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/080851 | 9/1/2005 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2131509 | Donahue et al. | Sep 1938 | A |
3092404 | MacWilliam | Jun 1963 | A |
3393930 | Ziherl | Jul 1968 | A |
3853339 | Wilson | Dec 1974 | A |
4575134 | Sugano | Mar 1986 | A |
5169180 | Villoni et al. | Dec 1992 | A |
5192095 | Behrens | Mar 1993 | A |
5570603 | Chatterley et al. | Nov 1996 | A |
5735553 | Niemiec | Apr 1998 | A |
5887912 | Nakamura | Mar 1999 | A |
5893591 | Ebel et al. | Apr 1999 | A |
6431613 | Altenrath et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
6527304 | Pliassounov | Mar 2003 | B1 |
7000953 | Berghaus | Feb 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1 141 975 | Sep 1957 | FR |
453 217 | Mar 1936 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070052233 A1 | Mar 2007 | US |